Has anyone not not made that claim?Has anyone ever made that claim?
Pedantics.
Has anyone not not made that claim?Has anyone ever made that claim?
Serious question... pedantics in what way?Has anyone not not made that claim?
Pedantics.
APR also cannot flash back to stock before going to the dealer to avoid a TD1. No different than Cobb, IE, or any other tuning platforms.
Safe to say that the bullet point about resetting the flash counter on the ECU is worthless to MK7 owners
I thought I remembered years ago the APR stock tune was their version of the stock tune, not the OEM's actual stock tune, so if Germany actually looked at it, they would see it's not the VW tune.
I wouldn’t necessarily say that.
The bullet point has done an excellent job of keeping this thread bumped to the top of the forum, which has made more MK7 owners who may be interested in at home flashing with APR software aware of this product.
I do have to say thank you to everyone for that.
I wouldn’t necessarily say that.
The bullet point has done an excellent job of keeping this thread bumped to the top of the forum, which has made more MK7 owners who may be interested in at home flashing with APR software aware of this product.
I do have to say thank you to everyone for that.
Yes, the arrogance of APR is quite astounding.Cup is half full at least.
I meant pedantics for everyone else. It's like "They didn't specifically say blah blah blah so therefore they must be lying...."Serious question... pedantics in what way?
The post I quoted made this statement...
I'm legitimately asking if APR made a claim that flashing back to stock would avoid a TD1? I only yesterday found out APR even had tunes for the MK7 TDI so I've not been in their tuning threads.
This thread is about their new product to flash at home. Unless I missed somewhere that it was said flashing to stock would avoid a TD1... what point is the quoted statement making? Or what is it refuting?
GarbageYep. VW in the Fatherland knows exactly how often your car has been tuned - that information is stored in several places, and no aftermarket company can change that.
Once tuned, VW will know - if they have reason to check.
Honestly, what Arin said is so clear and unambiguous it boggles the mind that so many are hating on him. Everyone knows there is a flash counter. There is a lot of FUD about tuning that "VW knows how many times you car should have been flashed blah blah blah TD1 blah blah". So to shut that questionable door, APR can now reset that counter. Jeez, it's not that complicated. And I guess **SOME** ECU's might brick if you flash more than 'N' times without resetting the counter. That's a reasonable assumption. I doubt anyone knows exactly which ECU's have a limit and what it is, I don't see APR going to the expense and trouble to find out.Kind of seems like APR is making a big deal about being able to reset the flash counter which is a non-issue for every other software/hardware developer on this platform.
Perhaps APR should advertise other useless features like being able to use their device as a coaster, makeshift frisbee or a chew toy for small dogs.
What is?Garbage
Do you really believe that "refreshing to stock" can avoid getting flagged?Honestly, what Arin said is so clear and unambiguous it boggles the mind that so many are hating on him. Everyone knows there is a flash counter. There is a lot of FUD about tuning that "VW knows how many times you car should have been flashed blah blah blah TD1 blah blah". So to shut that questionable door, APR can now reset that counter. Jeez, it's not that complicated. And I guess **SOME** ECU's might brick if you flash more than 'N' times without resetting the counter. That's a reasonable assumption. I doubt anyone knows exactly which ECU's have a limit and what it is, I don't see APR going to the expense and trouble to find out.
And to clarify, as always, if you are tuned and you do not refresh to stock you are risking being flagged TD1 at the VW dealer - though typically they don't check unless they have a reason to.
Most of what loopless is saying. VW has other ways of discovering if a car has been tuned than just the flash counter. This is a stupid marketing bullet point. APR, the large, risk-averse company selling people warrantied ECU tunes, absolutely knows which ECUs have hard flash limits. Arin might not, but I don't think they put the guys reversing ECUs in charge of making forum posts.What is?
I loved the sentence "And to clarify, as always, if you are tuned and you do not refresh to stock you are risking being flagged TD1 at the VW dealer - though typically they don't check unless they have a reason to."Most of what loopless is saying. VW has other ways of discovering if a car has been tuned than just the flash counter. This is a stupid marketing bullet point. APR, the large, risk-averse company selling people warrantied ECU tunes, absolutely knows which ECUs have hard flash limits. Arin might not, but I don't think they put the guys reversing ECUs in charge of making forum posts.
Right on. If you are worried about your warranty, therefore the TD1 flag, you have no business flashing your car.Electric cars will be our only choice soon. Life is too short to worry about TD1. If you're worried about TD1, don't flash the car.
I'd be curious is there anywhere we can see the revision history / logs for the tunes? I'd like to know whether I have the latest flashed as of April last year, but also to be able to see if there are any improvements.We start with the OEM code. When you flash the car back to stock, it’s just the OEM file again. There’s no point in complicating it by making our own “stock” tune or something like that.