As close as it gets: IMS Save!
Here's one I did this week.
The car had a weird rattling noise when I pulled it in the shop. I've never seen one this far gone that hadn't totally failed: http://986forum.com/forums/uploads01...1409924931.jpg |
This customer trailered his car from about 75 miles away. If he had driven, it would have never made it.
The car has 44k miles. 2000 2.7, twin-row bearing. |
Thanks for posting that. Nice to see those get caught before catastrophic failure. Any idea how long it had been since the last oil change and if the owner or shop had been examining the filter? For my $ I can see the bright side of a failure as a chance for an engine upgrade, but I have pretty much decided that I am going to put one of Mr Raby's IMS Guardians in as soon as I get the basic to-do list completed.
All the helicopters I have flown have a 'chip detector' installed for the engine and gearboxes, which is basically the same thing. If the warning light comes on, I don't fly to the next repair shop. I land. |
The good news about this one is that it was failing on the IMS side, not the engine side.
All the metal was isolated in the shaft. Although it took a while to clean up, it was contained. The pan and filter were clean. I fly turboprops with chip detectors, this would not have set that off. That's the scary part. |
What prompted the owner to bring the car into the shop?
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He just purchased the car and thought an IMS retrofit was a good idea.
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Many people who get the guardian will remove it once it alarms and sell the car to an unsuspecting buyer. |
At least it HAD a symptom...the rattling. The metal debris going only into the IMS tube is a scary possibility...but if I heard a weird rattling coming from that area the IMS would be on the table as a list of possible sources
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I'd rebuild the entire engine. Just sayin'. |
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That said, Series 9... That engine isn't saved yet. In its current state with metal debris suspended that heavily in the oil, the engine isn't qualified for an LN retrofit. You'll have to carry out extensive oil system flushes, employ a spin on filter adaptor (to omit the bypass system that will send unfiltered oil to the rest of the engine) and then fit with a filter mag. Even with all that done, the chances of the retrofit component being taken out by even the slightest residual amount of this ferromagnetic material is great. Looks like a good place to employ a competitors product, to me.. Please post the results! :-) That said, this amount of debris would have set an IMS Alert with an IMS Guardian. The engines and IMSBs I killed here on purpose during the development were often times not as great as this one is illustrated. If this engine was at my facility, it would come all the way apart and be ultrasonically cleaned. Why? Because I want to maintain my record of 414 IMS Retrofits with never having a post- process failure and if a retrofitted bearing that we install fails later, we aren't just another shop that can throw the finger at the retrofit component as being bad. No retrofit component can live through super heat treated ferromagnetic debris being suspended in the oil, and it won't just take out the IMS Bearing, it'll take out the oil pump, main and rod bearings and all the rest of the internally lubricated components... The smaller and finer the debris is, the easier it suspends in the oil and the further it travels. I'd rather have chunks in the oil as tiny, microscopic particles. Yes, we've learned from the mistakes of others. The Code Of Conduct that our IMS Solution Certified Installers must operate under will not allow them to apply a retrofit component to an engine that has seen a failure of this degree thats been pictured here. One of them did this last year and when he returned the old bearing to register it, his Certification was pulled within 2 hours. Approach with care and warn the owner. Lots of engines that are "saved", shouldn't be. The perfect engine for a retrofit is the one with a "perfect" IMS Bearing at the time of retrofit. Also, trust that the outer seal fails at the same rate as the inner seal of the IMS Bearing. As the balls and races lose control the wobbling and vibration take the seals out simultaneously. On the outer side of the IMSB high amounts of engine oil are present to wash the metal off the bearing and into the oil system. This is why the outside of the bearing appeared to be clean. It may have been clean, but the debris is just inside every nook and cranny of the engine, now. On the innermost side, thats pictured and shows all the material, there's no engine oil supply to wash the metal away and elsewhere into the engine. This is why it appears that all the metal was caught in the shaft, but thats not the case. I have done the forensics on these episodes a few dozen times and can state this with a degree of certainty. None of this is new.. Its not only common sense, its posted and stated many times over, including here: http://imsretrofit.com/bearing-already-failing/ |
So the stock filter housing allows an amount of unfiltered oil to circulate always? Or only once the sprung bypass is loaded with a certain amount of oil pressure?
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Probably not any legal recourse for an as-is type of sale, but there are ways of making a dishonest seller regretful.... |
I believe the stock housing allows bypassed oil on start up. For that reason I just went to the LN Spin on adapter.
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^^ +1 :cheers:
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Regardless of morals I don't see how any of these sellers have the guts to sell a car with a dosing ims knowing it is likely to go out on a test drive. It is a very immediate issue as we all know. failure appears to happen within the first week or so of ownership on these guardian cars. How pins and needles it must be for the seller on the test drives is unimaginable.
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Thank God that I replaced mine. It was in perfect looking condition and the seals were in good shape. I am sleeping very peacefully now. Especially since the RMS was replaced, along with the water pump, clutch, and the air oil separator at the same time. yes the total cost was $3k for all of that, but it was totally worth it. ;)
If the engine every does give out, I am going to ship the car straight to Arizona and have the V-8 conversion completed on it for $7k :dance: |
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To get GT3 type power from the V8 you're probably in the $20k region and that's before you tweak the suspension. |
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The filter thats used and how clean that filter is also increases the loads that the bypass sees.. Thats why long service intervals that are recommended by the factory suck so bad, the dirtier the filter, the more oil is bypassed. Some cars will see some bypass oil at all times because of variables like these. When a failure occurs the filter does it's job well, until the pressure within the filter housing is elevated due to a partially blocked filter, and the bypass opens. Its at that moment when the main and rod bearings see collateral damage from debris suspended in the oil. Its pressure fed death. |
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In an ideal world, perhaps. Not everyone is able or willing to spend $20k on a car that's worth $9k. He'll be doing oil/filter changes at 500 mile intervals for a couple thousand miles. It's the customer's car and the customer's decision. I think this one has a very good chance of pulling through. |
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