strut tower failure
#198
IMO the strut tower should not fail simply because the wheel goes over a pot hole, even if the pot hole is nasty enough to bend a wheel. Cars with low profile tires suffer bent wheels all the time from driving over potholes, but I have never heard of a pot hole that resulted in a strut tower failure, particularly when the wheel needs to be examined by a specialist just to determine that it is bent.
The bottom line is that I don't think the dealer/Porsche have presented sufficient evidence that the failure was not caused by a defect (either in the design or manufacture of the strut tower). Their story is particularly dubious when one considers that strut towers on other GT4 cars have also failed. I would suggest that you not give up so easily. Have you considered hiring a lawyer?
The bottom line is that I don't think the dealer/Porsche have presented sufficient evidence that the failure was not caused by a defect (either in the design or manufacture of the strut tower). Their story is particularly dubious when one considers that strut towers on other GT4 cars have also failed. I would suggest that you not give up so easily. Have you considered hiring a lawyer?
Last edited by Shandingo; 12-12-2016 at 04:41 PM.
#200
Your insurance company's lawyers might be.
If Porsche is correct and it should be on your insurance company, so be it. If not, well, that's quite a buck to pass to your insurance company—and to you in diminution of value and the Carfax report. I am just struggling to square these failures against nothing like them in Porsche's history, and enthusiasts' history of lowering and modifying these Porsches, even after they have rust and/or hundreds of thousands of miles.
If Porsche is correct and it should be on your insurance company, so be it. If not, well, that's quite a buck to pass to your insurance company—and to you in diminution of value and the Carfax report. I am just struggling to square these failures against nothing like them in Porsche's history, and enthusiasts' history of lowering and modifying these Porsches, even after they have rust and/or hundreds of thousands of miles.
#201
Probably not and it would take forever .
I still think it's a design flaw .
Lowered suspension so no room for the standard bump stop. Instead of designing one they just eliminated it. So when the shock bottoms out it smashes against a brittle structure ( cast aluminum ).
What could possibly go wrong??? Carl
I still think it's a design flaw .
Lowered suspension so no room for the standard bump stop. Instead of designing one they just eliminated it. So when the shock bottoms out it smashes against a brittle structure ( cast aluminum ).
What could possibly go wrong??? Carl
#202
GT3 player par excellence
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From: san francisco
They said they took the wheel off, and took it to a balancer to verify if it was out of round, and it was, with a flat spot, and a bubble in the tire at the same place.
I guess I hit a shallow pothole or something.
Oh, and they mentioned I might have caused it by lowering the car (which I
did, to get the alignment I wanted, and it was still fine for driveway lips etc)
I'm sure my continuing concern will be the same as all yours, that this might
happen again.
I guess I hit a shallow pothole or something.
Oh, and they mentioned I might have caused it by lowering the car (which I
did, to get the alignment I wanted, and it was still fine for driveway lips etc)
I'm sure my continuing concern will be the same as all yours, that this might
happen again.
An update for my case. PNA had it inspected, and the wheel is bent, so this is
seen as 'external influence', not a manufacturing defect, so I'm going the
insurance route. From what I hear, the chassis part is on backorder with
no ETA, and my body shop says that it may be a long process between
him and the insurance carrier before the full degree of coverage (or salvage!)
is decided...
Wish me luck.
Joe
seen as 'external influence', not a manufacturing defect, so I'm going the
insurance route. From what I hear, the chassis part is on backorder with
no ETA, and my body shop says that it may be a long process between
him and the insurance carrier before the full degree of coverage (or salvage!)
is decided...
Wish me luck.
Joe
lowering the car should have no damage, and certainly not blown shock tower. these guys say this with straight face??? that's like saying you go raped b/c u wore skirt? wtf.
finally wheel out of round is external cause not manufacturing defect?
you hit a pot hold , bent wheel, damaged shock tower. so any times you bent a wheel, they are obsolved of any issues?
wow. i would push a bit harder if i were you.
#203
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Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 3,309
Likes: 621
From: On a pygmy pony over by the dental floss bush
Car as delivered:
Front spec: 109 mm (+2/-0) Front actual: 120 mm
Rear spec: 130 mm (+2/-0) Rear actual: 135 mm
The episode is detailed in these threads:
https://rennlist.com/forums/gt4/9461...l#post13507916
https://rennlist.com/forums/gt4/9085...l#post13507883
#204
Rennlist Member
Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 3,309
Likes: 621
From: On a pygmy pony over by the dental floss bush
Would be interesting to understand your resulting ride height settings after you lowered, if you had them measured at the WSM recommended locations F/R. But understand if you'd rather not publish that info here.
#205
Rennlist Member
Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 3,309
Likes: 621
From: On a pygmy pony over by the dental floss bush
#206
They said they took the wheel off, and took it to a balancer to verify if it was out of round, and it was, with a flat spot, and a bubble in the tire at the same place.
I guess I hit a shallow pothole or something.
Oh, and they mentioned I might have caused it by lowering the car (which I
did, to get the alignment I wanted, and it was still fine for driveway lips etc)
I'm sure my continuing concern will be the same as all yours, that this might
happen again.
I guess I hit a shallow pothole or something.
Oh, and they mentioned I might have caused it by lowering the car (which I
did, to get the alignment I wanted, and it was still fine for driveway lips etc)
I'm sure my continuing concern will be the same as all yours, that this might
happen again.
For those of us that have lived with Pcar design flaws in the past, it seems like Porsche has yet to change its approach in how it handles these types of design flaws. Ugh...
Joe - sorry to see you have to go through this.
#208
Can I get a confirmation that this is the only Cayman without a bumpstop? I am
beseeching my PNA rep to fight for me on this. The bodyshop guy says the
car has a 'high salvage value' so insurance might 'total' it, rather than pay for
the entire front of the car to be disassembled. Literally the dashboard and
windscreen have to come out to replace essentially a full quarter of the chassis,
and my 3500-mile, never tracked dream car could be gone forever. It's 4:15AM
on Sunday, and I can't sleep.
beseeching my PNA rep to fight for me on this. The bodyshop guy says the
car has a 'high salvage value' so insurance might 'total' it, rather than pay for
the entire front of the car to be disassembled. Literally the dashboard and
windscreen have to come out to replace essentially a full quarter of the chassis,
and my 3500-mile, never tracked dream car could be gone forever. It's 4:15AM
on Sunday, and I can't sleep.
#209
Can I get a confirmation that this is the only Cayman without a bumpstop? I am
beseeching my PNA rep to fight for me on this. The bodyshop guy says the
car has a 'high salvage value' so insurance might 'total' it, rather than pay for
the entire front of the car to be disassembled. Literally the dashboard and
windscreen have to come out to replace essentially a full quarter of the chassis,
and my 3500-mile, never tracked dream car could be gone forever. It's 4:15AM
on Sunday, and I can't sleep.
beseeching my PNA rep to fight for me on this. The bodyshop guy says the
car has a 'high salvage value' so insurance might 'total' it, rather than pay for
the entire front of the car to be disassembled. Literally the dashboard and
windscreen have to come out to replace essentially a full quarter of the chassis,
and my 3500-mile, never tracked dream car could be gone forever. It's 4:15AM
on Sunday, and I can't sleep.
I did manage to win the Super Street class series for 2016.
#210
I doubt it. Unless the repairs exceed 75% of the car's market value, the insurance will not write it off. Your situation sucks. I feel bad for you. Sorry.