The passenger one is still hanging on months after it first went a bit stiff. Have to push it back in once opened door now but it works for now and will get fixed at mot time later in year.
And it's not just the door handles, is-it ?
Ours is coming up for four years old in April and with an unrelenting number of issues as-well as the the failed door handles.
what had gone wrong on yours?
And it's not just the door handles, is-it ?
Ours is coming up for four years old in April and with an unrelenting number of issues as-well as the the failed door handles.
madrat's car is a driving school car and the usage bears no resemblence to that which any normal 500 will get
Ah ok. I see. I wouldn't want a car a heap of learners had been practicing in!
The Suzuki we had before was no where near as much trouble. The number of faults that had was very low. Compared to other instructors cars the Fiat has not performed well, BSM would not renew the contract with Fiat because of the number of problems they were having with the 500 they went back to Vauxhall.
The BSM instructors we know all had reliability problems, the issue with check tests was not true, if it was every time we have a check test the examiners would be refusing to do them and not one of them have done so. Blind spots are terrible in the 500 but then they are in 99% of cars now. Most of the BSM instructors did hate the 500 and with good cause, the reasons given and the reasons reported were not always the same.
Our 500 is now 6 years old and has coverd 107,000 miles and as I said has a long long list of faults, we had the Suzuki for 6 years and it coverd just over 165,000 miles, the faults with that would cover about half a side of A4
But the Government's Driving Standards Agency officials who check that L-test instructors and their cars are up to the job, struggled to fit into the rear of the Fiat for the mandatory check-test.
Matters came to a head in February the Driving Standards Agency (DSA) issued guidance about the use of “compact or city cars” when driving instructors go for their mandatory check-tests. The only car that they identified as potentially problematic was the Fiat 500.
The note from Charles Morton, registrar of Approved Driving Instructors said: 'When presented for check rest, compact cars can occasionally pose difficulties for some of our examiners.
'In these cases their physical stature may prevent them from sitting safely and securely in the rear seat of the car, facing fully forward, with full use of a seat belt.
'Currently, the only compact city car that has been identified as presenting difficulties for some adult rear seat passengers is the Fiat 500.'
The check test is the test that all driving instructors have to take every 2-4 years to prove they can still teach. A DSA examiner will sit in the back of the car and observe them delivering a lesson for an hour. This determines their grade and is needed to allow them to renew the 'Green badge' they need to work.
Mr Morton's note had told instructors that they had to ring ahead of their check-test appointment 'to establish if there are likely to be any issues with the space in the rear which may make that vehicle unsuitable or unsafe for the examiner that has been allocated to conduct the check-test.'
Yesterday the DSA added: 'Some of our people did complain about leg-room and that they had to sit sideways to get their legs in.' It's ok at the front, but tight in the back.
Well you obviously now best, and the next time we get a check test I will point out your comment to the examiner
:shakehead: