failure of rear caliper bolt
#76
Intermediate
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Seattle area
Posts: 37
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
They've been led to accepting their responsibility, and your point is well taken - any sound will result in a direct exit from the surface in as orderly a manner as possible.
#78
I assume they'll go through the car pretty throughly. It might look like an isolated event, but the force to separate even a loose caliper bolt and then through the caliper around the wheel, there's been a lot of forces in vectors that the suspension is not expected to tolerate. A wheel carrier and every link would be the minimum. I'd want close inspection of each point of attachment to the chassis, I'd be looking along the brake line and in every direction to see if the steering rack was compromised, etc. I imagine the shop will be deep into their insurance before the job is done. Of course they also need to go through the whole of the car "nut and bolt" to see what was correctly torqued, what was paint marked as done, what was overlooked or simply neglected. This operation alone could run into hundreds of dollars in new hardware to be sure the car is 100%.
#79
GT3 player par excellence
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
who is this local shop?
#81
Intermediate
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Seattle area
Posts: 37
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Last post here on the shop side, don't want to derail the intent of the thread - all follow-ups will be under West Region.
Over the course of 3.5 weeks the shop fixed most of the damage on their dime, replacing wheel, tire, caliper & hose, upright and Girodisc bolts & spacers (Thanks Mike@RSS). Since the one rotor was toast I had both rings replaced, but when they were reassembling everything they texted to tell me they couldn't get torque on the passenger caliper - top started to give at 40, bottom at 25. Only think I could think was "WTF, you did it again?" I let them go the Timesert route but had the car released directly to reputable shop to do an all-up inspection. When the went to look at the repairs, the just-installed inserts came out with the bolts. Needless to say, the upright is trash - the original shops response: "Why did you take the bolts out, they were torqued to factory spec..." No Thunderhill for me this weekend...
Over the course of 3.5 weeks the shop fixed most of the damage on their dime, replacing wheel, tire, caliper & hose, upright and Girodisc bolts & spacers (Thanks Mike@RSS). Since the one rotor was toast I had both rings replaced, but when they were reassembling everything they texted to tell me they couldn't get torque on the passenger caliper - top started to give at 40, bottom at 25. Only think I could think was "WTF, you did it again?" I let them go the Timesert route but had the car released directly to reputable shop to do an all-up inspection. When the went to look at the repairs, the just-installed inserts came out with the bolts. Needless to say, the upright is trash - the original shops response: "Why did you take the bolts out, they were torqued to factory spec..." No Thunderhill for me this weekend...
#82
Last post here on the shop side, don't want to derail the intent of the thread - all follow-ups will be under West Region.
Over the course of 3.5 weeks the shop fixed most of the damage on their dime, replacing wheel, tire, caliper & hose, upright and Girodisc bolts & spacers (Thanks Mike@RSS). Since the one rotor was toast I had both rings replaced, but when they were reassembling everything they texted to tell me they couldn't get torque on the passenger caliper - top started to give at 40, bottom at 25. Only think I could think was "WTF, you did it again?" I let them go the Timesert route but had the car released directly to reputable shop to do an all-up inspection. When the went to look at the repairs, the just-installed inserts came out with the bolts. Needless to say, the upright is trash - the original shops response: "Why did you take the bolts out, they were torqued to factory spec..." No Thunderhill for me this weekend...
Over the course of 3.5 weeks the shop fixed most of the damage on their dime, replacing wheel, tire, caliper & hose, upright and Girodisc bolts & spacers (Thanks Mike@RSS). Since the one rotor was toast I had both rings replaced, but when they were reassembling everything they texted to tell me they couldn't get torque on the passenger caliper - top started to give at 40, bottom at 25. Only think I could think was "WTF, you did it again?" I let them go the Timesert route but had the car released directly to reputable shop to do an all-up inspection. When the went to look at the repairs, the just-installed inserts came out with the bolts. Needless to say, the upright is trash - the original shops response: "Why did you take the bolts out, they were torqued to factory spec..." No Thunderhill for me this weekend...
#83
I just today joined the timesert club. One rear failed. The original threads came out almost intact. I am therefore timeserting all four rears. M12X1.5X24. And while I am at it, I plan also on doing the fronts. Question for all before I order parts: Do the fronts take the same size timesert? 997.1 gt3 pccb.
#87
GT3 player par excellence
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
#90
GT3 player par excellence
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
^ cool, that's what you guys should get.
dont try to save the pennies, you will be cussing in front of you kids if you got the wrong nuts.
dont try to save the pennies, you will be cussing in front of you kids if you got the wrong nuts.