Originally posted by thetypicalm3guy
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Rod Bearing Showcase Thread
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Most of these bearings dont look all that bad at all. The S65 and S85 guys are laughing at us.
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The PO of my car was an older lady and they owned it for nearly 20 years, she never went above 4000rpm. I’m on original bearings at 160k and still going!Originally posted by jet_dogg View PostI'd love a synopsis of driving/service habits since the cars inception for each set of these rod bearings. The massive variance in mileage spreads doesn't give us any remotely conclusive information.
Without any data these pics don't really mean much, they're just a collection of engine internals to look at like paintings on a wall.
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My post on the first page of this thread includes 6 reports over 30k miles on my previous m3 before I changed the bearings. I bought it at 150k, but the engine was not original to the car, so even though I had a fairly comprehensive service history for that car, I knew nothing about the status of the bearings.Originally posted by repoman89 View Post
So basically the oil report didn’t tell you anything. Guess it’s worth just calling it an 80k-100k maintenance item like the old internet group think always said.
For my current m3, like I said earlier, I bought the car, drove it home, and pretty much immediately took it apart to do all of the big 3 as well as some other work. I took a sample of oil from before the change but I don’t know if I still have it. In any case, I didn’t send it in for analysis.
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So basically the oil report didn’t tell you anything. Guess it’s worth just calling it an 80k-100k maintenance item like the old internet group think always said.Originally posted by DoubleSidedTape View Post
Nope, I bought the car last fall and drove it home from California, and took it apart over the winter to overhaul everything. Here are the two reports from right after the bearing change (I also ended up replacing the cams and followers because one of the followers had been worn flat). I have driven about 1500 miles since the last oil change and it seems to drive really well, I'm waiting for about 2000 miles on this oil before I change it again and do another report.
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Sounds like you're the perfect person to spearhead this 👍Originally posted by jet_dogg View PostI'd love a synopsis of driving/service habits since the cars inception for each set of these rod bearings. The massive variance in mileage spreads doesn't give us any remotely conclusive information.
Without any data these pics don't really mean much, they're just a collection of engine internals to look at like paintings on a wall.
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Nope, I bought the car last fall and drove it home from California, and took it apart over the winter to overhaul everything. Here are the two reports from right after the bearing change (I also ended up replacing the cams and followers because one of the followers had been worn flat). I have driven about 1500 miles since the last oil change and it seems to drive really well, I'm waiting for about 2000 miles on this oil before I change it again and do another report.Originally posted by mtpktz View Post
That was close. Any chance you have a Blackstone report before those were changed? Curious to see the numbers if you have them.
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I'd love a synopsis of driving/service habits since the cars inception for each set of these rod bearings. The massive variance in mileage spreads doesn't give us any remotely conclusive information.
Without any data these pics don't really mean much, they're just a collection of engine internals to look at like paintings on a wall.
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All four of the middle cylinders had the bearings sticking to the crank, and you can see that they have contracted compared to 1 and 6. Its a miracle that nothing spun and that the crank was smooth.Originally posted by cobra View Post
WOW! Thats so bad.
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