RandallNeighbour |
10-16-2007 08:53 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by tholyoak
The RMS issue, is not an issue in most cases, Porsche has never made an engine that didn't drip a little oil. Talk to any air cooled 911 owner. Replace the seal with the latest seal when you need to replace the clutch, no big deal.
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There's another source of RMS failure beyond the seal itself being poorly made or fitting loosely or stretching due to heat and age, etc.
It's easy to assume that seal itself is bad and just needs replacement (Dealers often make this assumption when they replace a RMS under warranty). Porsche did make a bunch of crappy ones in the early years of the 986 and 996, but they still have RMS issues with the 997's and the 987's.
But that's not the entire nature of many RMS leaks by any means.
The shaft being out of round causes the RMS to wear out prematurely, stretching it and even tearing it in places. My MY97 had its engine replaced before I bought it... although I have no records, I wonder about this very thing as the cause for my engine replacement.
So, we have two problems surrounding the RMS issue. Crappy first, second, third, and even fourth generation rear main seals; and crappy manufacturing going on inside the engine which causes the RMS to fail.
Just thought I'd throw in this mix to add one more reason for RMS failure and how to attack the problem if you have more than one RMS failure in a relatively short time span.
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