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Old 04-05-2015, 02:58 PM   #1
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Location: santa barbara, CA & Devon, UK
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Heard enough of failures - how about "what hasn't failed?" on my Boxster!
I've never had a wheel fly off (beetle), never had the roof/top peel off at 70 (MG),
never had the hood fly open at 90 (MG), never had the muffler fall off at traffic lights (beetle), never had the throttle stuck wide open at traffic lights (beetle), never had gear knob come off in my hands (spitfire), never had my hydrolic suspension collapse and brakes fail (Citroen), never had a spark plug shoot out (Honda 500), never had my radio vanish into the dash (beetle), never had brakes fail and land on roof of hair salon (fiat 128 - after I sold it!), never had the headlights fail going down country road at night (honda 175), never had rust fall off bottom of doors when closing them (Lancia Beta HPE), never had the brakes fail on one side (Renault 21), I could go on......
Happy Easter
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Old 04-05-2015, 05:36 PM   #2
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Rust out in 2 years (Nissan), transmission fail (Honda), transmission bolts fall out and seen out the rear view mirror bouncing behind the car (Chrysler), 5 brake cylinders fail in first 25k (Honda), head gasket fail costing engine (Alfa), window crank fail 20 times on a new car in first 24 months (VW/Porsche), discover 8 years later dealer had sold a car involved in an accident (Chevy) ....

Drivers with no trouble probably never find the forums.
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Old 04-05-2015, 08:54 PM   #3
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Quote:
If you're driving a 15 year old car that the engine failed after 120,000 mile and the body was still intact, guess what your above the curve for almost every car manufactured.
Do you have data to support that? You must be used to driving a Chrysler or GM product. The list of cars I have purchased starting with more than 120k miles is way, way longer than the list of cars I've bought with low miles. I have not had to remove a cylinder head on a car in 25 years, nor have I had catastrophic failure until now.

What cracks me up more than a continuous flow of IMS threads are the number of people who wish to have such threads deleted. Let's not talk about ass cancer, so no one will get it. It is as if jamming your head in the sand and refusing to talk about it will make the "myth" go away, or that it will keep the value of your awesome sports car from tanking any more than it already has. If that is the case, then buckle up because these cars now cost more to fix than they are worth (just look at the number of rollers for sale). But take heart because according to the past two issues of Exellence after 30 years of looking up the nostrils of 911 drivers, the 914 is now officially an awesome car and a true Porsche! So there is hope.

Here:

This is the MINIMUM pile of parts you could expect to get away with and reassemble an M96 when an IMS bearing lets go. And I don't mean coming apart and destroying valve timing. My engine ran perfectly and I caught metal in the filter on an oil change. Not even very much metal. My car is a double row IMS, the kind that supposedly don't fail often.

Thanks to a single direct comment from Jake I abandoned plans to replace my IMS and flush the engine. I'm SO glad I followed his advice (never spoken to the man or paid him a dime). I put the past several months of my spare time into getting my car back together with the minimum of damage to my wallet. Honestly I should have spent about $6k more than I did. All I'm getting for my efforts is the 120k mile car I bought, and not a new engine.

When I took my engine apart I found evidence of a previously welded cylinder head (#15), a busted oil ring (not on the list), a spun rod bearing on cylinder six (#5), and of course the IMS (#8). So either my engine is a complete s*** show or these engines have some "flaws". Some of both I suspect.
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Old 04-06-2015, 06:51 AM   #4
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Quote:
Thanks to a single direct comment from Jake I abandoned plans to replace my IMS and flush the engine. I'm SO glad I followed his advice (never spoken to the man or paid him a dime).
That made my week, and its only Monday. Glad what I shared was helpful.

I see your pile, here's my pile after 6 months. Weighed in at 6,500 pounds at the scrapyard last week.

__________________
Jake Raby/www.flat6innovations.com
IMS Solution/ Faultless Tool Inventor
US Patent 8,992,089 &
US Patent 9,416,697
Developer of The IMS Retrofit Procedure- M96/ M97 Specialist
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