roaniecowpony
Well-Known Member
He covers all the details in the first post of this thread, including the type of oil.How many miles on that engine?
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He covers all the details in the first post of this thread, including the type of oil.How many miles on that engine?
Yeah, just been a while. This post ding my email this morning.He covers all the details in the first post of this thread, including the type of oil.
Hah! I remember that. The wax bleed-through issue with that siding? I made a claim because I had horrible bleed through above the shingles. They denied it saying that the siding had been installed "too close to the ground". Like how does that impact siding 20 feet in the air? What a joke.I have some first-hand experience to the contrary with the LP masonite siding, it did not make us whole but it was a sizeable chunk to help with the bill to do the house with Hardie plank.
Hah! I remember that. The wax bleed-through issue with that siding? I made a claim because I had horrible bleed through above the shingles. They denied it saying that the siding had been installed "too close to the ground". Like how does that impact siding 20 feet in the air? What a joke.
Yes, they are. So frustrating!OK, so these are the new redesigned Gen 2 intake lifters that are about $100 a piece, and it is still happening ? I don't have a Pentastar in the Jeep, but do have one in my Class B, which sits a lot, so this does not make me feel good for it's longevity...................![]()
GOOD WTF GRIEF!55,000 miles in on my 2018 JLUR with 3.6 and towing my 'squaredrop' over the high mountain passes here in Colorado at highway speeds (long runs at high revs under load), I really felt there were some problems with the motor. Just got the report from my shop, sure enough I've got cam damage.
Religious about oil changes, only run full syn (usually Amsoil) factory spec.
Must have been going bad for a while, but damn.
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Indeed... Used to be you babied your car & doubled up on oil changes because you wanted to make it past 200K miles. Late model Jeep people do the same with the faint hope they'll get to 60K.GOOD WTF GRIEF!... To say that I am shocked at this failure in any engine, especially the Jeep 3.6 would be an understatement. Cam failure is RARE on any engine...
Stellantis never seems to miss an opportunity to disappoint... TJ, the LAST of the REAL JEEPS!
What's changed?GOOD WTF GRIEF!
My first car with Hydraulic lifters was in 1974, before that all I drove was Corvettes (4) Solid lifters, HiPerf engines, revving to 7000 + RPM and I was racing them on weekends. Never had a cam failure (or any engine failure other than some broken valve springs, about 6 of them over the years in my 427 engine).
To say that I am shocked at this failure in any engine, especially the Jeep 3.6 would be an understatement. Cam failure is RARE on any engine...
Stellantis never seems to miss an opportunity to disappoint... TJ, the LAST of the REAL JEEPS!
Maybe there is simply insufficient oiling for the VVL high lift mode.What's changed?
These little overhead cam engines have a fraction of the valve spring pressures of a pushrod 427. So that's not it.
The metallurgy of cams and lifters has a lot of history. So, it's unlikely that's a problem. Although we can't rule out a quality control issue.
The kinematics of the VVL intake rocker, specifically the high lift rub block, seems to be unique. Possibly, the activation of the high lift mode creates a very high specific loading on the face of the cam and rocker rub block.
That's a lawyer talking!Hah! I remember that. The wax bleed-through issue with that siding? I made a claim because I had horrible bleed through above the shingles. They denied it saying that the siding had been installed "too close to the ground". Like how does that impact siding 20 feet in the air? What a joke.
If this were the case then wouldn't EVERY 2018 JLUR have the same problem?55,000 miles in on my 2018 JLUR with 3.6 and towing my 'squaredrop' over the high mountain passes here in Colorado at highway speeds (long runs at high revs under load), I really felt there were some problems with the motor. Just got the report from my shop, sure enough I've got cam damage.
Religious about oil changes, only run full syn (usually Amsoil) factory spec.
Must have been going bad for a while, but damn.
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What I see is many mfgs are trying to fix something that is NOT broke! Camshaft and rocker arms are not new science here folks, noting to see here, it works and works up to 7000+ rpm and lets see: 64 Corvette, 327, 375 Hp solid lifters, sold at 103XXX miles, 69 427 450 Hp solid lifters, sold at 169,XXX miles.What's changed?
These little overhead cam engines have a fraction of the valve spring pressures of a pushrod 427. So that's not it.
The metallurgy of cams and lifters has a lot of history. So, it's unlikely that's a problem. Although we can't rule out a quality control issue.
The kinematics of the VVL intake rocker, specifically the high lift rub block, seems to be unique. Possibly, the activation of the high lift mode creates a very high specific loading on the face of the cam and rocker rub block.
Lifter click: WOW was I happy when Chevy moved to HiPerf Hydraulic lifters. So somehow the Bowtie boys and the folks over at Mustang Ville and others have designed a Hydraulic lifter that will work way beyond 7k all day. But Jeep cannot pull it off on an engine they have been making for more than 2 weeks.Indeed... Used to be you babied your car & doubled up on oil changes because you wanted to make it past 200K miles. Late model Jeep people do the same with the faint hope they'll get to 60K.
(Just noticed a faint lifter click on the passenger side yesterday... '20 Sport w/ 16K miles FFS.)