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ejstubbs

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    Edinburgh

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    2017 Yeti SE L Outdoor 150 4x4 DSG in Business Grey
  • Year
    2017

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  1. Thanks everyone for your advice. I'd forgotten that the rear seats moved back and forward because I only ever have them fully back. Except that, in this instance, the offside one had somehow shifted very slightly forward - barely noticeable alongside the other seats, but sliding it fully forward and then firmly back (sat in the seat and pushing with my legs) it released and folded just fine. So all is now good 👍 Now I just have to remember this next time it does it...
  2. Setting out to remove the rear seats to accommodate a large load today, I found that the offside rear seat wouldn't fold forward. When I pulled up on the release bar at the back of the seat squab it moved upwards, but the mechanism under the seat didn't release the retaining hook in the floor to allow the seat to fold forward. As far as I can see you can't release the catches at the front of the seat when it's in the normal position, meaning that it can't be removed. The other two seats came out no problem at all. When I pull on the release bar it seems to come up against the trigger-like mechanism that grips the retaining hook in the floor, but it doesn't seem to move the final small amount that's required to trip the mechanism to release. Either that, or the mechanism itself is jammed somehow and won't release. I had a look around the back end of the seat but there is very little clearance between the seat base and the floor, so access to the release mechanism when the seat is in place seems to be pretty much impossible 🙁 Has anyone else come across this problem before, and if so is there a straightforward way to un-jam the mechanism, or will it have to be a dealer job?
  3. ejstubbs

    Adblue

    I've had two of those 1.89 litre bottles, both Skoda ones*, and both fractured at the neck on second or third use - sheared across as I was unscrewing it from the filler on the tank. They don't work out quite so cheap if that keeps happening. I have since acquired a VW Adblue filler hose which has the same automatic flow shutoff mechanism as the 1.8l bottles but I have yet to find a container that it will actually work with - it certainly doesn't seem to work with the 5l VW Adblue container which several online sources swore it would. I might have one more go with the 1.89l bottle, given the price of that Toyota one on Amazon. * When I tried to source a replacement from my local Skoda dealer I was told that they only do the 5l bottles now. They suggested I tried the local VW dealer who, not for the first time, turned out to be snobby and unhelpful.
  4. I needed to get Smartlink activated on the Bolero in my 2017 SE (by my local dealer, cost ~£100 IIRC) to be able to use Android Auto. It sounds like your Amundsen unit doesn't have Smartlink, though whether it can be activated on yours I couldn't say. A dealer should be able to advise. You do need to have a USB socket as an aux input on the head unit, as that's how Android Auto connects to Smartlink, so if you don't have that then it may not be possible to have Smartlink enabled.
  5. I think he means the "I" in TDI; ISTR that that was another part of the 'secret' colour-coding that Skoda used back in the day. Apart from anything else, they had to have something they could use instead of the "x" if the cars wasn't a 4x4 (on the 110PS versions - IIRC* the 140 and 170 were always 4x4). * Which happens increasingly rarely these days, so please feel free to correct me.
  6. I did that when I first started using the 205/55 R16 winter tyres on my old Yeti, back in 2010. I "calibrate" the speedo against GPS on a straight, level road and I know what the Maxidot reports as my speed in kmph for each 10mph increment from 20mph up to 70mph (20mph is 37/38kmph, for example, and 70mph is 126/127kmph). My dashcam also shows the current speed in MPH, but that's more useful for reassuring for my front seat passenger than it is for keeping me informed, since the camera is sited so as to be out of my direct line of sight. I do use Google Maps, but on the Bolero via Android Auto/Smartlink rather than on the phone itself, and I've never seen a GPS speedo on the screen. Maybe I'm not looking in the right place (but then the Bolero screen wouldn't be a particularly great place to have to look to keep an eye on your speed anyway). Google Maps does display the current speed limit for your location, but only if you are following its navigation, not if you just have it open to check for e.g. possible congestion ahead on route you already know well. And it's not always correct anyway...
  7. Every major tyre centre I've checked offers the 255/50 R17 with load rating, which tallies with the above. But as I say, I've got the 205/55 R16s which only need 91. The only one requiring 95 is the 215/60 R16.
  8. It's a 205/55 R16, which the EC Certificate of Conformity for my Yeti* says only needs a load index of 91: * It actually bears the Yeti's VIN, it's a not a generic document.
  9. Alighting from the car the other day, the missus spotted this damage to the NS front tyre: https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/53020090273_054041b0b0_o.png https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/53019025002_3562a3367d_o.png Annoyingly, this is the third time that we've had tyre sidewall damage on this car. The previous two instances were full penetration punctures that flattened the tyre. One was definitely my fault - I know how it happened, though I didn't realise it at the time. The other occurred while the missus was using the car, although she had no recollection of kerbing the tyre. We also had to have a tyre replaced due to uneven wear (almost certainly due to the tracking having been knocked out of alignment due to another "wheel/obstacle interface incident" which neither of us recalls). As far as I can see (but I'm very willing to be told otherwise) this one doesn't penetrate as far as the plies inside the sidewall, but I'm still concerned that it may be unsafe. The tyre appears to be holding pressure just fine (for now) but I'd be interested in the informed views of the Briskoda motorati on the wisdom or otherwise of continuing to drive on it. If this one needs replacing too, that'll make four tyres having had to be replaced before their time in six years 🙄 The lesson we need to learn, obviously, is to be more bl00dy careful in future...
  10. That's not a Skoda web site - click on "Fiche technique" in the breadcrumb trail in the page header (just to the left of "Acceuil") and you'll see lots of different manufacturers listed. In the UK you can get the certificate of conformity for your actual vehicle free from Skoda. This includes the tyre sizes that are homolgated for use on the vehicle (well, it does on mine, anyway). See this Skoda UK web page: Does Skoda France (or whatever they're called) not have similar information on their web site? I suppose you could even try sending your Yeti's chassis number to that e-mail address, telling them that you're moving to the UK and need the COC for the DVLA, and see what they say.
  11. The scratch protection films you can get for mobile phones, smar****ches and digital camera screens are often available in anti-reflection/anti-glare forms. I wonder if there's such a thing for the Amundsen/Bolero screens? (AFAICT it's all basically the same stuff, just cut to size for the device it's sold to fit.) Note: the censored word above was "smȧrtwȧtches" 🙄
  12. Thanks, I rather suspected that would be the case. You've saved me a tenner, anyway!
  13. I realise that the function to tilt the nearside door mirror down on reverse being selected is usually only available on Yetis with the electrically adjustable seats. However, recent events* have led me to thinking that it could be a useful feature to have on my Yeti. I was wondering whether it is available as a customization in the Carista app but the information on their website seems a little unclear: (Note: the Carista web page doesn't seem to recognise that there are two 'generations' of Yeti.) Can anyone with full access to the Carista app confirm (or check) whether this customisation works on cars without "memory seats"? Bearing in mind also that Yeti is a DSG auto, not a manual. I don't maintain an ongoing subscription to the Carista app so I'm basically trying to find out whether it's worth buying a month's sub to effect that particular change. I have done this in the past for other customisations e.g. mph on the Maxidot, but in every case I've backed out the change after a few days because I preferred the way the car functioned as standard. But if the mirror tilt customisation would work on my Yeti then I can't see any reason why I wouldn't want to retain it. I know we're only talking about a tenner to check for myself, but if someone else has already tried it and it worked then that would make it easier for me to decided to pry my wallet open! * Specificially: the second time I've had to replace a tyre after sidewall damage from a protruding/damaged kerbstone while parking ☹️
  14. ejstubbs

    Stop start

    The engine will restart if you take your foot off the brake in N, even with the handbrake applied. Never have understood why, though: you can't move the selector out of N without putting you foot back on the brake so there's no real safety element to it that I can see. OK, so a weak/badly adjusted handbrake could mean that the car could start to roll away on a hill, but the driver should be aware of what's going on - shouldn't they? As it is, the courtesy of using only the handbrake when stationary in traffic requires the extra step of moving the selector to P to avoid the engine restarting - at which point the handbrake becomes redundant anyway. It's almost as if the stop/start logic doesn't take the handbrake in to account at all. I'm told that plenty of other cars will happily sit in N with the stop/start active and just the handbrake on.
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