The Mystery of the Constant Repair Bill
Several years ago, I began noticing a pattern in a car enthusiast group. People were constantly complaining about breakdowns—repairs one after another, sometimes multiple times a year. The bills ranged from hundreds to thousands of dollars, and in some cases climbed close to $10,000.
What made this truly puzzling was that many of these owners were driving cars widely considered to be reliable. That raised a simple but uncomfortable question: What is actually going on?
The Car Battery Secret: Why the Dealer’s "Internal Memo" Is Worth Exactly Nothing
Most people treat car batteries like disposable light bulbs: use them until they die, complain loudly, then buy another one. The truth is far more irritating — most car batteries don’t die naturally. They are slowly and predictably killed years before their time.
Today, I’ll explain why manually charging your car battery year-round is one of the simplest ways to massively extend its life. I’ll also share a story about a dealership that tried to dodge a valid warranty claim using a phrase corporations love when they run out of arguments: "internal memo."
I am sure most people have a crazy dealership story, but mine is going to surprise you. This is one surprise after another, so stay until the end—you won't be disappointed. It was the end of 2023, and my 2019 Audi Q7 had just two months of warranty left. I ran an OBD11 scan and found a few codes, including an intermittent transmission issue and a static code for a glass breakage sensor. I took it in for a final check, and that is where the nightmare began.