oil pump
#1
#3
#4
#7
RE: oil pump
Sorry Mike, I feel Like Im being hosed with this vehicle which I love. I am not sure what to believe with what Ive read or learned. I understand the fact that this truck is finicky, which I love about it but, Im disconcerned with the fact I dont know anything about it. Please treat me like I need to know all these things about my vehicle, not as if Im a four year old child. Thanks man. I really appreciate it.
#8
RE: oil pump
I don't think Mike was treating you like a child. He gave you the answer to your question and suggested you do some more reading. I suggest you follow his advice. I own one of the risky VIN numbers and it's got over 100,000 miles on it with no problems so far. Some others experienced problems. It is what it is.
#9
RE: oil pump
Sorry to interject here, but Land Rover has left the owners of these affected VIN#'s between a rock and a hard place on this one. I just posted this on my own thread - here is the meat of TSB verbatim:
Whenever an oil pump failure is encountered on vehicles within the above VIN range
the only effective repair currently available is replacement of the complete engine
assembly including the front cover/oil pump manufactured to the latest tolerances. Italics added for emphasis.
You can interpret the above statement any way you want but the bottom line is still the same: When the original oil pump fails or otherwise needs to be replaced, an "off the shelf" replacement cannot be fitted properly. Read it again. That's what it says. Ain't gonna work. You need a new pump, you need a new engine. End of story. Official statement from the horse's mouth.
Whenever an oil pump failure is encountered on vehicles within the above VIN range
the only effective repair currently available is replacement of the complete engine
assembly including the front cover/oil pump manufactured to the latest tolerances. Italics added for emphasis.
You can interpret the above statement any way you want but the bottom line is still the same: When the original oil pump fails or otherwise needs to be replaced, an "off the shelf" replacement cannot be fitted properly. Read it again. That's what it says. Ain't gonna work. You need a new pump, you need a new engine. End of story. Official statement from the horse's mouth.
#10
RE: oil pump
well sure. Most people keep running their engine without oil pressure. This will toast the engine, and there is no point in replacing the front cover and pump if the block is toast.
If you think the oil pump is bad, or going bad, get a new front cover. The pump is mated to the cover, so you have to replace both at the same time. LR replaces the block so that
1)- they won't have to mess with it twice
2)- so they can sell you a new block without having to mess with it anymore.
Just because they say that in the TSB does not mean you HAVE to replace the block, it just means that if an LR dealership does the work, this is how they HAVE to do it.
If you think the oil pump is bad, or going bad, get a new front cover. The pump is mated to the cover, so you have to replace both at the same time. LR replaces the block so that
1)- they won't have to mess with it twice
2)- so they can sell you a new block without having to mess with it anymore.
Just because they say that in the TSB does not mean you HAVE to replace the block, it just means that if an LR dealership does the work, this is how they HAVE to do it.