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Sorry for your loss. If you want any possibility of help at all, be nice. You have a car that needs an engine. You're not the first and they've been threatened before. What I'm most surprised about is that of the too many Porsche owner's that have experienced IMS failures that they haven't gotten together and hired an attorney for a class-action suit. The only possibility of change comes from strength in numbers. There are likely thousands of attorney's who own Porsches and don't want to be the next high-and-dry owner with a bad engine. Numbers have strength - You Tube and other threats - not so much. Fix your car and drive it for another 100,000 miles.
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Get your friends and put on a mock lottery to win a 2005 Porsche boxster. Show one of them drawing the winning ticket. He does a fist in the air, screaming, run around the bar. Show his girlfriend crying tears of joy. Show his fat best friend somersaulting down the bar counter. Then show the whole bar run out to see the lucky winner get the keys to the car and a Porsche jacket, like the green jacket when you win the Masters. He gets in the car turns the ignition and kaboom! The grim reaper shows up with the letters IMS on his chest. And the girlfriend lets out a horror movie scream. Lots of smoke coming from the cockpit. Grim reaper "ha ha ha your time has come! The soul of this PORSCHE engine has been claimed!" The driver shakes his head "noooo it cant be! Nooooo it only has 42k miles!! Grimm reaper laughs haha ha no porsche engine is safe! Ha ha ha....and asks for the keys. Everyone goes back in the bar calling him a loser. I also have an idea for a Let's Make a Deal plot where you pick door #3 after passing up a suitcase full of gold bars or something ... |
IMS bearing is removable:
Chewed up bearing support: http://986forum.com/forums/uploads01...1330413022.jpg That should be Porsche logo: http://986forum.com/forums/uploads01...1330413158.jpg Intact inside/outside vehicle: http://986forum.com/forums/uploads01...1330413210.jpg Greg |
I really appreciate your help
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(remember, polite and professional) |
I thought you were going to play diplomat first? I understand how you feel, I lost one at less than 30K with religious oil changes and I still don't know what exactly it was that fell into disrepair. I started out like Gandhi and think my final communique celebrated my father's participation in making sure the world didn't speak German. They simply don't care, we are peons to them and if you have a late model you bought used that goes double. They make a fantastic product with no safety net under it and frankly they make no bones about it. How do they get away with it without massive lawsuits? That I don't know, think you're pissed? Go read the 911 blogs of guys who spent north of 100G for a paper weight. A lot of them are sworn enemies of Porsche and would do anything to thwart a future sale. Will they someday be the German Kodak? If they keep that level of arrogance up you can bet on it. Everyone is going to expect VW to be awesome now and that is not going to be an easy trick to pull off. Paul is giving you solid advise, get your money and run, if you can't change the engine yourself all you are going to do is pay a painful amount for the Resurrection of your own car. It's likely cheaper to sell it as a roller and get another one if like me you want a Porsche. In fact 11AM today, I get to see what I bought blind!! (gulp)
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Good advice Ghost
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The question you should all be asking yourself is, why NOBODY have been able to legally, and scientifically of course, prove that the IMS bearing is indeed a manufacturing issue, and not 'something' else. Only until then, Porsche is going to admit it. No proof = they are just going to continue to blame how the car is driven, or not!, change oil(type) intervals, whatever they want. Etc
I find it quite nice of them to allow a few engine swaps at no cost, and some recalls, new engine put in etc, with no legal obligations |
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one $500 part is all the difference between years of joy and the bitter demise that leaves you groveling for mercy. |
Such a shame this happens / was allowed to happen. These are otherwise such utterly lovely, wonderful cars.
:-( |
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Regarding your course of action , the dealer will be the only person that can put pressure on Porsche , they will be able to quote potential loss of sales, bad publicity of the brand , etc , etc as reasons for a goodwill gesture by Stuttgart. If you can get to talk with the dealer principal and get them on your side you will have a better chance than relying on the service manager who is unlikely to have the authority or clout to get Porsche to help. Porsche will NEVER admit it is a design failure or manufacturing defect , as this opens them up to liability for all other failures , so they will simply say they are assisting you in an irregular and uncommon failure by a goodwill gesture. Even with a new engine there will be no guarantees outside the normal period of a replacement part , so the same could happen again. If you want to safeguard against the bearing failing in future , either fit a ceramic one or a higher spec item that can operate in low lubrication situations with reduced wear. |
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Even after these stories still so many people claim that this is all made up and the bearings don't fail~ |
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Greg |
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In all my research I've seen late models Boxsters with premature engine failures...I counted 43 on another forum most were from 97-99. I really like the car but research and a good prepurchase inspection is necessary when buying used. I believe as a last resort park the car across the street with a large sign describing how you were treated. May even want rent a nearby billboard?
All the attorneys driving these cars should get together and file a lawsuit....Many bad engines... |
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If you could look at this from an adult perspective then maybe you might understand what lawyers already know. THE DEALER IS NOT AT FAULT, they are really the owners only advocates and you idiots insist on alienating the only folks that could actually help. |
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I will not buy another new Porsche until they do. |
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[QUOTE=Boxeer;280133]IMS bearing is removable:
Chewed up bearing support: http://986forum.com/forums/uploads01...1330413022.jpg That should be Porsche logo: http://986forum.com/forums/uploads01...1330413158.jpg Why is the bearing completely dry? Any seal pieces in there? Do you have a pic down the IMS shaft. I don't think you could sue porsche directly, you would have to go after NSK for producing defective bearings causing more than 10,000$ in damages(leading to a class action). Then NSK would probably be forced into release the info implicating porsche and THIER design of the IMS bearing. I'm no lawyer, but I did play one in a 6th grade play. |
It is a good idea but I don't think the bearing design/quality can be put in relationship. As a mechanical engineer I have to choose bearing sometime and it is my responsibility to choose the right one that match my application. They just screwd the design deeply and they are ignoring it. It's already a miracle that the bearing did last 42k.
The use of a bearing was just a bad choice as it is impossible to quantify the play of it and plan a replacement before failure happens. A bearing has an L10: Bearing Life Estimation - load and life calculations - Pacamor Kubar Bearings Greg |
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