The permanent license plates are in already - at a scant 9 calendar days (or a few less). On the heels of the title number being issued by Wednesday June 6, we were notified by postcard today that the live plates (the Jamestown "America's 400th Anniversary" plate) had arrived.
At least three people, one on the Dodge side and Roger and Wolf on the Subaru side, offered to put the plates on, but, alas, I had the Saturn VUE, as the better half had the Tribeca on the road to Pennsylvania.
EDIT: 9:45 PM - as it turns out, one of the temp tags was lost in the heavy rains in PA this evening, so the permanent plates could not have come at a better time.
Friday, June 8, 2007
Thursday, June 7, 2007
First commute action
Wednesday we placed the Tribeca in service for the commute to work for the first time. Traffic was poor as usual, so we hit the cutoffs over to Old Centreville Road rather than staying on 28. The Tribeca handled the speed bumps on the one section very smoothly - these speed bumps are made to practically destroy vehicles going the speed limit (25 MPH), forcing most vehicles to slow down to 5 MPH. The Tribeca handled them about 15 MPH with little effect on the ride.
Due to unexpected events, we did not get to test the Tribeca out in afternoon rush-hour traffic home. That will be for another day.
Due to unexpected events, we did not get to test the Tribeca out in afternoon rush-hour traffic home. That will be for another day.
Wednesday, June 6, 2007
Manassas Subaru files with DMV with Lightning speed
Manassas Subaru continues to impress - today marks a week since we purchased our 2007 Tribeca. This afternoon, I went to register the vehicle with the City of Manassas Commissioner of the Revenue' s office, and pay the City Treasurer for a City decal for the remainder of 2007. When the CoR's employee entered the car into the system, the title number pulled up in the system, a scant week after the purchase. The clerk commented on the speed with which it was entered, stating that it was not the norm, and that often it takes weeks.
The City printed the title number on the decal receipt, and, as a result, we were able to purchase our Penn State plate for the new car, "ROOAAR", from the Virginia DMV well prior to receipt of the first-issue permanent plates. It may take DMV up to four weeks to get us the new plates, so we might need the regular issue plates (on the Jamestown design) for a short time, as the 30-day tags will be up in that fourth week on the new plate order.
So Kudos to the Manassas Subaru team for their flawless execution. I learned last night that a friend had looked at Subarus last September at Manassas and gave glowing reviews of the very same Roger Holt. Mr. Holt, like with us, insisted our friend take a vehicle to his wife for her to see. Although they liked the Impreza, their family situation drove them in a different direction that time, but the treatment they received guarantees that Subaru will get first look when their next need arises.
The City printed the title number on the decal receipt, and, as a result, we were able to purchase our Penn State plate for the new car, "ROOAAR", from the Virginia DMV well prior to receipt of the first-issue permanent plates. It may take DMV up to four weeks to get us the new plates, so we might need the regular issue plates (on the Jamestown design) for a short time, as the 30-day tags will be up in that fourth week on the new plate order.
So Kudos to the Manassas Subaru team for their flawless execution. I learned last night that a friend had looked at Subarus last September at Manassas and gave glowing reviews of the very same Roger Holt. Mr. Holt, like with us, insisted our friend take a vehicle to his wife for her to see. Although they liked the Impreza, their family situation drove them in a different direction that time, but the treatment they received guarantees that Subaru will get first look when their next need arises.
Tuesday, June 5, 2007
First road experience
Last weekend, Saturday June 2, 2007 and Sunday June 3, 2007, gave us the opportunity to take our Tribeca to the highway. Our travels on Saturday took us down as far as Ashland, Va., before coming back to our final destination near Beaverdam, Va. The little bit of extra driving allowed us to test the Points of Interest feature on the navigation system, assisting us in finding a grocery store in Ashland. (Ukrops) For the most part, we were dealing with known terrority, but such territory is necessary to learn the ins and outs of the system.
Where Saturday's weather was clear and calm, Sunday was rain, rain and rain some more. It started with a quick switch-out of the floor mats from the carpeted to the all-weather. Doing this in the rain without having examined them prior was not hard - each of the four mats were unique in size and shape, and removing the carpeted ones one-by-one made the match up go quickly.
The conditions also gave a good chance to drive the Tribeca in wet weather, and better yet, test out the views and clearances in such conditions. Traffic was snarled on I-95 for the trip back north to Alexandria, crashing to a halt at the Massaponax exit. We got off at US-1 decided to get out of the rain at Central Park in Fredericksburg, eventually lunching at the new Cracker Barrel at exit 130 (well, new compared to the Massaponax one at exit 126), and proceeded on Fall Hill Ave back over to US-1 for the trip north. (Fall Hill crosses over I-95 just south of the southbound visitors' center) Route 1 really wasn't all that bad, so although the Nav system kept suggesting back to I-95 at every chance, we stayed on 1 all the way up.
Sunday evening allowed us the chance to take the Tribeca on some of the back roads in southwestern Fairfax County, Va., in particular, Henderson Road on the way to Yates Ford to get back to Manassas. The handling of the Subaru engine was in stark contrast to the Honda engine in our 2004 VUE, with the Subaru being easier.
All told, we went from having 20 miles on it at the start of Saturday to almost 220 by the end of Sunday, after having driven all of four miles on Wednesday, May 30th, and none on Thursday and Friday.
Where Saturday's weather was clear and calm, Sunday was rain, rain and rain some more. It started with a quick switch-out of the floor mats from the carpeted to the all-weather. Doing this in the rain without having examined them prior was not hard - each of the four mats were unique in size and shape, and removing the carpeted ones one-by-one made the match up go quickly.
The conditions also gave a good chance to drive the Tribeca in wet weather, and better yet, test out the views and clearances in such conditions. Traffic was snarled on I-95 for the trip back north to Alexandria, crashing to a halt at the Massaponax exit. We got off at US-1 decided to get out of the rain at Central Park in Fredericksburg, eventually lunching at the new Cracker Barrel at exit 130 (well, new compared to the Massaponax one at exit 126), and proceeded on Fall Hill Ave back over to US-1 for the trip north. (Fall Hill crosses over I-95 just south of the southbound visitors' center) Route 1 really wasn't all that bad, so although the Nav system kept suggesting back to I-95 at every chance, we stayed on 1 all the way up.
Sunday evening allowed us the chance to take the Tribeca on some of the back roads in southwestern Fairfax County, Va., in particular, Henderson Road on the way to Yates Ford to get back to Manassas. The handling of the Subaru engine was in stark contrast to the Honda engine in our 2004 VUE, with the Subaru being easier.
All told, we went from having 20 miles on it at the start of Saturday to almost 220 by the end of Sunday, after having driven all of four miles on Wednesday, May 30th, and none on Thursday and Friday.
Manasss Subaru - A Pleasant Experience
This was title was already posted on the main relantel.net, but it is worth mentioning it again in an update.
We dropped off our 2007 Tribeca yesterday for the additional protections to be applied, and Roger Holt and Wolf Asser again were both there, and both spent time out of their day talking to us. Mr. Asser took care of the keys and write-up, and Mr. Holt thought to check an area of previous concern (emailed on 5-30) that I had forgotten about - an item that turned out to be nothing more than adhesive from the protective coating.
We dropped off our 2007 Tribeca yesterday for the additional protections to be applied, and Roger Holt and Wolf Asser again were both there, and both spent time out of their day talking to us. Mr. Asser took care of the keys and write-up, and Mr. Holt thought to check an area of previous concern (emailed on 5-30) that I had forgotten about - an item that turned out to be nothing more than adhesive from the protective coating.
2007 Subaru Tribeca
We had occaision to purchase a 2007 Subaru B9 Tribeca Limited, 7 passenger version with Navigation and rear DVD system on May 30, 2007, from Manassas Subaru. The purchase process was painless, and the crew at Manassas Subaru was top notch, going above and beyond expectations at every step.
Some prior comments on the car on the parent blog, relantel.net:
Kudos to Subaru of America
Manassas Subaru - A Pleasant Experience
Some prior comments on the car on the parent blog, relantel.net:
Kudos to Subaru of America
Manassas Subaru - A Pleasant Experience
Monday, June 4, 2007
Kudos to Subaru of America
Our recent purchase of a 2007 Subaru Tribeca featured version 1.1 of their navigation software. A visit to my.subaru.com this AM saw version 2.0 for sale on there, for a price of $248. I was curious how long the new version had been out, so I sent an email from their contact form online. Specifically, I wanted to know whether the 2.0 had been released before we had purchased our Tribeca on 5-30-07. The answer was yes, but that 1.1 was current when our vehicle was manufactured. I had stated I didn't feel paying $248 was right if 2.0 had already been released, and although I did not specifically request it, Subaru will be sending the 2.0 version to us free of charge. Subaru's response was lightning fast for a web form - under two hours. And in a stark contrast with Saturn, Subaru did not attempt to make excuses, they made it right. Subaru appears to understand customer service. $248 might not seem like much after purchasing a car of over $30k, but Subaru exhibited yet another reason why they are a good company to deal with. Their small act of "goodwill" will get retold as much as Saturn's failure to back their product.
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