Not sure there’s a legitimate reason to reject here and nothing to suggest it’s a lemon.
You certainly can’t compare experience with a 2015 diesel, they’re worlds apart in terms of the requirements demanded to achieve emissions targets and the technology at play. Plus different cars are designed differently - if the DPF is closer to the engine it gets warmer naturally for instance.
i also doubt you can complain that no one mentioned the DPF at purchase. That’s like saying no one told you the car has a radiator or other similar essential parts. It’s part of a Diesel engine, simple as (I assume you know about AdBlu too? If not, get googling urgently).
My understanding of DPFs though is never, ever turn off in the middle of a cycle (indicated by the symptoms your wife experienced). It’s sometimes difficult to do in practice (what do you do if you’ve just arrived at work?!), but you need to keep going and let the cycle complete. I believe the lower mpg is the fuel being used to power the regeneration.
I’ll defer to others who know the engineering better, but I don’t think you’re experiencing anything unique to your car given the usage. I suspect every GLA would behave the same, but different brands will have different tolerances ..... they’ll all need to trigger the re-gen at some stage though.
For comparison, my BMW diesel runs incredibly hot (and ‘smells’ hot) infrequently so I know it’s completing a re-gen.... but I frequently do single trips of 175 miles without stopping at 70 mph. I honestly wouldn’t want to run it for shorter trips like yours though - that sounds like petrol territory, not current diesel.
Good luck though, re-post what happens!
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