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I brought my 2002 Saturn SL2 in to replace a battery and seal; only when I brought the car into the shop my odometer read less than 23,000 miles and afterwards it read 91,000 miles.

I was able to get records from two places that I had previously brought the car to that clearly tell the true odometer readings, proving that there was no way I was able to put an additional 65,000 miles on the car in that short time period. Any ideas of what I can do?

Rory Alsop
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Joshua Potvin
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3 Answers3

11

Saturn had a recall on this problem on L-Series vehicles. You may be having a similar problem on the S Series although I cannot find any information on it for your vehicle. Below is the recall info on the L-Series.

2000 - 2002 Saturn L-Series Vehicles (All Models) # 02-C-02 - (Aug 16, 2004)

INACCURATE ODOMETER READING AFTER LOSS OF BATTERY POWER (REPROGRAM BCM)

2000-2002 SATURN L-SERIES VEHICLES (ALL MODELS)

All Saturn Retailers and Service Providers

Saturn has decided that certain 2001 and 2002 model year L-Series vehicles were produced with Body Control Module (BCM) software that has a potential to calculate odometer values inaccurately. This can occur only after the vehicle has accumulated approximately 20,000 miles and the battery is then disconnected or power is interrupted for other reasons. In addition, certain 2000, 2001 and 2002 L-Series vehicles serviced with a replacement Body Control Module may exhibit the same condition.

To prevent the possibility of this condition occurring, retailers will upgrade the BCM software.

VEHICLES INVOLVED

Only selected 2000 - 2002 mode/year L-Series Saturn vehicles within the following VIN ranges will require this campaign:

2002 Model Year VIN Range (All Models) = 500037 - 515922

2001 Model Year VIN Range (All Models) = 500033 - 592301

2000 Model Year VIN Range (All Models) = A VIN listing of involved vehicles is shown for your reference.

It's at least worth checking out. Check with your local shop or GM dealer about reprogramming the BCM. Note this is not just correcting mileage in the BCM it's a software update. You can't just change the mileage in the BCM.

6

Here is how this could have happened on the 2002 BMW I used to own. I know the guts of that car particularly well, I am sure the Saturn is similar.

The mileage is actually stored in two places in the car. One place is the instrument cluster and the second is in the DME (the "computer"), both of those will count up the miles independently. If the cluster is replaced it will have an incorrect mileage, but you can use the scan tool to have the cluster updated to the "correct" mileage as stored in the computer.

My bet is that when you bought the car, it had a junkyard or tampered instrument cluster put in that showed an incorrect 23k reading while the car's computer retained the correct 91k reading.

When a battery fails it often generates lots of incorrect error codes because the low voltage confuses various sensors. So, after the battery was replaced the garage attached their scanner/programmer tool and fixed those errors.

One of the errors they fixed was correcting the incorrect cluster mileage using the mileage stored in the car's computer.

The garage did nothing wrong in all of this. If you want to find out who is responsible for the 65k of instant mileage and depreciation, you would needed to go back to the person who sold you the car and fraudulently misrepresented the mileage.

I'll include the same caveat as @Paulster2, if you bought this car new something much more interesting must have happened.

chilljeet
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Ukko
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It appears to me you bought a car which had the mileage rolled back on it. The only way I'd consider myself wrong in this is if you bought it new.

When an odometer has been tampered with, sometimes they stay where they are supposed to and other times it can revert. This really depends on the vehicle and the device used to monkey with the odometer. The battery replacement could have caused. The mileage is actually stored in several places (I've heard like nine). I'm thinking the original mileage could have been stored in permanent memory, with the altered mileage stored in the displayed memory which may be volatile. When the battery power was gone and the residual power drained, the odometer reverted back to main memory.

I don't think the shop would have done anything to actually cause this ... they'd have no reason to do something which would change the mileage on the vehicle. I would put it most likely on the person who sold the car to the dealership who is probably the culprit, but it could just as easily have been the dealership who did it. The thing you should believe to be true is that the odometer was messed with. What you don't know is the who and not way to really prove the who. Again, this all is an educated guess on my part, but seems plausible.

Pᴀᴜʟsᴛᴇʀ2
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