View Single Post
  #3  
Old 07-08-2016, 02:44 PM
ard ard is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Sierra Foothills, California
Posts: 6,738
ard is on a distinguished road
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stantiva View Post
My 2010 X5 turbo diesel was driven over a curb and ended up with the right front wheel suspended over a ditch and the car resting on the frame. After backing it out I saw large plastic chunks of the underbody shields at the running board area and oil dripping from the frame near the wheel. I could not identify the source of the leak but it was severe enough to call a tow truck rather than risk driving 100 miles to a shop.

The dealer provided quotes for the panel damage and had a tough time finding the source of the leak. Ultimately it was identified as the oil pressure line feeding the turbo. Dealer states that this could not be a result of the accident and will not submit a quote to insurance. There was NO leak before the accident, There was a significant leak immediately after. Can the shock that resulted in such damage result in a fracture to the oil tube? Dealer insists it is not possible

You have no idea if there was a branch, piece of wood, etc that was jammed into the oil return line. The problem is that your first telling of the event, "just the wheel dangling down" has now become their 'truth'....

why would you insist this damage must have been due to ONLY 'the shock'?? Could there not have been other pointed debris that caused this, that once you backed away this debris was no longer stuck in the car or it dropped out during towing?? Could the tow operator have put a hook on something they shouldnt?

Also, you are in Panama.... not many options I assume.

Which tube is leaking? Part number? What does the dealer want to fix it?

Can you demand an insurance inspection? your dealer may be screwing you, for no good reason.

Last edited by ard; 07-08-2016 at 10:16 PM.
Reply With Quote

Sponsored Links