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Nylon

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About Nylon

  • Birthday 09/20/1964

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    Male

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  • From
    Northern MN
  • Porsche Club
    No
  • Present cars
    '04 Cayenne turbo
    '99 2500 7.4L Suburban
    '01 2500 6.0l Suburban plow truck / daily
    '97 Accord V6
    '87 Honda Hurricane 1000
    '03 KTM 450 EXC Racing
  • Former cars
    '77 Cutlass Supreme
    '79 Cutlass Supreme
    '75 Blazer plow truck / daily
    '85 1500 Suburban plow truck / daily
    '85 Tercel
    '87 Accord 4cyl
    '94 1500 Suburban plow truck / daily
    Most missed....'76 B100 Dodge van slant 6 225 w/3 on the tree

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  1. I am on same page abtmansfi. Porsche is making money on their scam. The attorneys are making an embarrassing amount of money as usual. Only reason they jumped on this. The gal from Idaho should hold out. Porsche should have called in the cars and fixed the pipes. Simple. It would go a lot further in goodwill and is the "RIGHT THING TO DO". AND it would have cost them less than fighting it. Not to mention the taste left to anyone who may make another purchase. Nothing more pathetic than a donkey dance of denial and being drug into class action. There will be a whole bunch of us in this same boat who can't "afford" their settlement and the rest who do will still be getting the shaft. Only in a different way. The argument that both sides should be happy that neither side is happy is a false equivalent and is a testament to where the American legal system is parked.
  2. Guy and Gals, Just reread my post and want to thank all of you for the information. I seemed to be singular in mind but as I re read I notice more good advice that came to me that I didn't properly acknowledge at the time...so Thanks Again! So far I am finding an older Cayenne to be a great car / truck ... car to me since I have two 3/4 ton suburbans. Once they are demystified a bit and re discover that they are still trucks and car machines underneath it all. So much goodness with incredible weakness. ie plastic coolant tubes/ Ts in Cayenne. IMS bearing in the 99-04 911's and a worse ims bearing in 05 + 911s. Engine wrecking faults, leave you stranded and or very expensive repairs. Discovering the 911 issues as I am looking to buy an 03-05 911C4. How can a carmaker make such good vehicles yet make such colossal engineering blunders?
  3. You do not need to use Porsche Coolant but it is Pentosen coolant. It needs to be done but if you read the print on the class action there will be no $350. They only give that if its installed by a dealer and the dealer will eat that token and give it all back to PNA. http://www.renntech.org/forums/topic/38388-coolant-pipe-replacement-detailed-instructions/ http://www.renntech.org/forums/tutorials/article/329-cayenne-turbo-brass-t-pipe-mod/
  4. If you do it yourself or indie your out it looks like. Their settlement doesn't even cover cost of part. Much less the big buck install at dealer. This really is not a settlement in my opinion. It's lip service and it still costs you...now or later and worse if it leaves you stranded in the boonies.
  5. Got my notice yesterday. Since I bought 04 turbo used and am now at 97,000 miles....I would get $375 towards a dealer installed replacement. That is not a settlement that is another rip off. The aluminum pipes alone cost $1000. Recall and replace..that's a settlement. $375 isn't even fluff money in dealer charges...not to mention destroyed starters and seals as well as plastic coolant T's. Throw in the stranded somewhere factor or the tow from somewhere or the poor schmuck doing this replacement in his garage. What about the folks who already spent $5k for just pipe, not T's nor replacement of starters and seals and tow fees and loss of use of car.
  6. # 1 Yes the drier / desiccator element was replaced. Lines, evaporator and condenser were flushed repeatedly from three separate locations with a pulsing high pressure flush device. Vacuum was pulled for 45 min to remove solvent..then system held vacuum for 30 min. I will mention that it was 2669.76 for the total with tax. Spendy? yes...but less than half of what dealer would have charged and dealer would not have spent the time flushing. Then to have a long discussion with mechanic about ac current and future prospects and full disclosure of his repair are worth every penny. We also discussed having him replace the plastic T's with a custom brass replacement. They are game to replace the Ts if I fabricate them to darrinsmith's specs which he posted here on renntech. Mechanic also believes that I have leakage past the spring clamps on engine coolant lines...another good conversation. #2 Great post by seafeye. That is an impressive technical bulletin. Spells out pretty much everything. Added overfilling 134a as another possible suspect in my catastrophic compressor failure. That document should get posted on its own special place for all Porsche owners to read. Thank you! John
  7. Finally got my AC compressor fixed. I dropped it off at Imola in Minneapolis the evening before so they would have it for the day. I had to drive it home 200 miles the next day. Imola was a very good experience. They are open till 9 PM which is amazing. Everyone was exceptionally nice and very easy to communicate accurately which is a rare thing these days. Via e mail, phone and in person. They replaced the compressor, expansion valve and drier up front. There are three different ports that need to be flushed to do a decent job. There was a ton of crud that came out of my system. They flushed and flushed. The mechanic...Erick...came out when finished and we had a nice long talk. This Cayenne has rear AC meaning that there are more components buried deep which I hadn't thought about. We decided that replacing what we did and flushing the heck out of it was our best angle of attack. There may still be some crud caught in the rear components but should be minimal if any after his mega flush. Very much appreciated his effort. I bought this car and was told that it had a new ac compressor. Well it probably did after the old one h bombed into the system. They just slapped on a new compressor...no other components and no flush nor proper oil at each component. Imola warrants this one for 12 month and seeing as the compressor runs constant with a swash plate rather than a clutch....if its gonna blow due to remnant debris...it should do it fairly soon. I would recommend to anyone doing AC work to bring it in to someone who has the equipment. They finished my rig at 8 PM. It was not cheap but it wasn't that far out of line compared to simple compressor replace and recharge @ $1000 + each for a Honda Accord v6 and a Suburban 2500. We never did an autopsy on old compressor. No time.
  8. I was laying underneath mine for about 30 min trying to figure out if I could band clamp my leaking line from above. I can almost get an arm up to the Ts from below but even if I could... no way to get a band clamp on and tight with one hand. Looking at it from below I realized that taking of the intake...getting at it from above and probably breaking a multitue of plastic and gasket, that I would have a heck of a time clamping it if at all. No room for screw driver at 90 degrees to plumbing. Would be nice if I could reach in from drivers side wheel well. The wheel well looks like layers and layers of trouble though. My line is leaking between the rubber to metal connect below the lower T. Also anyone know where these lines run to from the bottom T? They snake around the power steering pump then down the frame under the driver side and disappear.
  9. Thanks for the trail of info on this. Thinking the pink stuff is not sealer but escaped Pentofrost. I have one that has turned into a pretty good leaker. I can see pink at most fittings clamps on both T's in back.
  10. Thanks for your insight. I was about to post that I got a much better look tonight from below with both pans off. There are trace coolant leaks at both Ts but the more major of the leaks is from the second (lower) T where its hose connects to steel line. leading down. Was going to ask...how do I fix this since its not really broken. I think I wil try to fashion the brass T replacements that fellow from Perth posted recently..then dig into it and put brass in it and replace every clamp I can get at back there with screw clamp...or simply add a screw clamp over the flare. At least I know I am not in for a catastrophic coolant failure on this unless one of those Ts implodes...I must say thay look good and fresh but looks can be unreliable.
  11. Darrin, Great post! I have a leak high in back on a rubber to metal line that I will probably have to get at by pulling the intake. When I go in I will do what you have done as well. Any idea what size the T brass? You guys metric so maybe tricky for U.S. local to get right size. I am assuming that you replaced the rubber as well since it was in little pieces. Thanks again, John
  12. Got a couple of pics of AC compressor while looking for coolant leak. Think McBit nailed it on this one. Have the mid body connector that trails off to the rear. The weird thing is that I am able to spin by hand what would be a magnetic clutch in front of the pully. It looks like something catastrophic happened to the "clutch"...crack in the casting with oil and freon leaking out indicates that as well....darn thing sure spins nice though by hand.
  13. Found the smell. Lot to be said for the pepto bismal coolant stalagmites. Followed the pepto trail drivers side. It's rubber down low then goes verticle on engine side of heat shield with multi bend metal lines. These lines run as a pair. Up high where it goes back to rubber from metal..it is leaking at a banjo clip and running down same metal line and dripping off where they go back to rubber. One line is leaking...not both. Can see it with an extended mirror from the bottom and the top but not great. Why would it leak here? Am I over pressured somewhere and this is the weak spot? The banjo clip seems to be where it is supposed to be. I can not see the hose that well but looks as though it is leaking rubber to metal unless there is a bad spot in rubber. Can't see it good enough to know. Newer to me cayenne. Had power steering line pop off at a metal rubber transition at a banjo clip when really cold this winter. Fixed it with a stainless hose clamp. This the same type of fix? Problem is how do I get at it? Also anyone know where these lines go to and come from? Can't tell if these are the notorious T's...does not look like it but hard to tell in the mirror. Been searching for a coolant system diagram and can not find one. Appreciated, John '04 Cayenne turbo 92,000 miles
  14. Thanks for the great info....The link to the denso site shows on page 20 that at the very least there is serpentine belt protection if the compressor locks. A limiter breaks allowing the pully to spin free. That is in the diagram on a 7se unit. The diagram indicates that that model is not a clutched unit. In my search for a new compressor the next problem is what to put back in it? Both the Porsche dealer and the bigger Indy Porsche repair place both told me that the replacement is clutched. All of my searching on the net..mostly e bay...shows the 7seu17c to be a clutched unit. Now that leads me to question the control aspect. Also makes me queston the information on this unit for e bay which indicates this model works on all v8 and v6 cayennes '03 to '08 which I kinda doubt now. Voltages to operate the compressors must be different between a clutched and not clutched unit. Maybe Porsche senses which unit it controls. I am also guessing that the car needs to be programmed that the compressor / ac system has been replaced. As long as I can drive it down, I will have Imola. the indy Porsche repair in Minneapolis just put in what it needs....clean everything out and replace compressor, dryer and expansion...o rings. Reprogram. I will know what they put in for replacement and report back.
  15. The cracked compressor in this '04 Cayenne turbo is Nippon Denso 7SEU17C. When I was in a local general auto shop we looked up porsche replacement parts for that vehicle and it stated that the replace compressor is clutched for 4.5 and for the v6. I was in a suburban at the time... not the Cayenne. I am going to bring Cayenne into that shop and have him take a look at the compressor and decide if it is clutched or not. The tag on the compressor is the Nippon Denso 7SEU17C. ND Oil 8 R134a. McBit500 post shows it should not be clutched. Then we are back at the point of potentially seizing the pump while driving 250 miles to a porsche shop. Managed to attach photo! The inch long crack to the left of the tag in the casing is the culpret. I will get a photo of the pump pully and post that too...later after I can pull off shrud and get a pic.
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