R3v talk me out of/into getting a 4.4l E53 X5.
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I have a 4.6is in Imola Red and red interior, it's basically for sale. Had the timing chain guides done but the engine still runs rough. Working on fixing that.
It's been nothing but a money pit. Originally got it to tow a trailer but within 6 months the trans blew up. Bought a 7.3L diesel excursion and the X5 has been sitting ever since.
It's needed everything, trans rebuild, motor rebuild, interior rebuild, suspension rebuild. I wouldn't recommend buying one.
Granted the excursion needed a trans rebuild too after towing for a year but that was mostly my fault.Comment
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Congratulations!
[IMG]https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/my350z.com-vbulletin/550x225/80-parkerbsig_5096690e71d912ec1addc4a84e99c374685fc03 8.jpg[/IMGComment
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yeah they did but they were pretty hard to find with that combo. we had a 6 speed but it was an xi - still a nice DD. With a 3 stage swap and my custom tune ours was surprisingly quick for a 3600lb wagon.
2006 to 2013 I think? 99% of them are auto/xdrive though :(Comment
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She’s going to the shop Friday, for now the transfer case actuator is unplugged. My guys down here said they keep the worm gear stocked and they usually do one every 2 weeks. Hopefully it’s just the worm gear but no signs of any issues with the transfer case itself! Fingers crossed.Comment
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TBH I think they fail because the t-case requires an LSD additive in the fluid (like an E30 rear diff), which eliminates chatter in the clutch plates. Over time the friction modifiers wear out - once that happens, the transfercase binds up during tight corners (especially parking) and you beat the shit out of that worm gear.
Keep the fluid fresh (once every 80k or so) and likely you'll never have a problem. Ours was perfectly fine but I replaced the fluid as soon as I noticed the "binding".Comment
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TBH I think they fail because the t-case requires an LSD additive in the fluid (like an E30 rear diff), which eliminates chatter in the clutch plates. Over time the friction modifiers wear out - once that happens, the transfercase binds up during tight corners (especially parking) and you beat the shit out of that worm gear.
Keep the fluid fresh (once every 80k or so) and likely you'll never have a problem. Ours was perfectly fine but I replaced the fluid as soon as I noticed the "binding".
Yeah that sounds about right, Ive read to keep all the gear fluids fresh on this car like every 60k miles. That’s the first preventive maintenance I’ll do lolComment
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TBH I think they fail because the t-case requires an LSD additive in the fluid (like an E30 rear diff), which eliminates chatter in the clutch plates. Over time the friction modifiers wear out - once that happens, the transfercase binds up during tight corners (especially parking) and you beat the shit out of that worm gear.
Keep the fluid fresh (once every 80k or so) and likely you'll never have a problem. Ours was perfectly fine but I replaced the fluid as soon as I noticed the "binding".Need parts now? Need them cheap? steve@blunttech.com
Chief Sales Officer, Midwest Division—Blunt Tech Industries
www.gutenparts.com
One stop shopping for NEW, USED and EURO PARTS!
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nah. Don't go all mechanical hypochondriac - the issue doesn't appear until about 100k miles, so a 60k interval is already pretty conservative.Comment
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Would you say these are more or less complicated in packaging / engineering / maintenance than an Audi A4?
How is the 4WD engaged? Is it all-the-time like a quattro system, or more like the Volvo or VW Haldex system that kicks in? My A4 Avant is the best ice car I've ever driven, but what a complicated packaging mess. Four systems have to come out to get to the thing you need to replace.Comment
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