CornishRob
Senior member
So just to finish this off for anyone looking, what sort of costs should this come to at a decent Indy, parts and labour, assuming no damage found?
Beedub said:im not worried about this really.... will just add it to my maintenance cycle... bare in mind the TQ of my s/c kit will add addition wear to these shells... currently on 11700 miles, most of the miles on the car have been supercharged and harder
ga41 said:Yeah in Limassol. It's MAN Automotive Engineering who used to be near the Ktimatologio but are now in the Polemidia industrial area. They're very good albeit a bit expensive.
ap208_1988 said:ga41 said:Yeah in Limassol. It's MAN Automotive Engineering who used to be near the Ktimatologio but are now in the Polemidia industrial area. They're very good albeit a bit expensive.
I think we are talking about the same guy as I heard they moved. My uncle used to service his BMW there and I took him there a few times and I heard he is regarded as the best mechanic around from many people. I am not entirely happy with my mechanic even though he is not bad so I will consider him during my next service schedule.
https://www.facebook.com/pages/MAN-Automotive-Engineering-LTD/527935083938429Mr Whippy said:Beedub said:im not worried about this really.... will just add it to my maintenance cycle... bare in mind the TQ of my s/c kit will add addition wear to these shells... currently on 11700 miles, most of the miles on the car have been supercharged and harder
Given the vast majority of rod/bearing loadings are inertial to begin with, the extra torque at high rpm from the supercharger is probably negligible.
You could do the maths but it's probably 20% tops.
Has anyone ever found a link with this issue with the running in oil period/change? Maybe a long-term oil circulation issue? Are all the cars that suffer sitting in garages over winter not being used or are many of them daily cars?
I know it's a fast car, but lots of these fast road car engines struggle with sustained oil pick-up at high lateral g's... did they change anything for the M3 CSL wrt oil pickup!?
Given the amount of mega mileage M3's you see around these days it's clearly not a major issue generally, so it makes you wonder if it's something to do with the original running in or how the cars are used as they get older?
Hmmm
Dave
As a precaution, I had mine checked and replaced at 50k miles when I was having some other work done. They were pristineStevenH72 said:I'd be very interested to hear whether any UK based members have had any experience of having the rod bearings replaced as a proactive preventative measure (rather than a reactive one).
I'm seem to remember £1000 being chucked around in previous posts.
anybody?
BMWZ4MC said:As a precaution, I had mine checked and replaced at 50k miles when I was having some other work done. They were pristineStevenH72 said:I'd be very interested to hear whether any UK based members have had any experience of having the rod bearings replaced as a proactive preventative measure (rather than a reactive one).
I'm seem to remember £1000 being chucked around in previous posts.
anybody?I've forgotten what it added to the bill, but it wasn't a huge cost (at an Indy).
My car has been heavily tracked and driven hard on the road, but I routinely perform oil changes between schedule services and always use the recommended oil. How much effect that has had on protecting the bearing shells, I don't know....maybe I've just been lucky!