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Home > Technical > Turbo failure B*57HHE |
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alex_pescaru Member Since: 12 Mar 2009 Location: RO Posts: 4642 |
Part of the inlet tubing must be removed for changing the timing belt... |
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15th Sep 2021 8:31 am |
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jules Member Since: 13 Dec 2007 Location: The Wilds of Warwickshire Posts: 5021 |
Difficult to know what has gone wrong without more info.
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15th Sep 2021 8:59 am |
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jules Member Since: 13 Dec 2007 Location: The Wilds of Warwickshire Posts: 5021 |
Wouldn't be the first time someone dropped a nut into the inlet. But you'd think it would make a horrid noise very soon after starting. Jules |
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15th Sep 2021 9:02 am |
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Jnjsse Member Since: 15 Sep 2021 Location: Hampshire Posts: 8 |
Thanks for the replies, I spoke to the garage who done the timing belt who said no pipes needed to be moved so i'm even more uncertain now!
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15th Sep 2021 9:58 am |
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Jnjsse Member Since: 15 Sep 2021 Location: Hampshire Posts: 8 |
Yes, he just said they'd look after anything big, i am wary of warranties on used cars, but i am still within the time frame to reject it if they can't prove the timing belt work is the reason for the failure. Hoping to know more on Friday |
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15th Sep 2021 10:02 am |
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Nodge68 Member Since: 15 Jul 2020 Location: Newquay Posts: 2082 |
I know all about that.
2009 Rimini Red SE TD4. Gone. 2006 Tonga Green i6 HSE. Gone. Audi A5 convertible, my daily driver. 1972 Hillman Avenger GT, the project. |
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18th Sep 2021 10:00 am |
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alex_pescaru Member Since: 12 Mar 2009 Location: RO Posts: 4642 |
See below at 1:27. And this one, at 7:57 |
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18th Sep 2021 4:43 pm |
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Jnjsse Member Since: 15 Sep 2021 Location: Hampshire Posts: 8 |
Thanks again for the replies. I should hear tomorrow what the problem is (or atleast what the mechanic is told to say) something doesn't feel right about the situation so I may get a examination done on the car before I collect it.
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19th Sep 2021 2:54 pm |
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merlinj79 Member Since: 13 Aug 2019 Location: San Diego Posts: 315 |
The turbo itself should tell at least part of the story...
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19th Sep 2021 4:44 pm |
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DEG5Y Member Since: 22 Jul 2016 Location: Widnes Posts: 162 |
Don't see how the two items would affect each other but as a coincidence, I had the
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4th Oct 2021 8:58 pm |
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Jagracer Member Since: 22 Feb 2019 Location: east anglia Posts: 198 |
Having replaced two turbos recently, I will throw a spanner into the works. A hole in a turbo pressure pipe can squeal like a stuck pig, so can a seized bearing on an alternator, or a turbo bearing about to seize through lack of oil. The changed Cambelt is a sales ploy to get you to buy the car. Nobody does repairs just before selling a car round here, they put sawdust in the sump and paint on the tyres. An electrically faulty Turbo is shot. The actuator has seized, hence the over boost that has put a hole in the pipe or intercooler. The oil in the pipe is normal, and comes from the EGR valve, which seize as well, and are the reason the turbo actuator goes wrong. I had a bloke tell me once that his boss said that a missing main spar in the wing of an aircraft he was servicing was not a reason to stop the plane flying, most garage mechanics have the same mindset unfortunately. I am sure that there are good people out there somewhere, but they are hard to find. |
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5th Oct 2021 2:51 pm |
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Jnjsse Member Since: 15 Sep 2021 Location: Hampshire Posts: 8 |
Hi, Thanks for the reply and apologies for not replying sooner, you were right the noise was a split in the pipe (it took his mates garage 3 weeks to diagnose) the car has now been returned with me losing some money which i'm ok with as i think i have avoided owning a head ache, he did not even acknowledge the other faults still present with the car.
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23rd Oct 2021 2:49 pm |
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