kerilli
Well-Known Member
In the ongoing saga of my horsebox, I seem to be surrounded by rip-off merchants. I've come to the conclusion that I must sound like a 12 year old billionairess on the phone. I haven't authorised anyone to do anything yet, so my lovely horsebox is still sitting there in a sorry blown-engine state. the quotes are coming down but i'm getting so much totally conflicting advice that I want to cry or tear my hear out.
If any ford-iveco engine experts could advise, so that when I go in to tackle the garage I have some more idea of what I'm trying to talk about, I'd really really appreciate it. Thankyou.
story so far:
lovely Solitaire 3-horse & living body on an 04 Iveco tector chassis. Cost a chuffing fortune 2 yrs ago. Regular runs, didn't sit all winter doing nothing, it was taken out for a run every week or so even when no horses needed moving (as mechanics advised.)
I've spent a LOT of money with garage A, every year. About £1000 last year, over £500 this spring, over £1200 in June for a full service and to get it through its Plating. Every time there was the slightest concern with it, I got them out.
It ran beautifully a few times after the plating, then took it out, fine, left it an hour or so, trundled out of driveway to come home and it suddenly overrevved mentally. Pulled over, turned it off immediately. Waited a bit, it wouldn't restart. I checked the oil level immediately and it was fine. Rescue guy couldn't get it going, thought it might be the turbo but then decided it wasn't. gave up.
Got it towed back to garage A, as they were only an hour away and I trusted them...
They tried to start it, replaced injectors (1 was melted, 1 had snapped off), got it going, left it to run for 5 mins and it blew up, blew a rod straight through the engine block.
They said the sump was full of oil and unburnt diesel, that there must have been a faulty injector. BUT the Engine Management System light, which had been dicking around all last year and this spring (hence hefty bills... and they'd advised me to 'ignore it', advice which I hadn't taken!) hadn't come on. Surely it would have, with a faulty injector. Also, there was no loss of power, which I've been told there should have been with a faulty injector...
So...
I think garage A have ****ed up royally, basically.
What do you think?
I've been told this is seriously unusual in a well-maintained '04 iveco tector engine. They're supposed to be workhorses. (This is the third Ford Cargo horsebox i've had, the other 2 have done over 10 years each before I sold them for a newer model (still running beautifully), and I've never had anything like this happen.)
Garage A have quoted me £3.5k for labour to put in a replacement engine. Eeek. Engine to cost £3k minimum, up to £8k for a new one from Iveco... plus labour. (It's a non-tilt cab.)
I have much lower quotes for the labour elsewhere now, btw. At £50 ish an hour, they're saying it'll take over 70 hours to drop the front axle, remove the old one, and fit a new engine... Is this vaguely fair, or in 'totally taking the mickey' territory?
I've found a replacement engine for £1k, btw.
Someone who sounded very trustworthy, and was recommended, has a ramp to be able to drop the front axle out to get the new engine in (NEVER buy a non-tilt cab horsebox peeps), quoted me £2.5k for fitting a recon engine, warranted for 3 months... but then added another £1k when he realised it was a Tector engine. SO... the other engine was free, was it? Aaaaaarrrrggggghhhhh.
A few people have said to stick it on a new cab chassis, and sell the old one for scrap. Cost would be similar, about £1k for the body swap actually. Thoughts?
I've been told that if the Engine Management System has a fault, then a new engine might not cure the problem, and the same could happen again...
Someone else said, make this one into a tilt-cab. Cost, £1,300.
But, Solitaire said that can't be done, the body's fitted too close, mechanics couldn't lift the engine out upwards even if cab tilted, because of the body.
Someone else has told me that is total bull****.
I really want to sit down and cry about this. Again.
SO, any advice, please, really really hugely appreciated. Any tame mechanics, please, come on down...
Cappucinno and cookies if you got this far.
If any ford-iveco engine experts could advise, so that when I go in to tackle the garage I have some more idea of what I'm trying to talk about, I'd really really appreciate it. Thankyou.
story so far:
lovely Solitaire 3-horse & living body on an 04 Iveco tector chassis. Cost a chuffing fortune 2 yrs ago. Regular runs, didn't sit all winter doing nothing, it was taken out for a run every week or so even when no horses needed moving (as mechanics advised.)
I've spent a LOT of money with garage A, every year. About £1000 last year, over £500 this spring, over £1200 in June for a full service and to get it through its Plating. Every time there was the slightest concern with it, I got them out.
It ran beautifully a few times after the plating, then took it out, fine, left it an hour or so, trundled out of driveway to come home and it suddenly overrevved mentally. Pulled over, turned it off immediately. Waited a bit, it wouldn't restart. I checked the oil level immediately and it was fine. Rescue guy couldn't get it going, thought it might be the turbo but then decided it wasn't. gave up.
Got it towed back to garage A, as they were only an hour away and I trusted them...
They tried to start it, replaced injectors (1 was melted, 1 had snapped off), got it going, left it to run for 5 mins and it blew up, blew a rod straight through the engine block.
They said the sump was full of oil and unburnt diesel, that there must have been a faulty injector. BUT the Engine Management System light, which had been dicking around all last year and this spring (hence hefty bills... and they'd advised me to 'ignore it', advice which I hadn't taken!) hadn't come on. Surely it would have, with a faulty injector. Also, there was no loss of power, which I've been told there should have been with a faulty injector...
So...
I think garage A have ****ed up royally, basically.
What do you think?
I've been told this is seriously unusual in a well-maintained '04 iveco tector engine. They're supposed to be workhorses. (This is the third Ford Cargo horsebox i've had, the other 2 have done over 10 years each before I sold them for a newer model (still running beautifully), and I've never had anything like this happen.)
Garage A have quoted me £3.5k for labour to put in a replacement engine. Eeek. Engine to cost £3k minimum, up to £8k for a new one from Iveco... plus labour. (It's a non-tilt cab.)
I have much lower quotes for the labour elsewhere now, btw. At £50 ish an hour, they're saying it'll take over 70 hours to drop the front axle, remove the old one, and fit a new engine... Is this vaguely fair, or in 'totally taking the mickey' territory?
I've found a replacement engine for £1k, btw.
Someone who sounded very trustworthy, and was recommended, has a ramp to be able to drop the front axle out to get the new engine in (NEVER buy a non-tilt cab horsebox peeps), quoted me £2.5k for fitting a recon engine, warranted for 3 months... but then added another £1k when he realised it was a Tector engine. SO... the other engine was free, was it? Aaaaaarrrrggggghhhhh.
A few people have said to stick it on a new cab chassis, and sell the old one for scrap. Cost would be similar, about £1k for the body swap actually. Thoughts?
I've been told that if the Engine Management System has a fault, then a new engine might not cure the problem, and the same could happen again...
Someone else said, make this one into a tilt-cab. Cost, £1,300.
But, Solitaire said that can't be done, the body's fitted too close, mechanics couldn't lift the engine out upwards even if cab tilted, because of the body.
Someone else has told me that is total bull****.
I really want to sit down and cry about this. Again.
SO, any advice, please, really really hugely appreciated. Any tame mechanics, please, come on down...
Cappucinno and cookies if you got this far.