
Originally Posted by
BrianElloy
Are there any leading indicators?
It would appear so.
Had a very interesting chat today with a fella who was, up until approx 12 months ago, the head mech/main man for the local Dealership here in Hobart.
He has since started out on his own and is doing very well.
About to start doing timing chains on a D3 V6 petrol which are very noisy. Big job apparently but straightforward.
Anyway, we had a long conversation re engine failures, and he is in no doubt whatsoever that the cause is due to excessive klms between oil changes.
Oil dilution and deterioration caused by circa 26,000 klm intervals causing the conrod brgs to "pick up".
Went as far as to say he has never seen one go that had circa 10-12,000 klm oil changes throughout its life.
He commented that he was confident it is not a "crankshaft problem" per se, because he felt sure that LR would be able to trace any faulty cranks and have the means/be prepared to do a recall on the specific batch.
His comments sorta gives me much more confidence that the problem is avoidable simply by, if necessary, "over servicing" the engines and of course ensuring the correct oil is used.
As many of us are of the opinion anyway, 10,000 klms is not over servicing anyway.
I'd be interested to know if those unfortunate and unlucky persons who have had a failure are able to advise their vehicles servicing history, ie, what were the klm periods between oil changes during the engine's life, and was the correct oil always used, which would help further establish a pattern here.
Before: Ser 2a LWB, Ser 3 S/W, 1979 RR 2 door, 1981 LR Stage 1 V8 (new), 1985 LR 110 V8 County (new), 2009 RRS TDV8
Now: MY13 D4 TDV6. "E" rear diff. Cambo's magic Engine & Auto Tune. 1968 Austin 1800 Mk1 auto (my 5th)
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