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Deschodt 04-13-2015 07:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Steve Carlton (Post 8574141)
I'd say the 2009 997 is getting more spendy than I'm comfortable with. Not wanting to risk a total engine failure, it seems the way to go is with a 2005 with the old IMS style bearing that's been updated or have it updated.

And that's where we go full circle in the discussion, IMO.

Because out of the riskier 05-08s, only "some" 05s are potentially elegible for an IMS upgrade without splitting the case (which is cost prohibitive). And you *cannot* tell which is which without buying it first and taking a look - I doubt the seller will agree to split the tranny from the motor in a PPI ;-) A car that has already been done would be the ticket for sure, but likely pricier.

There is an active lawsuit where VIN #s have been released "in scope" but in practice, people are finding out the numbers are not accurate enough to base a purchase decision on... So your best bet if you are a gambler is a super early 05 997 whose VIN you see in the lawsuit (I can't post the PDF of it, if someone can host it for everyone, PM me)

>So worst case on a 997 is that you have to replace the engine. It looks like a replacement engine is about $15k installed. Yeah I'd take the 05-08.

Stats wise, I understand, odds are good. But if you are in that bad group, it's gotta suck. Also from direct experience (a friend who blew his CaymanS on track racing me), those numbers are not necessarily accurate anymore. Porsche had engines/labor discounted as goodwill for a while, but now they sell you a stripped block (which BTW is still not a 9A1, so the clock starts ticking again) and by the time you factor labor to strip your block, replace whatever makes sense to replace, my friend was quoted closer to 20-25K. (He went aftermarket and 3.8 instead for the same $;-) And the car's value is still that of a MkI.

Personally I want this car to be the last newish 911 I ever buy (don't want electric steering or 7 speed box, or PDK), so I don't know if Gen1s make sense yet. I'd sleep better with a 9A1 - but there are so few of them for sale. Then again for the longest time M96s were bad and now with LN's solution they are desirable again, who knows if someone won't come up with a clever fix for 05-08s down the road ?

speeder 04-13-2015 08:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jrboulder (Post 8574143)
So worst case on a 997 is that you have to replace the engine. What's the chance of that? 5%? It looks like a replacement engine is about $15k installed. Yeah I'd take the 05-08.

Not sure what the actual chances are but I have an acquaintance with a 997.1, bought new that is on its third engine on Porsche's dime. He has some miles on the car, (can't remember exact mileage), but it lunched one engine @ 30-40k miles and then the first replacement sometime later. I'll try to get some further details. It is an early 997S.

I've known other people with '05 997s who bought them new and have been driving the snot out of them for ten years without so much as a hiccup. I'd love one for the right price. :cool:

onewhippedpuppy 04-13-2015 04:38 PM

Every car is at risk of a major expensive issue. The 2006+ 997 and 987 overall have such a low failure rate that I would not (and don't) have any issue with them as a daily driver.

speeder 04-13-2015 05:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onewhippedpuppy (Post 8575318)
Every car is at risk of a major expensive issue. The 2006+ 997 and 987 overall have such a low failure rate that I would not (and don't) have any issue with them as a daily driver.

Every car is not at an equal risk for an expensive issue, not by a long shot. In fact, this an almost unique situation, I cannot think of another expensive luxury or sports car that spontaneously self-destructs its engine with a full crankcase of clean oil and a functioning cooling system in any numbers, much less in disturbingly frequent numbers.

I like these cars a lot and am somewhat in the market for one but lets be real. This is not some, "every car has its issues", thing. Toyota Tundra PU trucks do not eat their own engines. BMWs do not. I could go on for a whole page. It's a major design flaw. :cool:

R K T 04-13-2015 05:36 PM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1428975227.jpg

Very close to listing my late '06 S for sale. Low miles. Rare factory options.

onewhippedpuppy 04-13-2015 05:39 PM

Lots of so called "normal cars" have had issues with oil cooking leading to engine failure. BMWs destroy fuel pumps, destroy rear subframes, and lunch their VANOS. But let's look at Porsches. What about chain tensioner failures leading to Carrera oil fed tensioners? Cracked or pulled head studs? Valve guides that might last 100k? There are a LOT of potential gotchas in Porsche history. Frankly this is one of the lower incidence rates, good luck getting very far past 100k without a pricey top-end on an air-cooled 911. These aren't Toyotas and never have been.

speeder 04-13-2015 09:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onewhippedpuppy (Post 8575427)
Lots of so called "normal cars" have had issues with oil cooking leading to engine failure. BMWs destroy fuel pumps, destroy rear subframes, and lunch their VANOS. But let's look at Porsches. What about chain tensioner failures leading to Carrera oil fed tensioners? Cracked or pulled head studs? Valve guides that might last 100k? There are a LOT of potential gotchas in Porsche history. Frankly this is one of the lower incidence rates, good luck getting very far past 100k without a pricey top-end on an air-cooled 911. These aren't Toyotas and never have been.

I'm pretty well-versed in the entire development history of the 911 and the other issues you bring up here but none of them compare to the IMS issue on water pampers. Pulled studs do not grenade a motor and none of your examples caused catastrophic engine failure on low mileage cars. Valve guides and top end jobs are things that don't even take the cars off the road, much less destroy them. Same with the BMW issues. We all know that all cars have issues and spotty maintainance can cause sludge issues and engine damage but this is in another category altogether. We're talking about perfectly maintained engines self-destructing with low miles due to a major design flaw. Not some part that just wears prematurely, (like valve guides). They're not analogous.

I just happened to run into my friend who is on his third engine tonight. The first one went @ 60k miles; (covered under warranty), second one @ exactly 120k, Porsche ate it and gave him a supposedly "updated" engine, he now has 140k on it and running good. This is a 2006 997S, bought new. He loves the car, other than the engines self-destructing. Both were IMS issues and both came out of nowhere with no warnings along the way. :(

I have a feeling that "matching numbers" is never going to be a big deal on these cars down the road. :)

Steve Carlton 04-13-2015 10:55 PM

Two IMSB failures for two engines to the same owner points to a much higher failure rate than discussed, especially for a 2006.

So, what's with the class-action lawsuit? Any timetable for a resolution and speculation on what the outcome might be?

onewhippedpuppy 04-14-2015 03:19 AM

I agree about the air-cooled 911 issues Denis, my point was more regarding money. Repairing snapped head studs or doing a top end rebuild on a classic 911 is very near to the cost of a new M96 engine. If your top end turns into a full rebuild it could easily be more if new P&Cs are required. Your buddy has terrible luck, because for every owner that has an IMS failure there are probably one hundred with no issues.

Steve, the IMS lawsuit is done and I think the timeframe to make a claim has passed.

Deschodt 04-14-2015 05:57 AM

We've had the same discussion in the 996 thread (except me as speeder, word for word, and Matt as Matt ;-) It just comes down to your level of confidence. The odds are pretty good the 997 will not blow up on you - no denying that. But in my book, *I* will be in the 5%, and therefore I prefer a fixable early Gen1 (impossible to know) or a Gen2. That's not unreasonable either. If you are selling them or looking for a deal, I imagine your priorities differ, as they are good deals and the odds are low. I want to keep it for a long time.

Like Speeder I have indirect but close (good friend) experience of those lunching themselves (on track, before my eyes)... I object a bit to the prices mentioned above. I said it before, today, it's closer to 20K+ to have a swap done - more if you do a clutch and water pump and whatever else. That buys a ****load of top end rebuilds and studs in the aircooled world. The IMS is more akin to a piston ventilating a case, which is not the kind of engineering cockups we've seen in Porsches of past....

The IMS suit would not help Steve. Largely it was for M96 engines, and only included very early 2005 997s with a low degree of accuracy, VIN wise. I can PM it to you in PDF form if you want... 997, you are on your own. So yeah, it comes down to your comfort level, nobody is right or wrong here and nobody knows the exact failure rate. The market however speaks by showing a 10K+ bump between gen1 and gen2s of close year/mileage. And I've owned 4 IMS cars without an issue - I just want my long term 997 to let me sleep at night ;-)

Steve Carlton 04-14-2015 07:05 AM

Good info here. Question that I'm sure has been discussed before- if an IMSB update was done on an early 2005, would it put that issue to bed permanently? How many hours of labor are involved separating the engine/transmission? I could see if one was serious and a clutch replacement could be not too early, it could be the final phase of a PPI/purchase.

Deschodt 04-14-2015 07:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Steve Carlton (Post 8576123)
Good info here. Question that I'm sure has been discussed before- if an IMSB update was done on an early 2005, would it put that issue to bed permanently? How many hours of labor are involved separating the engine/transmission? I could see if one was serious and a clutch replacement could be not too early, it could be the final phase of a PPI/purchase.

You bet. Proof that an 05 was done would make it a primo choice and likely command extra $. An independent quoted me about $2500-3000 to do that + a clutch at the same time (all parts and labor, bearing, clutch, etc). Less if you don't do the clutch, but seems silly not to since it's right in your face.

Final PPI, though ? I sincerely doubt an owner would say " sure go ahead and split my tranny from the engine, remove my clutch, just so you can see if it's an upgradeable car"... Even if he did, it'd be an expensive PPI for you if you do not end up buying the car.

Steve Carlton 04-14-2015 07:46 AM

Just thinking out loud... "I'll buy your car if it has an upgradable IMSB (and do the work with a new clutch)." If it's not upgradable, well, the seller now knows and has a big discount on popping in a new clutch for himself. (Hey, I fell into a pun there).

I'd have a hard enough time finding an '05 that I'd like in the first place, let alone it being a unicorn with an IMSB upgrade. Seems like the value on my minty 1985 is going up and would pay for most of the cost of upgrading to a 997.

speeder 04-14-2015 08:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Steve Carlton (Post 8576183)
Just thinking out loud... "I'll buy your car if it has an upgradable IMSB (and do the work with a new clutch)." If it's not upgradable, well, the seller now knows and has a big discount on popping in a new clutch for himself. (Hey, I fell into a pun there).

I'd have a hard enough time finding an '05 that I'd like in the first place, let alone it being a unicorn with an IMSB upgrade. Seems like the value on my minty 1985 is going up and would pay for most of the cost of upgrading to a 997.

Yeah, a real unicorn. Never find one of those. :(

This took me about 8 seconds:


Porsche 911 Carrera | eBay

Already has the IMS upgrade and new clutch at the same time. As for your PPI idea, it would require removing the flywheel, not just the clutch. I don't know if there is a Porsche owner on earth that would let a strange shop tear down his car that far to find a fault that would make you not buy it? :confused:

I would not let anyone even touch my car in a PPI unless it was spark plugs or valve covers and I at least knew the shop's reputation. Lastly, (and this is directed at the Internet in general, not you), "intermediate" is one word. The correct abbreviation or acronym would be ISB, or IS, if you like it shorter. WTF are people getting "IM"? One letter for each sylable? It still doesn't add up. That would be (5) letters for "intermediate". :rolleyes:

Sorry, just had to vent. :eek:

coldstart 04-14-2015 09:09 AM

I looked at a 2005 911S with the IMSB (or ISB) upgrade done and was seriously considering the car. However, the dealer maintenance records seemed to indicate that the bearing had failed and then the upgrade work was done. To me that is a big red flag on a car. Comments?

Deschodt 04-14-2015 09:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by coldstart (Post 8576365)
I looked at a 2005 911S with the IMSB (or ISB) upgrade done and was seriously considering the car. However, the dealer maintenance records seemed to indicate that the bearing had failed and then the upgrade work was done. To me that is a big red flag on a car. Comments?

No kidding it's a red flag. You could always sell your 72T and buy an 09-2010 outright ;-)

speeder 04-14-2015 09:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onewhippedpuppy (Post 8575787)
I agree about the air-cooled 911 issues Denis, my point was more regarding money. Repairing snapped head studs or doing a top end rebuild on a classic 911 is very near to the cost of a new M96 engine. If your top end turns into a full rebuild it could easily be more if new P&Cs are required. Your buddy has terrible luck, because for every owner that has an IMS failure there are probably one hundred with no issues.

Steve, the IMS lawsuit is done and I think the timeframe to make a claim has passed.

Are you joking? My buddy is the luckiest guy on earth. Porsche has paid for (2) complete replacement engines on his car. Most people with ISB failures are left with a 3k lb. paper weight that isn't worth fixing and their dick in their hand. :rolleyes:

Also, I did a very complete top-end job on my former 911SC that included Carrera tensioners, (completely unnecessary except for resale to the lemmings who believe everything on the web), 24 new studs, heads completely redone by Competition Engineering, (the best and most expensive), a list of "while you were in theres" as long as your arm, split case and did main bearings, and on and on and on...

It cost me about $3500 DIY with a lot of help from this board and that included $1400 to CE for heads. How you can compare this to a $15-20k long block from PCNA is beyond me. A failed ISB does not have a DIY solution, other than R&Ring the engine, I guess.

The design failure of that engine is what it is. Would I still own one? Yes, and I have. But I'm not in some fairyland about the problem. :cool:

onewhippedpuppy 04-14-2015 03:40 PM

C'mon Denis, you're smarter than that. Maybe 1 in 10 guys on this BBS would undertake an engine rebuild as a DIY. For everyone else a top end is close to $10k and a full rebuild closer to $20k with P&Cs. Comparing apples to apples, a good DIY mechanic could rebuild a good M96 core for the same or less. Or just swap in a good used engine for $10k or so.

I agree that the air cooled motors are rarely totally trashed. But don't pretend that it's cheap to rebuild one for the average person.

VincentVega 04-14-2015 04:48 PM

Quote:

good used engine
Isnt that the issue? Since the engine has as design flaw there really are no 'good' engines. Ff you mean one that doesnt need regular IMS bearing replacement you are out of luck.

KNS 04-14-2015 04:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by speeder (Post 8575697)
I have a feeling that "matching numbers" is never going to be a big deal on these cars down the road. :)

You're probably right! In fact, it may even count as a positive aspect when searching out potential cars.


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