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Date:         Mon, 10 Mar 2003 15:45:14 -0500
Reply-To:     The Bus Depot <vanagon@BUSDEPOT.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         The Bus Depot <vanagon@BUSDEPOT.COM>
Subject:      Re: tialpipes of busdepot
In-Reply-To:  <196.16f844d9.2b9e49aa@aol.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"

> The tailpipe I got from busdepot clearly would not fit > a stock vanagon. It was of good quality steel and > one fourth the cost of the true VW part. If you are > not opposed to doing some cutting the busdepot > tailpipe is a better choice for off road use as it > rides much higher. The vw part points down a bit > and rides a little low for off road use. ... > I still would like some mechanism to know that > when I order a vw parts from busdepot I > know when substitutions are being made.

The tailpipe we sell, under normal circumstances, definitely DOES fit a stock Vanagon. We sell many hundreds of them a year to Vanagon owners. They are made by Jopex, who is one of several OEM exhaust suppliers to VW. So it is in fact an OEM brand, even if not the same one that VW may be currently shipping at this time. (That changes often, depending on contracts, availability, etc., and can even vary from country to country.)

While the currently shipped VW brand tailpipe does have a somewhat lower angle, the Jopex one DOES have a sharp enough bend to clear the bumper. If yours didn't, then either the tailpipe you received is bent incorrectly, or something else on your particular Vanagon is. As you know, Gary, we're refunding you on the tailpipe since you bought a dealer one instead. So upon receiving it, I'll know which was the case. But we do sell hundreds of them a year, and they do fit, so this particular one was (for whatever reason) the exception, not the rule. I thought it might be important to point that out to those who may otherwise conclude that the Bus Depot ships hundreds of Vanagon tailpipes that don't fit Vanagons. :-)

As far as brands/substitutions, most of the products we sell are manufactured by OEM suppliers to VW, but are generally not the VW brand. As you discovered, there is typically a HUGE difference in price between the VW brand and the equivalent OEM product. For example, $32 versus $19 for a rear hatch strut, both from the same factory. Or $150 for a Bosch air flow meter under the Bosch name, versus about $400 for the same part under the VW name. In the vast majority of the cases the quality (and indeed the part itself!) is identical - only the price differs. Why don't the parts sold by us and other aftermarket suppliers carry the VW brand? Because it's trademarked. Contractually, often the manufacturer can only use the VW trademark on those parts that he is selling to VW. While he can sell the part to other suppliers (such as us), he cannot use the VW logo. That's why, in many cases, on aftermarket OEM parts such as ours if you look closely you'll see a spot where the VW logo was removed from the part, or where the manufacturer's logo has neatly replaced it. Of course, if you would rather use nothing but VW-brand parts, you can always go to the dealer. But for every case where you get a different (although not necessarily superior) part that way, there will likely be 50 other cases where you simply paid several times the price for the same part out of the same factory.

In cases where the part we ship is not an OE part, it's generally because an OE part is either unavailable, or so ridiculously expensive that nobody in their right mind would buy it. (Or where the aftermarket part is actually better, as with our stainless steel Vanagon crossover pipes, sold for the same price as VW's mild steel ones.) My guiding rule has always been that I won't sell a part that I wouldn't feel comfortable putting on my own Vanagon (OEM or not). Unlike people like thepartsbin.com, for whom Vanagons are barely a footnote, we are Vanagon enthusiasts and we drive them everyday. We use the parts on our own vans, and know from personal experience what lasts (or works) and what doesn't. One way that I can tell you that our tailpipes generally fit is that besides the hundreds I've sold, I also have one on my own '89 Westy.

There is another very important benefit to dealing with a Vanagon specialist. We support you as a Vanagon driver, and will continue to long after non-specialists and even the dealer have moved on to more popular vehicles. For example, unlike generic auto parts suppliers, I personally make huge efforts to find parts that are not longer available through the usual channels. If a part is discontinued in the U.S., I'll look all over the world before giving up on it. Maybe it's still available in Germany, South Africa, etc. Maybe I can find old stock (if not in the U.S. then perhaps in Europe). Maybe someone I know could tool up to make it. If I hear of a stash of rare old parts, I'll trek half way across the world to check it out. It's this kind of devotion to our hobby that will keep your Vanagon on the road, affordably, over the long haul. Do you think that if a particular critical part for a Vanagon were discontinued in the U.S., a generic auto parts supplier like thepartsbin.com would bother looking for another source? Why should they, when Vanagon owners represent perhaps 1 or 2 percent of their customer base? It's just not worth their effort. Even Volkswagen themselves have drastically reduced their support for Vanagon parts, and seems to be more than willing to discontinue coolant hoses and other such items without which the van will not run. With the Vanagon about to become not just one, but two, generations old when the T5 comes out, this situation will only worsen. Without parts suppliers who were dedicated to these unique vehicles, where would you be in five years when you needed a part that was somewhat more obscure than a tailpipe (but no less important)?

So there is a direct benefit to you as a Vanagon owner to supporting the specialists who support you - not just the Bus Depot, but the other dedicated specialists on this list as well. At the end of the day, we're the ones whom you will need to count on. We're the ones who will be there to help you out of a jam - long after both the generic parts suppliers, and VW themselves, have written off Vanagon owners as not being a lucrative enough market to bother with.

Not that this last point has anything to do with Gary's comments whatsoever, but I thought it worth pointing out nonetheless, since I was already off on a tangent anyway. :-)

- Ron Salmon The Bus Depot, Inc. www.busdepot.com (215) 234-VWVW

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