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  #131  
Old 06-04-2013, 07:29 PM
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Originally Posted by BigBlack48is View Post
Oh BMW knows all about the valve seal problem that is present in all of the N62's... that's very obvious. I am surprised there is no TIS or flat out recall that is in progress to fix this...
I am surprised to see all the calls for a safety recall for something that simply isn't a safety issue. No, rapid valve seal wear isn't acceptable, but it is far from being BMW's responsibility to fix years after the warranty has expired. The seals have simply worn out. Warranty doesn't cover wear and tear, it covers defects in manufacturing. It is hard to call something that shows up 7 or 8 years after the ship date a manufacturing problem.

If it was mine, I would sell it and move on. Or do guides and seals myself.
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  #132  
Old 06-04-2013, 07:34 PM
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sometimes i wish the BMWs were built by egyptians - their worksmanship stood up the time test of last 4000 years...


can you imagine driving a 3995 year old car, and worry that in the last 5 years something would happen??!!!
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  #133  
Old 06-04-2013, 11:56 PM
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Originally Posted by TerminatorX5 View Post
sometimes i wish the BMWs were built by egyptians - their worksmanship stood up the time test of last 4000 years...


can you imagine driving a 3995 year old car, and worry that in the last 5 years something would happen??!!!
Feel free to purchase yourself a Nasr, I hear they have a 4000 year unlimited mile warranty.............
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  #134  
Old 06-05-2013, 01:37 AM
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it covers defects in manufacturing.

it seems more of a defect in engineering design, and while it could be easily forgiven for a Lada designers, whose product falls apart the moment it is off the assembly line, it is not expected from the winners of multiple awards in engine designs, which BMW claims to be... and that "crush" of expectations is what makes people upset... made me upset when my 4.6is went belly up because of the guides... i felt betrayed... that is why people buy real rolex and not $20 fakes... well... some buy fakes... but, i would not be upset over poor quality of $20 rolex... on the other hand, if the $5000 certified genuine rolex exhibits quality issues in assembly or design - i'd be upset...

having said this, i would hope that the designers of engine would come up an "updated" part that would resolve the issue - after all, this is a BMW and not a trabant, we would expect these cars outlive their competitors and thus command premium for the new models - if you can sell 20 year bimmer with 200K miles for several thousand bucks, a brand new one will fetch top dollars too...
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  #135  
Old 06-05-2013, 02:49 AM
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Originally Posted by TerminatorX5 View Post
it seems more of a defect in engineering design, and while it could be easily forgiven for a Lada designers, whose product falls apart the moment it is off the assembly line, it is not expected from the winners of multiple awards in engine designs, which BMW claims to be... and that "crush" of expectations is what makes people upset... made me upset when my 4.6is went belly up because of the guides... i felt betrayed... that is why people buy real rolex and not $20 fakes... well... some buy fakes... but, i would not be upset over poor quality of $20 rolex... on the other hand, if the $5000 certified genuine rolex exhibits quality issues in assembly or design - i'd be upset...

having said this, i would hope that the designers of engine would come up an "updated" part that would resolve the issue - after all, this is a BMW and not a trabant, we would expect these cars outlive their competitors and thus command premium for the new models - if you can sell 20 year bimmer with 200K miles for several thousand bucks, a brand new one will fetch top dollars too...
A design defect is something that makes the vehicle unsafe. You are describing a situation whereby the product doesn't meet your expectations for running 200,000 miles without wear to the valve seals.

I'm not saying that it is a great thing that valve seals wear out, or that people shouldn't be disappointed, but no manufacturer is going to give away free engines years after the warranty is up (especially \when some are second and third owners who didn't purchase the vehicle from BMW) simply because the owners didn't expect to have to maintain those engines.
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  #136  
Old 06-05-2013, 07:18 AM
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Originally Posted by bcredliner View Post
Since a lot of the 4.8 owners use this forum, might be worth the effort to gather a list of those that have had the valve seal problem or are concerned their X is getting to that time that they fear it is going to happen to them and send a registered letter from an attorney with a thorough description of what has happened and what each have paid to have the problem fixed. Also saying that valve seals failing at less than 100,000 is not dis-similar to a door falling off---it just plain and simple should not happen. Even if something like this has already been done, I would do it again and request an explanation from BMW why they think this across the board failure is OK rather than something that should have a fix and that fix done by the dealer at no or parts only charge.
I think you are missing something bcredliner... it's not just us n6248b guys, it's the whole n62 line. The N62 V8 line was put into MANY MANY vehicles that BMW produced from 2002 - 2011. And yes, the problem persists in most of them.
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  #137  
Old 06-05-2013, 08:55 AM
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Originally Posted by JCL View Post
A design defect is something that makes the vehicle unsafe. You are describing a situation whereby the product doesn't meet your expectations for running 200,000 miles without wear to the valve seals.

I'm not saying that it is a great thing that valve seals wear out, or that people shouldn't be disappointed, but no manufacturer is going to give away free engines years after the warranty is up (especially \when some are second and third owners who didn't purchase the vehicle from BMW) simply because the owners didn't expect to have to maintain those engines.
a design defect can be something not safety related - say, a right windshield wiper on left hand drive E53 (I am not familiar with layout of the RHD wipers) - while the left wiper can be lifted away from the glass, the right wiper can not while the wiper is in parked horizontal position...

has nothing to do with safety but makes no sense, and thus, I would consider this an oversight from the design engineers, where one team designed the wipers that can be lifted, and the other team designed hood that prevents the right wiper from being raised...

same with those valve seals - while it is not expected that something will outlasts the pyramids (gee, can i get over those pyramids?!!!), it is clear that something was not thought through... this is one of the reasons the manufacturers participate in races - race on sunday, sell on monday (or something to that effect)... they test and AGE their ideas on race engines running at 18000 RPMs and then move the ideas to the production engines... as a design engineer, they should know the properties of the materials used, if they break or bend under load, if the mineral oil corrodes or lubes the material, if sulfur in local gasoline destroys the internal guts of the engines (remember the V8 from mid-90s? the Alusil block? they were replacing the engines at that time due to the fact that they overlooked the KNOWN sulfur issue in the US petrol/gasoline)

and as far as safety goes... losing a vital component, such as engine going at traffic speed, and thus losing the power steering, the power brakes and the ability to safely command the vehicle due to UNEXPECTED mechanical failure of a major component... that is a safety issue... I am talking about those guides of mine on the M62 motor... And while you can blame me for changing oil every other christmas, and totally ignore the maintenance, the sheer number of consumers with the same problem points to one common denominator, the design flaw in the engine... a piece of plastic inside an internal combustion engine - even sound of it does not make sense... and if the plastic component would have lasted, nobody would even talk about it but since it seems to be a weak link, we are talking about it... maybe metal guides would not be appropriate, but neither would be a wooden stick... or plastic... so, as engineers, they should have come up with something for those guides... or, abandon the particular design that calls for those guides... we are paying them to be experts in what they do, not amateurs...

I am not litigating this issue, i am not a lawyer, i am a technician, and while i admire many technical advances of the BMW engineers, i think turning a blind eye to an obvious problem does not serve their image well... and certain percentage of their price tag comes from an image - hey dude, what you drive? a Yugo... and you? I got a bimmer!... whose got a better image?...

and nobody expects a freebee - like with the cluster replacement, there was price for the part and comp'd labor... or combination thereof... or, like with Alusil engines, the whole thing was replaced... granted, with N62 being in almost all V-8 BMWs (minus the M cars) made from 2002 to about 2011 (is that right, BigBlack??), that is a lot of engines to replace... nobody will expect that... but coming with an improved part might be a better solution - i've heard that the simple valve seal replacement yields the same blue smoke in another 80,000 miles... for me, 80K is only 4 years of ownership... about 3.5 years... or so...
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  #138  
Old 06-05-2013, 11:42 AM
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Has anyone done the valve seal replacement? How difficult of a task is it? I understand depends on the skill of the person.
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  #139  
Old 06-05-2013, 02:55 PM
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Originally Posted by pezho405 View Post
Ok 10-40 Mobil 1 high milage this weekend it is. Ill tell you how it goes.

Also i may have noticed that in the shop we used to have 5-40 and ever since we changed back to 5-30 i started smoking... didnt make that connection at first but i hope its true. If it is, it means ive always had this problem since i bought the car..
Any updates? How's the 10W40 working for you?
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  #140  
Old 06-05-2013, 05:18 PM
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Originally Posted by williak7 View Post
Has anyone done the valve seal replacement? How difficult of a task is it? I understand depends on the skill of the person.
A little update... I talked to the service technician a bit more about this. There was a large part list needed and BMW estimates 40+ hours of labor. Guess I should've bought the extended warranty, but I'm always hesitant with whether they would follow through.

guess I will just deal with it or trade it in. He was telling me that the N62 engine in the 7 series and 6 series do not have this problem. Those actually have different issues come up. He said he talked to an engineer on the engine and they assume it has to do with the torch on the engine which cause the seal to fail.
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