Home Forums Articles How To's FAQ Register
Go Back   Xoutpost.com > BMW SAV Forums > X5 (E53) Forum
Fluid Motor Union
User Name
Password
Member List Premier Membership Today's Posts New Posts

Xoutpost server transfer and maintenance is occurring....
Xoutpost is currently undergoing a planned server migration.... stay tuned for new developments.... sincerely, the management


View Poll Results: Is it necessary to change the "Lifetime" trans oil in the X5 4.4 at 100k?
Yes 26 74.29%
No 4 11.43%
It's Lifetime, therefore NEVER 5 14.29%
Voters: 35. You may not vote on this poll

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #141  
Old 04-13-2010, 05:42 PM
JCL's Avatar
JCL JCL is offline
Premier Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Vancouver, Canada
Posts: 11,853
JCL will become famous soon enoughJCL will become famous soon enough
Quote:
Originally Posted by sunny5280 View Post
My apologies if I got you confused with someone else.

With that said, given Mr. Millers qualifications and recommendation are you will to consider that your position may be wrong?
Do you even understand my position? I don't think you do. You don't even know my qualifications.

My position applies to my vehicle, not yours. There isn't a right and wrong, as I pointed out at the very beginning of this thread. There is a balance of risk. Penguin refers to it as not being black and white. You seem to want to make it so. Anyone who doesn't agree with your mechanic is discounted.

I don't particularly subscribe to Miller's recommendations, so he doesn't influence me. I don't necessarily disagree with him, I just don't read him so can't really comment.

If I had a high mileage X5 with a shifting problem, I would change the fluid because I would have nothing to lose, just the price of parts. It would be a faint hope clause/Hail Mary kind of effort. If I didn't have a shifting problem, I wouldn't touch the fluid. I guess I disagree with Miller there, if I understand his position from the summar comments posted. If a fluid change didn't resolve the problem, I would take the transmission out and overhaul it myself.

Now, what I really want to know is, do you even acknowledge that a likely cause of your valve body failure was a fluid change prior to you buying the vehicle? And are you now changing the fluid hoping to avoid another valve body failure? Or was your valve body failure one of those many transmission failures not impacted in any way by fluid changes?
__________________
2007 X3 3.0si, 6 MT, Premium, White

Retired:
2008 535i, 6 MT, M Sport, Premium, Space Grey
2003 X5 3.0 Steptronic, Premium, Titanium Silver

2002 325xi 5 MT, Steel Grey
2004 Z4 3.0 Premium, Sport, SMG, Maldives Blue
Reply With Quote

Sponsored Links

  #142  
Old 04-13-2010, 05:48 PM
JCL's Avatar
JCL JCL is offline
Premier Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Vancouver, Canada
Posts: 11,853
JCL will become famous soon enoughJCL will become famous soon enough
Quote:
Originally Posted by sunny5280 View Post
Very likely a fluid flush would avoid the valve body becoming clogged. I'm still waiting for his response to this.
It is the other way around, you have it reversed. The fluid flush tends to cause the valve body becoming clogged. It isn't common for a valve body to fail for other reasons, but I am sure it could happen.

Please don't keep assigning beliefs to me that you have erroneously formulated from various comments.
__________________
2007 X3 3.0si, 6 MT, Premium, White

Retired:
2008 535i, 6 MT, M Sport, Premium, Space Grey
2003 X5 3.0 Steptronic, Premium, Titanium Silver

2002 325xi 5 MT, Steel Grey
2004 Z4 3.0 Premium, Sport, SMG, Maldives Blue
Reply With Quote
  #143  
Old 04-13-2010, 05:58 PM
Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Denver, CO
Posts: 622
sunny5280 is an unknown quantity at this point
Quote:
Originally Posted by JCL View Post
Do you even understand my position? I don't think you do.
I fully understand your position. You feel the benefit does not outweigh the risk. Is that or is that not correct?

Quote:
You don't even know my qualifications.
I believe you stated your qualifications early in the discussion.

Quote:
My position applies to my vehicle, not yours. There isn't a right and wrong, as I pointed out at the very beginning of this thread. There is a balance of risk.
I agree. I fail to see why you continue to feel I am not aware of this. You and I have a different opinion on the risk/benefit.

Quote:
Penguin refers to it as not being black and white. You seem to want to make it so. Anyone who doesn't agree with your mechanic is discounted.
What I disagree with is a correlation between changing the transmission fluid and subsequent transmission failure. I have repeatedly stated there is some risk and because of that risk I'm sure there are examples of where sediment became dislodged and caused a subsequent failure. However that does not translate into a correlation of fluid change = subsequent failure...as you would have us believe.

Quote:
I don't particularly subscribe to Miller's recommendations, so he doesn't influence me. I don't necessarily disagree with him, I just don't read him so can't really comment.

If I had a high mileage X5 with a shifting problem, I would change the fluid because I would have nothing to lose, just the price of parts. It would be a faint hope clause/Hail Mary kind of effort.
And yet you seem to have ignored this as potential reason why you may have observed transmission failures after a transmission fluid change.


Quote:
If I didn't have a shifting problem, I wouldn't touch the fluid. I guess I disagree with Miller there, if I understand his position from the summar comments posted. If a fluid change didn't resolve the problem, I would take the transmission out and overhaul it myself.
So how about commenting on my valve body replacement? Do you think a fluid change may have averted my problem?

Quote:
Now, what I really want to know is, do you even acknowledge that a likely cause of your valve body failure was a fluid change prior to you buying the vehicle?
No, I don't acknowledge it as likely. There is no evidence to suggest the fluid was ever changed. It had 80K miles on it and came with a considerable number of service records and none of them showed the fluid had been changed. Likewise there was no indication the fluid had been changed when the repair was performed.

Will I acknowledge there's the possibility the fluid was changed and thus resulted in the failure: You bet. Though I think it highly unlikely (or, the inverse of that would be "slight"...a word we've seen before haven't we?).

Quote:
And are you now changing the fluid hoping to avoid another valve body failure?
That's part of it. But not the only reason. I had all the other fluids replaced as well because I want to start with a known baseline and I believe no fluid is lifetime.

Quote:
Or was your valve body failure one of those many transmission failures not impacted in any way by fluid changes?
This is possible too.
Reply With Quote
  #144  
Old 04-13-2010, 06:02 PM
Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Denver, CO
Posts: 622
sunny5280 is an unknown quantity at this point
Quote:
Originally Posted by JCL View Post
It is the other way around, you have it reversed. The fluid flush tends to cause the valve body becoming clogged. It isn't common for a valve body to fail for other reasons, but I am sure it could happen.
No, I don't have it the other way around. You just said the VB tends to fail because it becomes clogged. Assuming the fluid wasn't flushed, and there's no reason to think it had, do you feel flushing the fluid would have prevented the failure? Seems reasonble to me the flush would have removed the contaminant and possibly saved me a lot of money.

Quote:
Please don't keep assigning beliefs to me that you have erroneously formulated from various comments.
I'll keep this in mind should it ever happen.

Last edited by sunny5280; 04-13-2010 at 06:11 PM.
Reply With Quote
  #145  
Old 04-13-2010, 06:18 PM
Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Denver, CO
Posts: 622
sunny5280 is an unknown quantity at this point
Quote:
Originally Posted by FSETH View Post


The risk is real very real, not urban legend.
Again with the strawmen. I have repeatedly acknowledged there is a risk. Why do you continue to argue as if I hadn't?
Reply With Quote
  #146  
Old 04-13-2010, 06:27 PM
FSETH's Avatar
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Marietta, GA
Posts: 5,302
FSETH is on a distinguished road
Quote:
Originally Posted by sunny5280 View Post
Again with the strawmen. I have repeatedly acknowledged there is a risk. Why do you continue to argue as if I hadn't?
Is there a risk, or is it urban legend? I still don't know where you stand. You can't have it both ways. One or the other please.
__________________
Profeshenal spellar
Reply With Quote
  #147  
Old 04-13-2010, 06:30 PM
Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Denver, CO
Posts: 622
sunny5280 is an unknown quantity at this point
Quote:
Originally Posted by FSETH View Post
Is there a risk, or is it urban legend? I still don't know where you stand. You can't have it both ways. One or the other please.
There is a risk and it is an urban legend. The two aren't mutually exclusive.
Reply With Quote
  #148  
Old 04-13-2010, 06:42 PM
FSETH's Avatar
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Marietta, GA
Posts: 5,302
FSETH is on a distinguished road
Quote:
Originally Posted by sunny5280 View Post
There is a risk and it is an urban legend. The two aren't mutually exclusive.
Lets clean the slate and start over for a minute. What exactly is the point that you are trying to get accross in this thread?
__________________
Profeshenal spellar
Reply With Quote
  #149  
Old 04-13-2010, 06:55 PM
Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Denver, CO
Posts: 622
sunny5280 is an unknown quantity at this point
Quote:
Originally Posted by FSETH View Post
Lets clean the slate and start over for a minute. What exactly is the point that you are trying to get accross in this thread?
I am saying there is no proof showing a correlation between transmission fluid changes and subsequent transmission failures. And that such a claim is nothing but an urban legend.

To help illustrate:

When changing the oil in a vehicle there is a risk the drain plug can be over tightend and strip the treads of the oil pan or plug. Just because this risk exists, and it has been known to happen on occasion, does not mean there is a correlation that changing the oil results in stripped oil pans or plugs. I would consider such a claim an urban legend even though the risk is there and I can point to examples of it happening.
Reply With Quote
  #150  
Old 04-13-2010, 07:21 PM
FSETH's Avatar
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Marietta, GA
Posts: 5,302
FSETH is on a distinguished road
Quote:
Originally Posted by sunny5280 View Post
I am saying there is no proof showing a correlation between transmission fluid changes and subsequent transmission failures. And that such a claim is nothing but an urban legend.
OK, so would it be fair to say that you disagree with Mike Miller's, JCL's, etc. opinion that changing the fluid for the first time on an un-maintained, higher mileage (say 100,000 miles) automatic transmission comes with risk of failure due to the fluid? Keep in mind that I am not talking about someone using incorrect methods, techniques or fluids. I am talking about a perfect fluid and filter change with the propert parts.
__________________
Profeshenal spellar
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On





All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:12 AM.
vBulletin, Copyright 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. SEO by vBSEO 3.6.0
© 2017 Xoutpost.com. All rights reserved. Xoutpost.com is a private enthusiast site not associated with BMW AG.
The BMW name, marks, M stripe logo, and Roundel logo as well as X3, X5 and X6 designations used in the pages of this Web Site are the property of BMW AG.
This web site is not sponsored or affiliated in any way with BMW AG or any of its subsidiaries.