Originally posted by: Roger
Vacuum has absolutely nothing to do with oil pressure.
They said I have two options. $1900 for a kit of some sort that could clear up the problem
You have discovered why I said "Best of Luck to ya" now on that new engine from GM EHOriginally posted by: Jugernot
DAMMIT DAMMIT DAMMIT, just got "the" call. Dealer says the engine is done.... They said I have two options. $1900 for a kit of some sort that could clear up the problem or $4200 for a new engine. F#$K I don't need this right now. I'm a freaking college student who makes $16.50 an hour at my job. I can't afford this crap...
I've babied this damn truck since I bought it, guess the owner before me (had 30,000miles on it used...) didn't.
:|
If you must, insist on a complete and thorough going through and rebuild of your current engine. Ask lots of questions. I would request to be there while they rebuilt it.
The above is an example of "swaptronics" rather than diagnosis. Charging a customer for parts (sender) that are a very reasonable first guess is wrong unless the parts prove their worth by fixing the problem, and in any event the pressure senders resistance would have been easy enough to measure with a DVM. Swapping the dash component without verifying it was bad practice and more work than hooking a direct guage to the oil system. Even if the engine sounded fine gauging the pressure is the obvious way to eliminate or very engine problems as the source.It was $80 for diagnostics, $30 for sending unit, and $44 for a new dash switch. Oil level is fine.
