Working On A Modern(ish) Car For The First Time Was An Utterly Infuriating Experience

I’ve never been much of a home mechanic, but I’ve always tried to do simple jobs like oil changes and general servicing myself. It’s always been on older cars, though, like a 1986 Mercedes 190E 2.3-16, a 1992 VW Corrado and a 1990 BMW E30 318iS; 80s and 90s legends that are all easy peasy to spanner yourself. So, although my current car - a 2005 MkV VW Golf GTI - isn’t exactly a new motor, it’s by far the most modern I’ve worked on. And my god, was it a ridiculous faff to service.
Let’s start with the oil change. When shopping for all the necessary bits online, I was overjoyed to see the oil filter was an internal one. “Ah,” I thought; “it’ll take just a couple of minutes to change that, like the internal filter on my old Merc”. But no. The filter lives in a housing right underneath the engine, and you have to take off the sump guard just to get to it.
Then, you have to remove a drain plug cover - which was as good as seized after being overtightened, by the way - find that the drain plug is hopeless without the special VW tool you’re supposed to use, at which point you’ll probably just accept there’s going to be a slight mess as the remaining undrained oil in the filter housing splashes out. Drain plug cover out of the way, and you have to whip out a 36mm socket to remove the filter housing. Who has a 36mm socket? I certainly don’t, and had to buy one especially for the job.

Traumatised by what was one of the most needlessly tricky oil changes I’ve ever had to do, I put off changing the air filter for another few weeks. The last time I changed an air filter it took about two minutes and involved popping open a little box, swapping the filter to a nice fresh one, and sticking the lid back on. Not so here. The filter is sealed within the engine cover, so you have to take the whole damn thing off, removing various plugs and pipes and carefully lift the assembly off a quartet of rubber grommets.
Then, you have to undo something like 12 screws and remove a heat shield thing to take the engine cover apart. When I reached this stage, I realised two things: one, the new air filter I’d been sent was the wrong shape, and two, the half-wit who’d last taken the engine cover off had broken it in several places, stripped several screw threads and tried to glue it all back together. The only way there would have been more swearing at that point is if Gordon Ramsey was walking past on a carpet made entirely of Lego bricks, while eating a disappointing soufflé.

Removing the engine cover is not easy, so I can see why it had been broken, but bodging it together and sticking it back in the engine bay rather than replacing it makes he or she a cretin of the highest order. Wherever you are, I hate you. Very much.
The engine cover being removed at least meant I could do something productive and change the spark plugs, but I’m now faced with doing the whole job again with a replacement airbox and the right filter.
I (mostly) enjoyed working on my older cars, but there was nothing fun about the work I had to do on my Golf. I’m sure not all modern-ish cars are as painful for the home mechanic, but with the amount of plastic tat you see under the bonnets of cars these days, they just aren’t going to be as easy to spanner as older motors.
What hellishly tricky modern-ish cars have you had the displeasure of working on?














Comments
The car marques (with VW and Mercedes leading the way) are on purpose trying hard to make the engine gradually look as much like a blackbox as possible. For some things, it’s comprehensible - they quite understandably don’t want any idiot to mess with their ECU, or the electrics in general on that matter. But most importantly, they just want everybody to send their car to a certified dealership just so they can charge ludicrous amounts of money for simple jobs, which is just ridiculous. I’m just waiting for the moment when you need a special tool to change the wheels or fill up the windscreen washer fluid.
We have a 2010 Volvo V60 in our family - a great car, no question, but some day the CD player stopped working. And because the Volvo engineers are… well… special, I guess, the whole head unit is a part that only Volvo uses. To make it even better, you can’t buy that head unit anywhere, only Volvo dealers have access to them and you also need special tools to change it. Long story short, when the next service was due, we asked the Volvo dealer how much it would be to repair the CD player. The answer? They need to replace the whole head unit, for a modest price of 1000 €. A thousand bucks FOR A FREAKING CD PLAYER.
ChrisFix would be disappointed a lot if all his videos go to waste :/
Every petrolhead after reading this
The plastic guards underneath do my head in. I tried leaving them off, but first bit of water and a belt starts slipping…
And i’m here laughing with my 50 year old ford where pretty much everything can be done with basic tools.
Don’t buy cars. Ride an Uber. Save the environment.
The only thing you can do engine wise from the top on a new 911 without taking off the rear clip, tail lights, fans, and spoiler is fill the oil and coolant
capitalisme…..
Its not modern cars it’s modern German cars, I used to have a B6 A4 and it was similarly horrendous to deal with. People I know who have to deal with BMWs have similar experiences. Yet my 05 350z, and 2011 mustang don’t have these issues at all, pretty straight forward. I mean you always run into packaging issue (like on my Subaru where spark plugs were a night mare) but outside of that Ze Germans seem to make the most bizarre choices
Pagination