I need help!!

Started by alfaromeo8c, August 24, 2018, 01:02:12 PM

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alfaromeo8c

Hi Guys,

I have an alfa romeo gt 3.2 and my car started to make a noise sometimes when the engine is cold since two weeks ago and the noise always disappeared in couple of minutes.

I went to a local mechanic and he found the problem that a bearing in water pump made a loud noise in the morning.
He showed me how engine is quite without driving belt. And he recommended to replace water pump and timing belt as well because it is a wise way to save money even though timing belt is still good. Unfortunately, he didn't have a tool that used for replacing timing belt.

Hence, my car was towed to a workshop in Malagal 20th of August as driving belt was already removed. I explained the problem to a mechanic there. Tuesday afternoon, I got a call from the mechanic and he said there was no compression on cylinder 4 and he suspected timing belt jumped a tooth from water pump failure and the failure of the timing belt resulted in piston and valve contact.

I didn't understand it as my car had run smoothly without any problem before timing belt and water pump was replaced in the workshop. Afterward, I met a local mechanic and explained current engine problem. He said "bullshit" as the only problem was a noise and it is impossible that water pump failure make timing belt jumped a tooth structurally and he was sure that the workshop broke the engine. I also contacted the other specialist and visited an official alfa romeo dealer. They all disagreed with the opinion of the workshop in Malaga.

I will willingly pay $1650 for replacing timing belt and water pump if I can get my car back in good condition. But, I don't want to pay about $5000 in total for fixing the engine including timing belt and water pump due to the fault of the workshop.

Can you guys introduce me a mechanic who can write a technical report?

Thank you.


poohbah

Go to Cileberti Motors in Hector St Osborne Park. They are the Alfa specialists I always use. But if the belt failed and pistons and valves have come into contact, you are going to have to make an expensive decision one way or another.
Now:    2002 156 GTA
            1981 GTV
Before: 1999 156 V6 Q-auto
            2001 156 V6 (sadly cremated)

ugame

#2
Ring http://www.cilebertimotors.com.au/ ASAP.

Sadly this information is too late for you, but these are the ONLY people in Perth I'd have gone to for the work you've had done.

GL. Sad to hear.

(Beat me to it John)

If you can prove the Malaga mech caused the damage, you may have a legal leg to stand on, but you may have to fight for it.

I had a 4x4 specialist once who nearly killed a car I had as they didn't lock tight the nut holding on the harmonic balancer., which then came off (fortunately during startup on our driveway)

In his words he said "I'll understand if you never want me to touch your car again, but I want the opportunity to make this right."
And he did, at no cost to me.

So sometimes you do get a good one.
Past: 180SX | 300ZX Twin Turbo | 350Z HR Roadster | 300C 5.7 V8 HEMI | 98 GTV 2.0 TS
Present: 2002 GTV 2.0 TS | 147 TS | 74 Super Beetle | Porsche Cayman S 987.1
Future: I've stopped looking. Wife says "No more Alfas" lol.

Pseudonym

+1 for cileberti motors, also autodelta should be pretty qualified to not mess that up.

I'd say if you show a diagram of the timing belt and auxiliary belt setup to the MTA or a magistrate you won't need a mechanics testimony, the problem you've got is that you delivered them the car not running due to the auxiliary belt removal so they have grounds to point the finger at the previous mechanic....

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alfaromeo8c

#4
Quote from: poohbah on August 24, 2018, 03:17:10 PM
Go to Cileberti Motors in Hector St Osborne Park. They are the Alfa specialists I always use. But if the belt failed and pistons and valves have come into contact, you are going to have to make an expensive decision one way or another.
I also got a quotation from cileberti before, I should have gone there

alfaromeo8c

Quote from: Pseudonym on August 24, 2018, 04:47:46 PM
+1 for cileberti motors, also autodelta should be pretty qualified to not mess that up.

I'd say if you show a diagram of the timing belt and auxiliary belt setup to the MTA or a magistrate you won't need a mechanics testimony, the problem you've got is that you delivered them the car not running due to the auxiliary belt removal so they have grounds to point the finger at the previous mechanic....

Sent from my HTC 2PS5200 using Tapatalk
Unfortunately, this happened in autodelta.
I've been using the local workshop for the last 3 years, they did many jobs for me like replacing timing belt, clutch. also when diff was blown I got a second hand gear box including q2 through them. A co-worker of the local mechanic is in Italy with a tool to do some work there,that's why he couldn't do it.
Thank you for your advice.

Pseudonym

Err, right... well, that's a bit of a bombshell. We haven't used them for a while but they've done work without issue before. Assuming AD are still under the same ownership I wouldn't expect them to get their explanation so wrong... unless you actually can jump a tooth by running a busso without the auxiliaries attached  ???

When was the timing belt actually last done? And not just the belt, the guides and tensioners etc? There have been times when things have gone bang while with another party and I've just accepted that it was likely just unfortunate timing for natural wear and tear, but for a head recon from a routine job I can understand wanting to look at all the options.

If you're satisfied you've got all the facts lined up and are wanting to go down the mediation/small claims avenue then cilebertis are the most qualified for technical advice and repairs. In talking to them and consumer protection / legal counsel you'll establish your prospects for using that advice when seeking reimbursement, but speak to those parties before making a decision obviously. GT are a good car, but for the age it's potentially not financially logical to repair, you'd want to establish sound prospect of proving fault before investing money in it, unless of course you've got the Alfa virus and like us are happy draining the bank account to keep driving.

Personally, I learned similar lessons myself when I was younger, I cut my losses and took the car elsewhere and the workshop I ended with became my go-to for those cars for almost a decade. It wasn't cheap, but a good life lesson about the price of a professional vs the price of an amateur.

bazzbazz

Quote from: Pseudonym on August 25, 2018, 04:39:39 AM
Assuming AD are still under the same ownership I wouldn't expect them to get their explanation so wrong... unless you actually can jump a tooth by running a busso without the auxiliaries attached  ???

No you can't.

And a faulty Water Pump can not affect the timing belt, unless the whole thing come loose or disintegrates.
On The Spot Alfa
Mobile Alfa Romeo Diagnostic/Repair/Maintenance/Service
Brisbane/Gold Coast
0405721613
onthespotalfa@iinet.net.au

alfaromeo8c

Quote from: Pseudonym on August 25, 2018, 04:39:39 AM
Err, right... well, that's a bit of a bombshell. We haven't used them for a while but they've done work without issue before. Assuming AD are still under the same ownership I wouldn't expect them to get their explanation so wrong... unless you actually can jump a tooth by running a busso without the auxiliaries attached  ???

When was the timing belt actually last done? And not just the belt, the guides and tensioners etc? There have been times when things have gone bang while with another party and I've just accepted that it was likely just unfortunate timing for natural wear and tear, but for a head recon from a routine job I can understand wanting to look at all the options.

about 2 and half years ago when 90k, timing belt kit and metallic water pump done now 130k. A guy from cileberti also said water pump failure can't affect timing belt jumped a tooth. But he refused to write a technical report.I understand his stance.
It seems like the only option for me is consumer protection complaint or court even though it is very hard to prove their fault.

poohbah

First things first - go and get a current and accurate diagnosis of what is actually the problem as she sits now and ask for a comprehensive quote to get it fixed - (I'd go to Cileberti's). Until you have a proper idea of exactly what has happened, and what the cost is going to be to rectify, you really can't do much else.

Then think about going to Consumer Protection - if you are in the RAC I would contact them first and tell them your story, and they may be able to assist, or at least give you some tips on how to go about it.

But I suspect it will be pretty hard to prove a workshop was at fault given you said at the outset you kept driving the car for a couple of weeks after first noticing there was a problem, minor though it seemed (we've all done that!). 

Rereading your original post, do you know if the original mechanic did a compression test when he first diagnosed noisy water pump bearing? Or did he just have a listen and give his initial view? Maybe No4 cylinder was already a problem?
Now:    2002 156 GTA
            1981 GTV
Before: 1999 156 V6 Q-auto
            2001 156 V6 (sadly cremated)

Pseudonym

Yeah, we actually kept driving a 2.5 rwd with water falling out of the pump bearing for a while before fixing it and no issues.

As poohbah said that's the best way to go about it, but yeah having swapped mechanics the trail of who did what is murky. You *shouldn't* have timing issues at those ages and kilometers but you also can't rule out that initial belt change missing something and contributing to premature wear, and as cilebertis probably know they can establish what's happened to cylinder 4 but not why. That's a very good reason to go with cileberti, they'll give you an itemised invoice of what they've done rather than a general description of "fixed timing" etc.

Hopefully RAC or consumer protection can advise better on options.

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alfaromeo8c

Quote from: poohbah on August 25, 2018, 12:51:27 PM

Rereading your original post, do you know if the original mechanic did a compression test when he first diagnosed noisy water pump bearing? Or did he just have a listen and give his initial view? Maybe No4 cylinder was already a problem?
I don't know he did or not but he started engine and let me heard the sound and then he drove my car several meters without driving belt for a tow as it is possible to drive structurally.
if there was a problem on cylinder, engine would run very poorly.
Actually, the mechanic wanted to defend me against autodelta, but the owner of the local shop and the owner of autodela know each other, but not friends. that's why the mechanic can't do it for me.
I have only the estimate showing price of each part for fixing the engine.
Thank you for your advice.

Rising Sun

Hi there, I'm a little perplexed with this one because you mentioned the car was towed from the first mechanic to another workshop because the drive belt was already removed. That seems strange because putting a drive belt back is such a simple thing on these cars and wouldn't warrant a tow truck. Am I right in saying that he removed the timing belt, and worked out he needed the tools to put it back together, and hence the tow? FYI, I guess the tools he needed are the cam locks. If that's the case, then it's possible your first mechanic caused valve interference as without the cam locks, the cams can jump/snap out of position when the belt is removed. As has been previously mentioned, because the car has been at various locations, things get very murky.

What exactly prompted the second repairer to do a compression test? Was it a precursory thing while the intake manifold was still off? Or was it as a result of the engine misfiring after it went back together?

A couple of things to consider:

Obviously the second repairer had the cam locks. One would assume as you had the car towed there based on the fact that the first repairer didn't have them. If this is the case, surely the second repairer has done this procedure before. I'm not saying they didn't make a mistake, but there is also a good chance they knew how to change a belt and pump successfully.

One or 2 teeth out on these engines does not constitute valve damage. I've personally seen a lot more than that without touching valves.

Water pump issues won't cause a belt to jump as it's driven from the axillary belt, not the timing belt.

A cam snapping back when the belt is removed without cam locks can cause a valve to touch a piston, if any pistons are in the DTC position. Hence my first comment about the first repairer.

A low or no compression situation may have actually been there before anyone touched your car. Low compression may not have been easily identifiable.

If some dirt or something got caught in the valve when the manifold came off, that is something which can be checked easily without too much invasive work to the engine. Usually a simple fix too. There are a number of checks which need to be done before a head comes off. Someone needs to identify the cause of compression loss is it a bottom end issue? Is it a bent valve? Is it something sticking in the valve? If you are trying to point the finger at someone, you need to be clear. Chances are that no one has caused this at all. I'm just saying you need to get all your ducks in a row before trying to get a case together.

I agree, it's a crappy situation. It is for the repairers too. Just be objective about it and deal with facts.

I hope this helps and good luck with it all.

alfaromeo8c

#13
Quote from: Rising Sun on August 25, 2018, 02:34:38 PM
Hi there, I'm a little perplexed with this one because you mentioned the car was towed from the first mechanic to another workshop because the drive belt was already removed. That seems strange because putting a drive belt back is such a simple thing on these cars and wouldn't warrant a tow truck. Am I right in saying that he removed the timing belt, and worked out he needed the tools to put it back together, and hence the tow? FYI, I guess the tools he needed are the cam locks. If that's the case, then it's possible your first mechanic caused valve interference as without the cam locks, the cams can jump/snap out of position when the belt is removed. As has been previously mentioned, because the car has been at various locations, things get very murky.

What exactly prompted the second repairer to do a compression test? Was it a precursory thing while the intake manifold was still off? Or was it as a result of the engine misfiring after it went back together?

The local workshop did the job many times. as I mentioned above his co-worker is in Italy with a tool now. Hence, the local mechanic said he couldn't replace timing belt as it is too risky without a tool, he just removed driving belt.

And Autodelta said "vehicle was pushed into workshop to carry out work. we did now want to start it as we did know know the extent of the water pump failure. Timing belt and water pump was replaced as per the alfa romeo procedure with the cam locking tools. upon completion of the work, we started the vehicle and it was running very poorly. Carried out compression test on engine and found no compression on cylinder 4. suspect timing belt jumped a tooth from water pump failure. requires removal of front cylinder head to inspect damage.
The alfa romeo 3.2 v6 engine is an interface engine and failure of the timing belt results in piston and valve contact."
this is they type the problem on paper, not an estimate. and they suspected a bent valve.
Thanks for your technical point.

Rising Sun

My pleasure. That will be a hard one to get around now. But first thing is to determine whether the loss of compression is caused by a valve or bottom end. There a couple of checks the mechanics can do to verify that before the head comes off. Obviously if it's a bent valve, it would not have been caused by a water pump failure. Good luck with it all!!!