2 C4 IMS bearing
#76
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I asked because i thought there was a pre-qualification of some type before installing the Solution and i assumed that would involve inspecting the existing bearing.
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Optionman1 (06-09-2020)
#78
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Point blank.A mechanic/technician that is well versed in 996 ims bearings would know that large center nut means bearing cannot be changed unless engine is removed from said vehicle and disassembled.Matvrix I am sorry you are going through this unfortunate situation.
#79
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If all you want to do is get the car back on the road - skip the pre-qual. (in general - not in the case of this owner/engine...)
-Tom
#81
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#82
Track Day
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Sorry chaps, well and truly relied on this garage to carry the torch. Especially, when they were ref here on this forum. After all, the lead is an ex-Porche mechanic and all that. Quite, going to bite my tongue and have them disassemble it without invoicing me an arm and a leg. Right, really invaluable, you are!
#83
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Originally Posted by dgjks6
OK Still trying to work this out. If he put the puller on the stud and the tube catcher thing through the hole that is smaller than the bearing it would be resting on the bearing, then how did he get the bearing to move? Doesn’t pulling on the stud bring the bearing into the tube catcher thing? If the bearing is bigger than the puller it won’t fit.
If I understand how a bearing puller works. Which I think I do since I have used a bunch of them in the past.
If he used a TON of force he could have pulled I guess the inner race in and destroyed the bearing. But the pic looks like the bearing is intact.
Does this make sense to anyone else or am I way off?
Or maybe he tried to pull it with a slide hammer and not the tool.
If I understand how a bearing puller works. Which I think I do since I have used a bunch of them in the past.
If he used a TON of force he could have pulled I guess the inner race in and destroyed the bearing. But the pic looks like the bearing is intact.
Does this make sense to anyone else or am I way off?
Or maybe he tried to pull it with a slide hammer and not the tool.
Normally when removing an ims you slot the cylindrical tool through the hole in the case which it's designed to fit, the outer edge of the cylindrical puller sits on the outer edge of the shaft with the inner diameter of the puller big enough to accept the bearing as the pulling part of the tool in the centre attaches to the ims stud and pulls back , all good but.....
Problem with larger bearing is the end of the ims shaft is bigger and the bearing is bigger , the bearing is so big it won't even fit through the ims flange hole in the crankcase , so when you put the tool on its resting on the bearing not the outer lip of the ims , then the stud puller in the middle pulls but the bearing has no where to go as it's trapped by the cylindrical part of the tool but even if you could pull it , you would have to pull it through the crankcase which you can't coz it's too big. This garage has started the procedure but put load on the ims stud to start the pulling process, normally not a problem as once the bearing is out , it's not re used but now they realised they can't get it out but have compromised the bearing by using the puller which could have damaged it inside as it's not designed to take a sideways load of such force, shame as the larger ims has the lowest failure and with the seal removed is usually ok to leave alone , I think the op thought he must have had a gen 2 small single row bearing but must have got the gen 3 large single row bearing without realising !
#84
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Dg
Normally when removing an ims you slot the cylindrical tool through the hole in the case which it's designed to fit, the outer edge of the cylindrical puller sits on the outer edge of the shaft with the inner diameter of the puller big enough to accept the bearing as the pulling part of the tool in the centre attaches to the ims stud and pulls back , all good but.....
Problem with larger bearing is the end of the ims shaft is bigger and the bearing is bigger , the bearing is so big it won't even fit through the ims flange hole in the crankcase , so when you put the tool on its resting on the bearing not the outer lip of the ims , then the stud puller in the middle pulls but the bearing has no where to go as it's trapped by the cylindrical part of the tool but even if you could pull it , you would have to pull it through the crankcase which you can't coz it's too big. This garage has started the procedure but put load on the ims stud to start the pulling process, normally not a problem as once the bearing is out , it's not re used but now they realised they can't get it out but have compromised the bearing by using the puller which could have damaged it inside as it's not designed to take a sideways load of such force, shame as the larger ims has the lowest failure and with the seal removed is usually ok to leave alone , I think the op thought he must have had a gen 2 small single row bearing but must have got the gen 3 large single row bearing without realising !
Normally when removing an ims you slot the cylindrical tool through the hole in the case which it's designed to fit, the outer edge of the cylindrical puller sits on the outer edge of the shaft with the inner diameter of the puller big enough to accept the bearing as the pulling part of the tool in the centre attaches to the ims stud and pulls back , all good but.....
Problem with larger bearing is the end of the ims shaft is bigger and the bearing is bigger , the bearing is so big it won't even fit through the ims flange hole in the crankcase , so when you put the tool on its resting on the bearing not the outer lip of the ims , then the stud puller in the middle pulls but the bearing has no where to go as it's trapped by the cylindrical part of the tool but even if you could pull it , you would have to pull it through the crankcase which you can't coz it's too big. This garage has started the procedure but put load on the ims stud to start the pulling process, normally not a problem as once the bearing is out , it's not re used but now they realised they can't get it out but have compromised the bearing by using the puller which could have damaged it inside as it's not designed to take a sideways load of such force, shame as the larger ims has the lowest failure and with the seal removed is usually ok to leave alone , I think the op thought he must have had a gen 2 small single row bearing but must have got the gen 3 large single row bearing without realising !
I hate to be the one that has to pop this bubble, but there are lots of shops out there that aren't qualified to work on a lawnmower. Some days we are all completely exhausted with calls from people lacking the wherewithal to work on any car. That is the reason we have pre-qualification and registration requirements. You can't trust that a shop is going to do right by you blindly. Shops are beating themselves over the head for these jobs and consumers are shopping by price, not value. We've seen jobs where they don't even change the oil and filter when changing out the IMS bearing, just for make up oil to top off what is lost when the flange is pulled. The worse we've seen in the last month was a shop that still installed an IMS Solution after they scoped the bores and found two scored cylinders rather than doing what is right and telling the customer they can't do the install.
#85
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https://lnengineering.com/products/i...ification.html
#87
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Did Cali-Auto's Porsche trained mechanic (with 40 yrs experience) do the work on your car?
#88
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