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#1
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CV Boots
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#2
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Start planning to replace as soon as you see the tear. You don't want dirt(gravel) getting in there ..... worse loosing all the grease from the inside
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#3
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jazz47 - Thanks for the reply. I actually posted this just to see what everyone would say but it seems that maybe most might have thought of this as a "dumb" question. Truth be told I am just trying to get my head around the fact that my X5 is at the dealer right now and they are trying to fix the adaptive headlights since they will raise and lower for no reason...really kind of funny to see it happen unless you happen to do it on the highway to a big rig and blind them in their side mirrors...boy that guy was peeved and there was nothing I could do. Anyway, I digress but point is they were looking at the sensors for the lights that are attached to the front and rear axle for ride level and low and behold looks like the CV Boots are tearing. Well my X5 has been in the shop no less than 8-10 times in the last 6 months because the technician did not re-attach the front lower control arm bolt properly and it detached itself from the wheel while I was driving it amongst other things. Fortunately no one was hurt but again they have had the front wheels off on this thing multiple times over the last 3-4 months and never once said anything about the CV Boots. Makes me wonder if they are really looking when the Manager says they will give it a complete and thorough inspection. I was just trying to get a gauge from the forum as to when these things need to be replaced and what to watch for as a less than mechanically savvy guy.
Thanks again for the reply!! |
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#4
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I agree that you need to replace them at the first sign of any tearing. I recently had mine in for a tune up and they noticed a tear in both CV joints. They said I was lucky that no gravel made its way in there and that I still had grease inside. But here is the best part. They quoted me $900+ to replace them. I said no thanks and got a quote from a reputable shop down the road for $700. The crazy thing is that the service manager called me after I left, so I told him how much the quote was down the road and he agreed to match it! So I will always get a second opinion when dealing with my local stealer, I mean dealer!
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#5
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If your X is still at the dealers, ask the shop foreman if you could have a look at the CV boots yourself. Preferably up on a hoist where you could just walk in underneath and inspect said boots. Any decent mechanic will let you have a close up peep, as long as they don't have insurance restrictions in denying you/joe public workshop access. Take a rag and wipe down around the clips as well, should be nice n dry. Obviously look for cracks and or tell tail signs of grease spots on the rubber boots.
Do a search, tons of info on CV boots. GL
__________________
2002 - 3.0i - Topaz Blue - Beige - Samana Beige Go hard or go home or go hard going home
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#6
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Quote:
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#7
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Sorry to hear about the frustrating dealer experience. Missing the cracked CV boot is a major oversight by the dealer .... especially if you are always there. In addition the CV boots are a common replacement item on the X5, they should have noticed it.
If the manager is not taking care of you with all this incidents, it maybe time to find a different dealership. The least they could do is replace your pads on the house. |
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#8
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you will hear squeeking noise... ball joints are very difficult to replace without the proper bmw ball joint, so make sure you have that...
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#9
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i had my cv boot replaced about a month or so ago. i was lucky that my cuz was just making a quick inspection of the car, he always goes for the cv boots every inspection to make sure there perfectly fine. lucky the problem was caught and fixed =] and since he was my cuz he did it for me for free=] which reminds me... i have to go treat my cuz to a good ass dinner one of these days!
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#10
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Did they just replace the covers? Even $700 seems a bit high. I had one torn cover one time and it ended up being like $35 for the cover and $95 for an hour of labor.
__________________
Previous: 2002 X5 3.0 / 121,000 miles Current: 2007 X5 3.0si / 93,000 miles |
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