VNT
Well-Known Member
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- #1
Have a friend who is a tech, replacing a 2.0 Turbo engine in a Cherokee with 58K. Car was always serviced and engine internals look clean.
He had it pulled from the car and had it in his stall, waiting on the new engine. The good news is there was no carbon or build up on the valves. The bad news is that one of the pistons was melted down and the lands collapsed/ melted on one side , the intake port side. The car came in running poorly and he test drove and did compression and #2 cylinder was dead. I guess they are putting in new engine, turbo and injectors.
The other thing he also told me was these 2.0 engines do not have iron liners, I guess they use aluminum with a coating on the cylinder walls. He said the cylinder wall was worn thru to the aluminum on the dead cylinder.
He had it pulled from the car and had it in his stall, waiting on the new engine. The good news is there was no carbon or build up on the valves. The bad news is that one of the pistons was melted down and the lands collapsed/ melted on one side , the intake port side. The car came in running poorly and he test drove and did compression and #2 cylinder was dead. I guess they are putting in new engine, turbo and injectors.
The other thing he also told me was these 2.0 engines do not have iron liners, I guess they use aluminum with a coating on the cylinder walls. He said the cylinder wall was worn thru to the aluminum on the dead cylinder.
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. It wouldn’t surprise me if that’s what killed that engine. In theory though, the tcm/ecm should be downshifting to avoid lugging the engine.