I had sent my car in to a very reputable, well trusted shop to get the subframe reinforcement done. I usually do the work on my own cars (for reasons reinforced here within) but I dont have access to a welder so I bit the bullet. About a week goes by and they ran into this or that, had to order a part or two because they noticed it needed replacing, etc. Finally get the car back after two weeks in the shop. The drive home from the shop is about 25 minutes of mostly highway, I immediately noticed on the on ramp it was a touch squirelly which was really strange considering all the bushings had been replaced and the car should feel tight as all hell. As soon as I get off the highway I decide to take it around my neighborhood and I hear the grinding noise. When load was transferred to the right side of the car I would hear a LOUD screech. At first I thought it was a bent brake dust shield or something rubbing on the rotor, but the screech was a little too loud and intermittent to really convince me that's what was wrong. Eventually, when I lifted the car up I happened to notice the back right wheel seemed to move A LOT as load was removed. Sure enough, I took a look around the back of the wheel and bearing grease is everywhere. I can move the wheel around quite a bit and my fear is realized.
Now, the subframe job is a big one, lot's of steps involved, and people can make mistakes. I'm thinking maybe they forgot to tighten one bolt, maybe used the wrong torque spec, something along those lines. Still, you send it to a trusted shop and pay that premium to avoid mistakes like that. Well... when I took the wheel off I quickly transitioned from annoyed but understanding to bewildered and disappointed. They had clearly punched out the indentation to remove the existing axle nut to do their work and then subsequently put it back on even though it was clearly broken. I took off the rear driver side wheel and sure enough, same thing, reused nut.
The axle nut is a $10 piece of hardware. ANY self respecting shop should be replacing these everytime they come off. In a shop that does as many BMW jobs as they do they should have a large box labeled AXLE NUTS to pick from. It's one thing if you're working on your own car and need to reuse it until you can get your hands on a new one, but this is a safety critical item. You indent the nut so that through the hot/cold cycles generated from braking and resting the nut which holds your axle on doesnt come loose. I have had a bearing blow on me at like 30 mph. You lose pretty much all control of your vehicle. At 60mph that can be deadly for you and anyone in the lanes next to you or oncoming traffic.
I called them yesterday when I realized the bearing was shot but before I realized why. They would like me to bring it in so they can work on it more.
What's everyones thoughts here? Am I misunderstanding something about the M3 axle nut that makes this ok? Should I let them touch my car ever again?
Here is an imgur link with some images
https://imgur.com/a/rOxbF2b
Now, the subframe job is a big one, lot's of steps involved, and people can make mistakes. I'm thinking maybe they forgot to tighten one bolt, maybe used the wrong torque spec, something along those lines. Still, you send it to a trusted shop and pay that premium to avoid mistakes like that. Well... when I took the wheel off I quickly transitioned from annoyed but understanding to bewildered and disappointed. They had clearly punched out the indentation to remove the existing axle nut to do their work and then subsequently put it back on even though it was clearly broken. I took off the rear driver side wheel and sure enough, same thing, reused nut.
The axle nut is a $10 piece of hardware. ANY self respecting shop should be replacing these everytime they come off. In a shop that does as many BMW jobs as they do they should have a large box labeled AXLE NUTS to pick from. It's one thing if you're working on your own car and need to reuse it until you can get your hands on a new one, but this is a safety critical item. You indent the nut so that through the hot/cold cycles generated from braking and resting the nut which holds your axle on doesnt come loose. I have had a bearing blow on me at like 30 mph. You lose pretty much all control of your vehicle. At 60mph that can be deadly for you and anyone in the lanes next to you or oncoming traffic.
I called them yesterday when I realized the bearing was shot but before I realized why. They would like me to bring it in so they can work on it more.
What's everyones thoughts here? Am I misunderstanding something about the M3 axle nut that makes this ok? Should I let them touch my car ever again?
Here is an imgur link with some images
https://imgur.com/a/rOxbF2b
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