Stupid maintenance requirements

Stupid maintenance requirements

Author
Discussion

Quisling

Original Poster:

539 posts

39 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
landrover discovery and Rangerover spppooorrrrtttaahhhhhhhh

You have to remove the body to change the turbo

What other bloody stupid things out there in fixing land?

Leon R

3,206 posts

96 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
Removing the wheel to change a bulb springs immediately to mind.

Looking at you Renault Megane.

TinyMonster

171 posts

38 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
F50 clutch change still makes me smile.


ruggedscotty

5,625 posts

209 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
Quisling said:
landrover discovery and Rangerover spppooorrrrtttaahhhhhhhh

You have to remove the body to change the turbo

What other bloody stupid things out there in fixing land?
lots im afraid - as the average joe got brighter and more able to some diy then it becomes a fight to stop him and get that car into a dealer for work...

electric parking brakes requiring to be connected to a marque PC to enable it to be reset ? makes those rear pads or disc changes even more complicated.

Having to code anything onot your car, change a battery... need to code it... and the like.

Oh and my pet hate is headlights that need air intakes stripped out to get in and about them...


everything they can think on to force you to take it in for repair lol..

Every day a journey

1,566 posts

38 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
I can't remember which of the V8 Ferraris (might have been the 348) was an engine out job to do the belts which needed doing at ridiculously short intervals.

Every day a journey

1,566 posts

38 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
TinyMonster said:
F50 clutch change still makes me smile.

WOW!!!!

I bet that's not cheap!


21st Century Man

40,862 posts

248 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
I greased my Kingpins yesterday, it's a 2003 vehicle. But seeing some of the other posts I guess twenty or so minutes with a jack and a grease gun is nothing really.

plasticpig

12,932 posts

225 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
Which Discovery? You certainly don't have to for a Disco 3 or 4. Land Rover may say you have to but there are independents who can do it without taking the body off.


RizzoTheRat

25,140 posts

192 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
Leon R said:
Removing the wheel to change a bulb springs immediately to mind.

Looking at you Renault Megane.
I think that beats the Citroen ZX where you have to take a wheel off to change the horn.


TinyMonster

171 posts

38 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
21st Century Man said:
I greased my Kingpins yesterday

21st Century Man

40,862 posts

248 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
TinyMonster said:
21st Century Man said:
I greased my Kingpins yesterday
It involved nipples and lots of pumping too.

Krikkit

26,514 posts

181 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
Quisling said:
landrover discovery and Rangerover spppooorrrrtttaahhhhhhhh

You have to remove the body to change the turbo

What other bloody stupid things out there in fixing land?
Nothing wrong with it when you actually look how it's done - the body-off procedure is quite straight-forward and leaves you masses of room to properly sort the engine out.

In the end the job is probably quicker than if you tried to leave the body on and engineer a postbox fix like a lot of modern cars.

p.s. Spowwwttaaaaahhhh wink

TinyMonster

171 posts

38 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
21st Century Man said:
It involved nipples and lots of pumping too.

Johnnytheboy

24,498 posts

186 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
On a minor level, the high level brake light on a Peugeot Partner van is held in place by two screws. Remove these and it just pulls away from the door.

Except it doesn't because then you have to break your finger and feed it in through a tiny access hole to lever off a plastic clip without snapping it.

Given that the two screws are doing a great job of holding the light assembly in place, the hidden clip is just Gallic sadism.

Lotobear

6,292 posts

128 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
Lotus Evora - rear clam/body off and engine out to change a clutch

TurboHatchback

4,159 posts

153 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
Audi V8/V10 timing chains. For some reason they decided that the back of the engine was the best place for them, that they should be fearsomely complicated and that long life oil change intervals were a good idea.

One of the things I used to really like about my landcruisers was the absence of this sort of silliness. A cambelt change required no special tools whatsoever and took about 30 minutes on the driveway. Changing bulbs was just a matter of reaching in and swapping them over, about 30 seconds with no loss of skin or sense of humour whatsoever.

Limpet

6,307 posts

161 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
TurboHatchback said:
Audi V8/V10 timing chains. For some reason they decided that the back of the engine was the best place for them, that they should be fearsomely complicated and that long life oil change intervals were a good idea.
A BMW speciality as well.

The spinner of plates

17,687 posts

200 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
Every day a journey said:
TinyMonster said:
F50 clutch change still makes me smile.

WOW!!!!

I bet that's not cheap!
pfft, so they'd have you believe - just slide the overlaps and a pair of 19mm joining nuts & bolts either side right?

PH User

22,154 posts

108 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
Leon R said:
Removing the wheel to change a bulb springs immediately to mind.

Looking at you Renault Megane.
That depends which generation of Megane that you are looking at. Some are very easy to change bulbs.

Bennet

2,119 posts

131 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2021
quotequote all
ruggedscotty said:
lots im afraid - as the average joe got brighter and more able to some diy then it becomes a fight to stop him and get that car into a dealer for work...
I'd be amazed if designers have genuinely been tasked with making cars more difficult to perform home maintenance on.