As a Toyota owner who has had a related experience, I encourage you to call corporate directly. When I called them, they were awesome and understanding. You should also check reviews for the maintainance departments at dealerships in your area. Note that the sales and service departments are separate and can vary in their level of competence within a single dealership. Then take it to the best one that you can reasonably get to.
In my situation, I had purchased a pre-owned Corolla still under warantee. After a little while, I noticed a whistling sound when ever I was driving into the wind or at high speeds - essentially a problem with the windshield. I took it into my local dealership 4 times and they weren't able to fix it...and you could see glue on the outside of the windshield that looked like crap as one of their "fixes". They also tried to convince me there was nothing wrong. I then decided to go to a dealership with a better reputation although an additional 30 minutes away from me. They told me they needed approval from corporate to work on it since the first dealership had already been reimbursed. I called corporate and explained the situation. They understood that the first dealership had "lost my business" as I was very clear about not going there again. I took it to the better service department, they fixed it with only one attempt required (they actually replaced the windshield).
The moral of the story is - corporate is awesome and helpful. They may have some suggestions for you before making a decision, so there is no reason to delay calling them. I would recommend deciding where you would like your vehicle to be serviced from now on though. Those technicians sound like the incompetent ones I was dealing with who, after keeping my car for a week, did nothing and told me there was nothing wrong, not to mention that a 9 year old could have done a neater job with the glue that I could see all over my windshield. I wouldn't want them to even change my oil at this point.
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NappuccinoSurveyor of Things and StuffRegistered Userregular
Well.. if you're manually shifting that car once its in gear that would explain bad mileage. Drop it on the 3-D and leave it there. 2/L is for different driving/towing conditions.
Actually, this is a good point.
Are you sure you have it in the correct automatic setting?
Yeah 2/L would also explain the lack of power too.
yea, an auto, just through it in D and let the car do everything, no need to really throw it in any other drive ever*
*not really forever , mostly normal ever
Yeah, I haven't been manually shifting to different gears. I leave it in D.
Here are the stats on my last two tanks:
Dec 5 480KM / 42.825L = 11.21 KM/L
Dec 11 466KM / 40.702L = 11.45 KM/L
Economy is a little better than what I was going by before, since there appears to be about 10L still in the tank when the guage is on empty. That's quite a reserve tank, there. It still seems fairly low, though. The second tank was a lot more city driving than the first, oddly enough. I did quite a bit of driving in downtown Toronto.
Dec 5 480KM / 42.825L = 11.21 KM/L
Dec 11 466KM / 40.702L = 11.45 KM/L
This should put quite a few of your worries to rest. You're getting 26.37 and 26.93 MPG respectively. According to the US Government's website on fuel economy, your car gets 25 MPG city and 32 highway. 28 combined. The fact that you were doing city driving and coming it an just under the combined estimate says your car is performing pretty much as expected.
When they say "highway" mileage, they mean straight uninterrupted driving for long periods of time. Basically, ideal conditions. Unless you're going on a road trip, you'll rarely achieve those ideal conditions, and you can expect much closer to the "combined" mileage, which you are currently achieving.
Now, that's not to say your engine isn't running sluggish, but at least we can put the fuel economy concerns to rest.
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In my situation, I had purchased a pre-owned Corolla still under warantee. After a little while, I noticed a whistling sound when ever I was driving into the wind or at high speeds - essentially a problem with the windshield. I took it into my local dealership 4 times and they weren't able to fix it...and you could see glue on the outside of the windshield that looked like crap as one of their "fixes". They also tried to convince me there was nothing wrong. I then decided to go to a dealership with a better reputation although an additional 30 minutes away from me. They told me they needed approval from corporate to work on it since the first dealership had already been reimbursed. I called corporate and explained the situation. They understood that the first dealership had "lost my business" as I was very clear about not going there again. I took it to the better service department, they fixed it with only one attempt required (they actually replaced the windshield).
The moral of the story is - corporate is awesome and helpful. They may have some suggestions for you before making a decision, so there is no reason to delay calling them. I would recommend deciding where you would like your vehicle to be serviced from now on though. Those technicians sound like the incompetent ones I was dealing with who, after keeping my car for a week, did nothing and told me there was nothing wrong, not to mention that a 9 year old could have done a neater job with the glue that I could see all over my windshield. I wouldn't want them to even change my oil at this point.
Actually, this is a good point.
Are you sure you have it in the correct automatic setting?
yea, an auto, just through it in D and let the car do everything, no need to really throw it in any other drive ever*
*not really forever , mostly normal ever
Yeah, I haven't been manually shifting to different gears. I leave it in D.
Here are the stats on my last two tanks:
Dec 5 480KM / 42.825L = 11.21 KM/L
Dec 11 466KM / 40.702L = 11.45 KM/L
Economy is a little better than what I was going by before, since there appears to be about 10L still in the tank when the guage is on empty. That's quite a reserve tank, there. It still seems fairly low, though. The second tank was a lot more city driving than the first, oddly enough. I did quite a bit of driving in downtown Toronto.
Gas tanks don't actually have reserve tanks, it's just how the float works.
This should put quite a few of your worries to rest. You're getting 26.37 and 26.93 MPG respectively. According to the US Government's website on fuel economy, your car gets 25 MPG city and 32 highway. 28 combined. The fact that you were doing city driving and coming it an just under the combined estimate says your car is performing pretty much as expected.
When they say "highway" mileage, they mean straight uninterrupted driving for long periods of time. Basically, ideal conditions. Unless you're going on a road trip, you'll rarely achieve those ideal conditions, and you can expect much closer to the "combined" mileage, which you are currently achieving.
Now, that's not to say your engine isn't running sluggish, but at least we can put the fuel economy concerns to rest.
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