Haldex SWD failure

We have a 2009 SEAT Altea Freetrack with 49k miles and FSH. The FSH is not from the main dealer as that is 35 miles away, so it's done at a trusted independent.

The car has had a number of the typical modern VAG faults, but during the last month the haldex 4wd controller has failed. These cost approx £750 plus vat for the replacement part. That's a big bill for a recent car and Internet searches indicate these controllers are failing regularly on other VAG cars.

SEAT customer care said they are unlikely to help as the car has not been serviced at a main dealer and haldex won't sell me the part direct at a more sensible price. Have you any advice? My main concern is buying another and it giving up after 3 years.

Asked on 6 June 2013 by conqueringlion

Answered by Honest John
VAG's attitude is understandable. Suggest you try specialists such as www.ecutesting.com or www.bba-reman.com to see if they can fix the original Haldex controller.
Similar questions
I purchased a brand new Peugeot Boxer from a main dealer in May 2016. In June, it started to have a slight hesitation which has now worsened and makes me feel as if it might come to a complete stop at...
My car has been inoperable for two weeks now. I had a total power failure. RAC and local garage tested battery etc. - all normal. Once stripped back it transpires that the connection between the positive...
I have a Volkswagen Polo GTi 6R, which is fitted with the 1.4-litre TSi 180 petrol engine and a seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox. The car was purchased new in March of this year and I followed the ‘running...
Related models
Four wheel drive version of Altea XL, creating an SUV MPV. Surprisingly good both on and off road.
 

Value my car

Save £75 on Warranty using code HJ75

with MotorEasy

Get a warranty quote

Save 12% on GAP Insurance

Use HJ21 to save on an ALA policy

See offer