Archive for the 'Getz Maintenance' Category
Renewing your car registration
Yesterday, I went to the Land Transportation Office at Sto. Domingo in Quezon City to renew the car registration of my Hyundai Getz. It took me approximately an hour and a half to complete everything – a miracle! – so I was quite pleased. Good job, LTO.
Costs:
Emissions Test – Php420
Compulsory Third Party Liability (CTPL) – Php890
Actual registration – Php1960
Total: Php3270.00
I did not have to pay any fixers. I did not have to pay any tip money. To top it all off, the service was fast and efficient. I was quite surprised and pleased. Good job, LTO!
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Where did my Hyundai Getz tools go?
Two nights ago, I was setting up my kids’ new beds when I realized I needed a wrench to dismantle their existing wooden bedframe. “Aha!” I thought to myself, “the wrench of my Hyundai Getz!”
I went downstairs and to my Getz to getz it (Getz it? Get(z) it? lol), but I couldn’t find it! The whole tool set is missing! There’s a culture of borrowing things without permission (and not returning them) in the compound in which my family lives, but all the likely suspects deny it. I can’t recall using (and losing) it myself; I’m the type of person who will always return things to where I got them (thanks, Dad), so this is a big puzzle for me.
Meanwhile, I’m deathly terrified that I may run a flat and be unable to change the tire. So I guess I’m going to hie my fat ass to Ace Hardware and pick up a new set. I’ll let y’all know how expensive that’ll be so you’ll know how much you’ll need to spend if and when you need to replace your own set of tire tools. *sigh*
Update: I found them! They were underneath my spare tire! How they got there, I’ll never know. *facepalm*
No commentsHyundai Getz 45,000km checkup
My Hyundai Getz was checked in yesterday into Hyundai Global City – that’s the Hyundai service center at the Fort, my favorite place to get it checked-up – for her 45,000km checkup. I’ll post the checkup list later today, but just to give you a ballpark figure of how much I spent, I spent roughly Php3,300.
As predicted by my visitor Robbie, my Hyundai Getz’s Bosch headlights conked out. :p I decided to therefore go with Hyundai Fort Bonifacio to take care of it, even if it costs so much more than the bulbs available at Ace or Blade. It’s Php590 per piece. OUCH, right? Plus, Php400 for labor to install it. But I did the math, the bulbs I bought for a little less than Php800 lasted five months because I wasn’t ready for it. In theory, the Php1,500 I spent will last me at least two years. Worth it, because it’s all Hyundai original. Haaay.
No commentsYep… LTO still sucks
Yesterday, I took my Hyundai Getz and went to the Land Transportation Office branch along Sto. Domingo in Quezon City to renew my license. (It was my birthday. Happy birthday to me, wheee.)
I clocked in roughly 12:40pm. I left at approximately 3:45pm. That’s supposed to be faster? Please! *roll eyes*
Many of my friends said I should’ve gotten it done at the mall. Now that I think about it, I should have. It’s just frustrating that we can’t get the same level of service at all LTO branches. Plus, quite frankly, while the whole biometrics thing was cool, I dislike peeing with the door open. (Apparently a new policy.) The angle ensured the lady manning the computer might actually be able to see me peeing, and while my wedding ring is an effective deterrent to the exhibitionist in me, I really am not fond of using public toilets to do my business.
So there. I have three years to be bitter with the wasted three hours of my birthday life as well as this goshawful picture that makes me look so fat. Plus when I got back into my Hyundai Getz, sobrang init!
What are your license renewal or car registration stories?
4 commentsGina’s first major surgery
About two weeks ago, the front right tire of my Hyundai Getz started to squeak really loudly when I fetched my wife from work. We’re not talking the kind of bicycle-tire iki! iki! iki! sounds. We’re talking the kind of loud EEEEEEEEEEEEK! sound that attracts attention because it’s so darn loud and painful to the ears.
After driving a few hundred meters, I pulled over to the side and examined the tire. It looked okay, but when the car moved forward – even at snail’s pace – the front right tire made that horrible shrieking sound. So I decided to replace the tire with the spare tire, thinking maybe the sound would go away with a different tire. Big mistake. I managed to replace one nut. When I worked on the second one, the nut wouldn’t budge. After stepping on the ratchet – or whatever you call that thing you pop into the nut to loosen it – the head of the nut suddenly broke off, leaving the rest of the bolt’s screw inside the hole.
Well, we’re screwed now, aren’t we?, I thought to myself. The squeaking sound wouldn’t go away, we were miles and miles away from Hyundai Global City, and I didn’t want to travel any further than we should because at that point I thought our tire might just fall off! My options were Hyundai Manila Bay along Macapagal and Hyundai Otis, so we proceeded to Hyundai Otis.
It was there that we found out the extent of Gina’s sickness. Two of the nuts on the front right tire had fused into the metal plate behind the tire. To remove these would require sawing through the metal and basically breaking the plate. Replacement and labor: somewhere near Php2,000. Wait, it gets worse. As they went to check the driveshaft, they discovered that one of the central points of the mechanism was broken. The entire pipe would need to be replaced. With labor and parts, total cost was somewhere near Php9,000.00 total, despite a discount given by the service department of Hyundai Otis.
No choice, diba? So I gave the go-signal and basically lived without Gina for two days. This was the first time ever that I’d been separated from my Hyundai Getz overnight. For two nights. The separation anxiety was ridiculous. I commuted to work for the first time ever, and found that it wasn’t as bad as I would’ve thought. (And once the MRT line is complete along EDSA, stretching down past A. Bonifacio, I’ll definitely find it easier to commute.)
When I picked Gina up from Hyundai Otis, she was obviously in much better shape. All parts original, all service original, all bayad original (hahaha). I’m glad she’s okay.
How are your Hyundai Getzes? Any major surgery like Gina’s?
11 commentsAn Electric Hyundai Getz?
The green revolution has reached home base!
According to this article, the Australian edition of the Hyundai Getz has gotten a makeover, courtesy of Australian innovators Blade Electric Vehicles. The revamped Hyundai Getz has an electric motor driven by a lithium iron phosphate battery that can power the car 100km per single charge.
The folks at Blade have christened their new baby the Blade Electron. How different is that from Hyundai Getz? Other than the fact that it’s electric and has a different name, not much, apparently. The Electron has passed Australian safety standards on its two-speed automatic transmission. According to the article, “the great thing about this car is apart from the drivetrain, everything else is just Getz. The air-conditioner and power steering are driven by an auxiliary motor, so most of the driving experience remains constant and the Getz retains its character. The batteries take up little space and the luggage area is almost unaffected. Only 10cm of this space is taken up by the batteries and related electronics.”
Right now, the Electric Getz Blade Electron sells in India, and apparently, Australia, for our equivalent of – are you ready? – Php2,000,000!! Ouchies! I mean, I love the concept, and it’s terrific that we’re doing something to promote sustainable technology, but greenergy shouldn’t be this expensive. What do you think?
1 commentMerry Christmas 2009
Happy holidays, Getzers! May 2010 be a year of upgrades, lower gas prices, & personal joys for all of you. Thank you for passing by and sticking with Life With Gina!
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