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jules Member Since: 13 Dec 2007 Location: The Wilds of Warwickshire Posts: 5017 |
"In January 2022, BMW released a statement acknowledging the presence of a technical issue with the N57 engine which may have contributed to instances of police vehicles in the United Kingdom catching fire, including one case in January 2020 which resulted in the death of a British police officer.[4] This issue led to police forces across the United Kingdom withdrawing, retiring or limiting the speed of vehicles powered by the N57 engine, preventing their use in pursuits.[5] In the press release, BMW stated “This issue is associated with the particular way in which the police operate these high-performance vehicles […] there is no need for action on civilian vehicles”.[4]
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15th Jan 2023 9:42 pm |
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NoDo$h Member Since: 27 May 2008 Location: fings go booooom. Posts: 490 |
There's some conjecture that repeated prolonged idling, followed by short bursts of high speed, resulted in a DPF cycle that greatly increased oil dilution. If that resulted in a bearing shell spinning, you're going to see a pretty rapid and catastrophic failure of the engine, with parts bursting through sumps etc.
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15th Jan 2023 10:07 pm |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4906 |
The problem might be more to do with always having the cars idling when on jobs but not actually chasing someone. Procrastination, mankind's greatest labour saving device!
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15th Jan 2023 11:58 pm |
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NoDo$h Member Since: 27 May 2008 Location: fings go booooom. Posts: 490 |
I think a couple of other German auto manufacturers have tried that previously and got into a spot of bother over it
Some reports I've seen reference the use of "run lock" where cars will be at the scene of an incident, sometimes for hours, with engines running to keep lights etc. active. There's a reasonable chance that other countries have a different approach. Certainly when I and a couple of friends had cause to close an autobahn near Augsburg due to a serious accident that happened directly in front of us, the Polizei that turned up placed a bunch of cones behind our cars and then turned all their lights etc off. Once they'd taken our statements and the air ambulance was clear they waved us through and left the cones in place while they took measurements, pics etc. then re-opened about 15 mins later. Whole lot from "woah.... Stop! Stop! Stop!", calling it in and getting on the radio to the other rally crews to us departing the scene after the casualty was evacuated was around 25 minutes. Total scene closure circa 40 minutes, and this was a really nasty one, with 2 vehicles at autobahn speeds hitting a lady who had exited her broken down car in the outside lane. In the UK that section of motorway would have been closed for upwards of 4 hours and every police vehicle from a 10 mile radius would be there with every single light on for the duration of the incident. I guess their reasoning was "the traffic back there is stationary for 3 km, so nobody is going to blast up to these cones at 150kmh because I don't have my blue lights all over the place. They seem to use blue lights to get to a scene, rather than to secure it. Current driveway contents: 2021 V60 Cross Country B5 2009 FL2 dog bus and shooting wagon On Order: 2023 Fisker Ocean Ultra - deposit paid. |
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16th Jan 2023 9:32 am |
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MartynB Member Since: 08 Aug 2011 Location: Currently Rootless ! Posts: 1780 |
Of course you also have to look at why BMW would pull out of their entire ‘ Authority ‘ sales which covered more than just the police . The suspect engines in the police vehicles are no more , they were replaced several years ago . Consider that the vehicles were supplied at huge discounts , as would be spares . BMW would not benefit from service work generally as the police vehicles would be serviced in house . All the expensive conversion work was carried out by 3rd parties , not BMW . Fine when that business was incremental above normal operating profits .
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16th Jan 2023 11:40 am |
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IanMetro Member Since: 11 Sep 2017 Location: Somerset BS21 Posts: 3133 |
I had seen similar 'BMW stopping UK Government Supply' inspired stories around for a couple of weeks, but not giving the above DPF reasons, and including link to Jaguar giving way to Audi as Official Government Cars.
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16th Jan 2023 3:07 pm |
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jules Member Since: 13 Dec 2007 Location: The Wilds of Warwickshire Posts: 5017 |
Indeed as MartynB says, high margin cars is where the profit is. Jules |
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16th Jan 2023 4:15 pm |
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