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Home > Technical > To keep or not to keep...? |
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Tigger Member Since: 30 Mar 2011 Location: L15KRD Posts: 2555 |
How did “a nut get sucked in”?!
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26th Oct 2019 11:35 pm |
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Luke G Member Since: 26 Jan 2019 Location: Australia Posts: 88 |
An idiot (me) did some preventative maintenance and decided to remove the flaps in the inlet manifold. On refitting it all i found that one of the nuts that secures the egr pipe to the inlet manifold was missing. Thinking I’d put it down somewhere in my garage I just put a new one on. Sadly the original nut must have dropped off into the inlet manifold either during the removal or reinstalling and eventually, a few weeks later, got sucked in to the cylinder. Fortunately it occurred on start up in my garage and I quickly shut it down when the engine sounded like a chaff cutter. All really embarrassing really! |
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27th Oct 2019 3:26 am |
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Tigger Member Since: 30 Mar 2011 Location: L15KRD Posts: 2555 |
Ouch! Unlucky |
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27th Oct 2019 5:57 am |
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Drainpipe Member Since: 28 Sep 2019 Location: Lincolnshire Mountains Posts: 12 |
Keep it. If you’ve had it a while, it’s done quite a few km, it’s been good in the past, you know its history. Add this all up and it’s a keeper. Freelander 2 Metropolis. 2014 |
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27th Oct 2019 9:40 am |
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Chuckalicious Member Since: 23 May 2014 Location: Midlothian Posts: 1796 |
I'd say keep it too. Assuming the engine repair is done correctly, your car is probably better than it was before. You'll be unlikely to get back what you've put in if you sell it, so unless you want a new car and can afford it, keep what you've got.
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27th Oct 2019 10:19 am |
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Deafender Member Since: 09 Mar 2019 Location: Buckingham Posts: 98 |
Keep it I would say, especially if you do your own maintenance work and know your car.
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27th Oct 2019 12:08 pm |
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Drainpipe Member Since: 28 Sep 2019 Location: Lincolnshire Mountains Posts: 12 |
Have we made a decision? Freelander 2 Metropolis. 2014 |
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29th Oct 2019 1:13 pm |
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Luke G Member Since: 26 Jan 2019 Location: Australia Posts: 88 |
Many thanks to everyone for the advice. I think I’ll hold onto it. It’s been a great car to date and i am very much looking forward to firing it up again and taking it for a run. Further more, it’s in great condition and to replace it with something comparable would cost an absolute fortune in today’s dollars. |
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29th Oct 2019 6:00 pm |
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jules Member Since: 13 Dec 2007 Location: The Wilds of Warwickshire Posts: 5056 |
My TD Defender drove for a couple of years before the cracked pistons made themselves obvious. Unknown to me the previous owner had replaced valves etc (after a cambelt failure I should imagine) but missed the cracked pistons.
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29th Oct 2019 10:21 pm |
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Walenut Member Since: 17 Jun 2012 Location: Midlands Posts: 116 |
I had a cam belt go on a Ford Oroin some years ago. Cam shaft was broke into several pieces. Replaced the cylinder head with a Ford service exchange. Kept the car for another 40,000 miles. Big end bearings where a bit noisy but it ran ok. |
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30th Oct 2019 9:54 pm |
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Nodge68 Member Since: 15 Jul 2020 Location: Newquay Posts: 2082 |
Hi. I've just bought a FL2 with a misfire, which has suffered the same EGR nut in the intake issue. The vehicle was really cheap, so I took a chance on the repair being a detached deactivation flap. The damage was extensive, so I've got to replace the piston and 4 valves. I'm looking forward to get the engine up and running again.
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12th Aug 2020 8:29 am |
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