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Today's Turbos Dependable ?
When I researched my last car purchase, a VW, I was lead to believe the turbos of the 2000-2010 era were not dependable long term. If you bought one with 100,000 miles or more you had better plan on the expense of replacing the turbo. Is that true today? Or have advances been made. The replacement expense seems to always negate the gas savings of a turbo. Today's N/A cars seems to go to 250,000 easily. My neighbor had 250,000 on her 2004 N/A Honda Odyssey when she sold it.
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Ford claims their ecoboost fours are reliable, but I personally have avoided "huffer" engines, either blower or turbo. Why are the car makers going turbo? To comply with CAFE mandates. It's true...don't use the boost, and these little 4 bangers deliver great mileage. Use the boost, and you can almost keep up with a normally aspirated V-8 while enjoying roughly the same mileage as the V-8.
I have zero experience with "huffer" engines because of the thinking I expressed above. I could very well be wrong, but won't be buying a boosted engine car to find out. |
Diesels use turbos and they are reliable. My X5 seems to have an aux oil pump which helps cool the turbos after engine shutdown.
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Maybe it depends on the brand?
But I don’t trust the current BMW turbo engines to go very long. Way too stressed, 2 liter boosted engines pulling 3600-4000+ lb. vehicles. In the last Roundel (BMW CCA mag), one of the columnists wrote about a long trip that he had just done in his 5 series. Which he seems to like. As part of the article, he mentioned the work the car had has in its 150,000 mile life. One thing, nonchalantly mentioned, is that it’s on its FOURTH set of twin turbos. |
It feels to me like these small displacement turbo engines are the last gasp of the internal combustion engine, which are being legislated and politicised out of existence. Makers are focusing on electric now. For the gas engines, just slap on turbos, crank up the boost and get them through the end of the warranty period.
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I just ordered a new Ford T350 van with the ecoboost 3.5L. I'm amazed they get 310 hp. and 400 lb. ft. of torque out of 3.5L, but you can't get a larger displacement engine. Seems to me a small displacement engine with one or two turbos putting out that kind of power wouldn't be anything that would last a long time. But I'm old school and maybe the current technology if up to it longevity wise.
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We had a 2004 Vdub Jetta and that little turbo engine was trouble-free for the 100k miles we owned it.
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I have a 2014 f150 3.5 ecoboost with 75K on it. It has had the drivers side turbo replaced on it already and I get a low boost CEL from time to time.
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After a bad experience with a ~2007 Subaru XT (big turbo - drank oil and eventually tried to digest the turbo guts through the engine) we got back on the horse and have a '13 Hyundai Santa Fe 2.0 turbo. It's pretty quick for a toaster, and about as exciting. Doesn't really consume much oil but does throw a big puff when you really get on it. I'm replacing the PCV valve today - we'll see if that fixes it.
Sure you can build a high-stress-but-forever engine but it costs you. At grocery-getter price points I'm pessimistic. |
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I have owned many turbocharged cars in the past 20+ years. I have never had to replace a turbo on a single one of them.
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My 1996 Saab 900SE turbo went over 150K miles with no turbo issues. The only reasons I got rid of it was because Saab was going out of business and I was concerned about future service & parts.
My current daily driver is a M-B W204 (C-class) coupe with a 4 cylinder turbo. Over 75K miles and so far no issues. I believe it definitely depends on the brand, and even more so on the service it receives. In my experience and opinion, turbos need more frequent oil changes and I also believe it is better to use synthetic oil in turbocharged engines due to the better resistance to thermal breakdown synthetic oil allegedly has over conventional oil. |
1993 Passat TDI 430,000 KM. No trouble with the turbo.
2006 Jetta TDI 320,000 KM . No trouble with the turbo. 2016 Golf TSi coming up to 100,000 km. I'll keep you posted. Best Les |
The new Volvos are 2L 4 cylinder with 320 HP. They are both turbocharged and supercharged.
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FWIW, my 930 has 120K miles on its original motor, turbo, and transmission.
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The one thing I do know, is you CAN'T TURBO A 914!
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My old Jetta (2001) went 400,00 miles on the original turbo. Later VW's were less reliable, closer tot he 2010 years.
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My Ford Focus 1.8 turbo diesel had turbo trouble; at 249000 miles, so I am not conolaining
Of course I didn't gun the engine ever until it was fully warmed up, and I always waited 30 seconds before shutting the engine down. |
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