santiagodraco
Member
- Car
- 2010 FX 50s
So, here's my brief but hopefully interesting story inspired by Toronto's similar situation (https://www.infinitiscene.com/search/1/?q=19716-Engine-is-dead-at-114000km-(70-000-miles)-2009-fx50). Mine was much less painful however.
Starting about a year ago I started noticing the FX would start somewhat rough, in cold or warm weather. After it did this it would continue to run poorly. No rhyme or reason why. I had an ODBII reader and saw that it was throwing a misfire code on cylinder 7.
I took the car into the dealership for the problem 3 times. In all cases no luck determining cause. It was intermittent enough to be hard to track down. Also if the car had been running long it would not have the issue on a restart.
Speculation time... bad sensor? ECU? Gremlins?
After some time I had another issue crop up. While driving the car would "stall" at some random time and I'd be forced to idle to a stop, turn off the motor, start it back up and be off and running again.
On one of these occasions I just happened to look down at my gauges at the right time and noticed... the temp gauge was pegged. The car was overheating and going into shutdown mode!
Ahah! Now we're getting somewhere! My first reaction was to check the coolant fluid. Full. If anything the reservoir was TOO full. Hmm, maybe a thermostat? But that didn't make much sense... if it was a tstat that wouldn't affect startup. Back to square one and the dealer.
So I take it back in armed with this new information. The dealer thinks tstat as well (in spite of the misfire code) and replaces it. No luck. Then they decide to check the number 7 cylinder. Wet spark plug. Wet with coolant.... diagnosis? Head gasket.
So they tell me about the head gasket and that it will be some time to repair. I'm thinking ok, head gasket, week or so. One week later I call back to check status. "It will be a bit more we're still waiting on parts.". "Parts?" I ask. Dealer "Yeah, they are coming in on the special truck." Now I'm confused. "A head gasket requires a special truck?" "No, the new engine requires the heavy truck."
I had a conversation with the mechanic (who I'd met before, good guy, competent and thorough) after I got the FX back a week later. As it turns out if I would have only had the misfire code thrown I'd have had a gasket replacement. However since it also threw the overheat code that immediately required a full engine replacement (aluminum block etc).
So i've had the FX back now for a couple of weeks. Did some other things to the FX since then, new brakes/rotors turned, new Viper 5706 with smart start, complete rewire of my sound system with HDMI tablet integration (getting ready for competition), full detail and aquapel window treatment and a free alignment from the dealer.
All in all it feels like a brand new car again and I couldn't be happier. Drives better than it has in at least a year, maybe more (hard to say how long the gasket was bad!) and with the alignment (needed after lowering the car) and the new brakes (last time I replaced them I didn't turn the rotors... bad move, lots of squeaks and chatter from warping).....it's a dream to drive again.
So I recommend to everyone that you blow you spring a headgasket leak on the coolant side and wait to throw an overheat code before bringing it in. You might get a brand new motor after 4 years of owning your car :D
Starting about a year ago I started noticing the FX would start somewhat rough, in cold or warm weather. After it did this it would continue to run poorly. No rhyme or reason why. I had an ODBII reader and saw that it was throwing a misfire code on cylinder 7.
I took the car into the dealership for the problem 3 times. In all cases no luck determining cause. It was intermittent enough to be hard to track down. Also if the car had been running long it would not have the issue on a restart.
Speculation time... bad sensor? ECU? Gremlins?
After some time I had another issue crop up. While driving the car would "stall" at some random time and I'd be forced to idle to a stop, turn off the motor, start it back up and be off and running again.
On one of these occasions I just happened to look down at my gauges at the right time and noticed... the temp gauge was pegged. The car was overheating and going into shutdown mode!
Ahah! Now we're getting somewhere! My first reaction was to check the coolant fluid. Full. If anything the reservoir was TOO full. Hmm, maybe a thermostat? But that didn't make much sense... if it was a tstat that wouldn't affect startup. Back to square one and the dealer.
So I take it back in armed with this new information. The dealer thinks tstat as well (in spite of the misfire code) and replaces it. No luck. Then they decide to check the number 7 cylinder. Wet spark plug. Wet with coolant.... diagnosis? Head gasket.
So they tell me about the head gasket and that it will be some time to repair. I'm thinking ok, head gasket, week or so. One week later I call back to check status. "It will be a bit more we're still waiting on parts.". "Parts?" I ask. Dealer "Yeah, they are coming in on the special truck." Now I'm confused. "A head gasket requires a special truck?" "No, the new engine requires the heavy truck."
I had a conversation with the mechanic (who I'd met before, good guy, competent and thorough) after I got the FX back a week later. As it turns out if I would have only had the misfire code thrown I'd have had a gasket replacement. However since it also threw the overheat code that immediately required a full engine replacement (aluminum block etc).
So i've had the FX back now for a couple of weeks. Did some other things to the FX since then, new brakes/rotors turned, new Viper 5706 with smart start, complete rewire of my sound system with HDMI tablet integration (getting ready for competition), full detail and aquapel window treatment and a free alignment from the dealer.
All in all it feels like a brand new car again and I couldn't be happier. Drives better than it has in at least a year, maybe more (hard to say how long the gasket was bad!) and with the alignment (needed after lowering the car) and the new brakes (last time I replaced them I didn't turn the rotors... bad move, lots of squeaks and chatter from warping).....it's a dream to drive again.
So I recommend to everyone that you blow you spring a headgasket leak on the coolant side and wait to throw an overheat code before bringing it in. You might get a brand new motor after 4 years of owning your car :D