Thursday, April 23, 2015

silicone rubber oil seals

Silicone rubber oil seals.The intake manifold gasket can develop external engine oil leaks. The intake manifold will need to be removed and the gaskets replaced to correct this issue.
Fix it. I plan to ask the service manager if they can do better and reduce the cost from $1500. If not, I will delete the rear shocks (do them myself at a local auto craft shop) and tranny gasket (no visible leaks anywhere)and see what the revised cost estimate numbers are.
My budget is $1,000 but not $1500 with all the stuff added in. I would like to buy some X-mas presents, too, for children/families who are poor and not making it in this economy...etc.Silicone rubber oil seals.

I paid $36,000 for this vehicle (new) and these problems at 114,000 miles on a maintained vehicle makes me wonder why buy American or GM or I should trade in every five years. Trade it in seems to be the answer for me.

Just for some fun, one phone call to a parts place produced the following: plastic elbows are $3.99 a pair; non-plastic gasket intake manifold kit is $299.00. And, the current on engine intake manifolds are make out of plastic....and I am totally surprised to hear that and am not keen on that at all. Now, intake manifold gaskets can develop engine leaks. Assuming these gaskets are the plastic ones that were not advertised to this owner by GM.Silicone rubber oil seals.

My budget is $1,000 but not $1500 with all the stuff added in. I would like to buy some X-mas presents, too, for children/families who are poor and not making it in this economy...etc.
I've had a great 2000 Lasabre bought with only 30,000 miles 1 owner (little old man who passed away). My mechanic (great great guy) told me these cars had poorly designed intake manifold gaskets and if I see signicant "gunk" on the bottom of the radiator cap... or signs of water in the oil, that these gaskets should be replaced with much higher quality ones. Actually, I had him replace the gaskets (It was $400 total) as a preventative measure. Not a problem at all for 150,000 miles until I totaled it in black ice one night in a multi-car pile up (The car was so well built that it took a huge impact and I walked away unhurt). I bought another one (because I needed a car quick for work etc.).Silicone rubber oil seals. I should have taken my time because at $4,800 and with 117,000 miles, it wasn't taken good care of (although it looked great and ran well). It's cost me a couple thousand in the last couple years in tires, struts, starter, etc, and now I see significant "gunk" on the underside of the radiator cap and the oil gets dirty too fast. So I need to replace it's intake manifold gasket and other stuff too. On the OTHER hand, realizing my errors in purchasing the 2nd Lasabre, and my dumb luck in finding the first one that I totalled, I spent 7 months on cars.com just "looking" at 2000 through 2005 Lasabres for sale. When I spotted one for $4,300 with 65,000 miles that had had the intake manifold gasket already replaced and other stuff too, we drove 240 miles and after driving it, bought it. Man, what a great car!! So the lessons for me were, 1. Lasabres need intake manifold gaskets replaced with much better ones as a certainty, never buy a car quickly but search for months for a well taken car of one for best price (only searching diligently will let you discover best price), and move quickly once it's found because I missed several great buys (after long searches) along the way by waiting a few days while someone smarter than me got to it first. These 2000 through 2005 Lasabres are amazing cars for the current prices. Just diligently internet search for one well before you find it AND get the intake manifold gasket replaced once you do automatically Silicone rubber oil seals.
I paid $36,000 for this vehicle (new) and these problems at 114,000 miles on a maintained vehicle makes me wonder why buy American or GM or I should trade in every five years. Trade it in seems to be the answer for me.Silicone rubber oil seals.

No comments:

Post a Comment