Long story short:
Friend has a 1991 325i 4 door auto. Friend's girlfriend was driving on the freeway, car made weird noises and shut off on its own.
Brought it to me, only to find out 3 of the wrist pins on the pistons came out causing the rods to fly freely through each revolution. Cylinder 4 and 5 had punched windows where i believe the rods came out (couldn't find them anywhere, probably fell on the freeway). Messed up block and some bent valves meant we needed a new working block and some valves.
Got the motor running good, transmission bolted up and never touched it. Start the car, and the automatic transmission has no oil pressure. Figured he was low on ATF oil, checked it and it was full. Disconnected the top cooling line and started the car waited for fluid to squirt out but none. Not a single drop.
Cliff Notes: Transmission was functioning perfectly fine before the incident occurred. The motor giving up should have no relation yet it seems rather weird as to why it would go out as well.
My question:
1) Does the automatic transmission build pressure based on revolving gears/flaps or does it have a pump to build pressure?
2) Because there is no pressure but full fluid, is it possible that just the pump went out?
3) If the pump did go out, has anyone documented this repair?
4) If it isn't the pump, what else could it be?
5) Help me, as my friends car has been sitting in my driveway for a week.
-Jasper
Friend has a 1991 325i 4 door auto. Friend's girlfriend was driving on the freeway, car made weird noises and shut off on its own.
Brought it to me, only to find out 3 of the wrist pins on the pistons came out causing the rods to fly freely through each revolution. Cylinder 4 and 5 had punched windows where i believe the rods came out (couldn't find them anywhere, probably fell on the freeway). Messed up block and some bent valves meant we needed a new working block and some valves.
Got the motor running good, transmission bolted up and never touched it. Start the car, and the automatic transmission has no oil pressure. Figured he was low on ATF oil, checked it and it was full. Disconnected the top cooling line and started the car waited for fluid to squirt out but none. Not a single drop.
Cliff Notes: Transmission was functioning perfectly fine before the incident occurred. The motor giving up should have no relation yet it seems rather weird as to why it would go out as well.
My question:
1) Does the automatic transmission build pressure based on revolving gears/flaps or does it have a pump to build pressure?
2) Because there is no pressure but full fluid, is it possible that just the pump went out?
3) If the pump did go out, has anyone documented this repair?
4) If it isn't the pump, what else could it be?
5) Help me, as my friends car has been sitting in my driveway for a week.
-Jasper
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