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Originally Posted by M3_WC
Yup, one and only example.
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Hey, the statement was that no one had ever had a problem. A very sweeping statement, I might add. I just pointed out that it isn't true. I have read about more than one example, but have never worked on one personally, so it is all second hand info for me. Why not ask Terry himself, who posted in a thread titled "Who has blown an N54?" a few weeks back?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Terry @ BMS on N54tech.com
We know they are pretty durable < 440rw but above that it's anyones guess. I know of one that was lost to hydrolock, one where a fuel injector stuck open and locked it, a couple with grenaded/detonated pistons, two that swallowed part of an intake/charge pipe, and one that appears to have broken a piston skirt or rod.
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N54TECH.COM : BMW N54 / N55 Turbo Performance forum - View Single Post - Who has blown an N54
Sounds like more than one, as those are just Terry's examples. I am sure other tuners have some similar stories, you can't develop these products in the field without some lessons being learned.
Quote:
Originally Posted by M3_WC
HPFP failures have nothing to do with tunes or piggybacks. Same can be said for injector failures. These are known problems on all N54's, including non-modified which the majority have no mods.
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I understand that a HPFP can fail without a tune, my own did. I said, though, that people with tunes experience a higher incidence. I think that is probably due to the heat, and duty cycle, both of which are raised with increased power output. The tune itself doesn't cause it, it simply creates operating conditions that are harder on components that already have a propensity to fail. You don't see incidence rates of injector and HPFP failures as being related to heat or duty cycle? Honestly?
Quote:
Originally Posted by M3_WC
Broken half shafts are from people drag racing their cars.
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I am sure they are. BMW designed the driveline for more than dragstrips, and that included making halfshafts lighter to reduce unsprung weight. BMW desired to protect the driveline from shocks, and so even installed those maddening clutch delay valves on MT cars to reduce driveline shocks. It isn't surprising that halfshafts can fail. The statement suggested that people who add hp can find other limits, and experience higher incidences of failure elsewhere. You don't agree?
Quote:
Originally Posted by M3_WC
You fail to mention. The car owner was running a prototype turbo upgrade, methanol injection. And was told to run higher octane gas, which he did not. Push the limits with 500+whp, then something can break with stock internals.
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I didn't fail to mention anything, I posted a thread that contains all that information about the turbo, meth injection, etc. The car owner states he was not told to run higher octane gas, and Terry called it a communications failure. If there had been safeties installed such as a meth cutout, however, it wouldn't have mattered so much that the tune wasn't tested. Please understand that I am not attacking Terry. I just think it is surprising that people think that turning up the boost without addressing other issues is safe, and won't lead to failures of engines or other components. It is only natural to expect it to do so.