Date: Wed, 26 Apr 95 08:07:15 PDT
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@vanagon.com>
From: Steve Reilly <steve@caliban.ucsd.edu>
Subject: Heads leak...wires melt?
Hello all,
I've been lurking, off and on, here in San Diego for a couple of
months now, and I'm intrigued (bemused?) by the apparently high
frequency of head leak problems. My impression from reading this
list and talking to vanagon owners in my area (and as you could see
from the Truck Trader ads posted by someone the other day, there are
a lot of vanagons around here) is that ALL vanagons have this
problem, sooner or later. I've been through it with both of mine (an
84 and my current 90), and, frankly, it pisses me off. Don't get me
wrong, I love these vehicles, warts and all, and given that they are
no longer produced, I plan to keep my 90 carat for a long
time.(Which is why I really appreciate this list).
I'll post the details of my head repairs directly to Alf for his FTC
compilation, but spare the rest of you for now. The real reason for
this post is to see if anyone can explain what may have led to the
following: Two days (and maybe 50 miles) after having the heads
redone on my 84, the wiring harness did a complete meltdown! This is
now only an academic issue, as it happened about 3 years ago, its
long since been paid for, and I no longer own the van, but the
situation still nags me a bit.
The head work was done by an independent garage - one that works on
lots of pricey German stuff like MBs, BMWs, and Audis, and has a
pretty good reputation. The local dealer offered no assistance with
the repair costs, and said nothing about VWoA maybe chipping in, so
I took it elsewhere for a lower bid. (Unfortunately, I handed over
all my paperwork when I sold the van, so don't have the
documentation to attempt to recover some of the expense through the
FTC). Anyway, the head work was done on schedule, within the
estimate, and all apeared copacetic. Then, two days later while at a
traffic light, a very bad nasty smell took over the poor baby, smoke
luffed out of the engine compartment, and poof! it ran no more. I
had it towed to the garage (it was after hours) and the next day
made calls to service departments of two VW dealers, and two other
VW independent garages. The consensus was, gee, it seems pretty
suspicious, they probably did something to cause the meltdown, but
it will be hard to prove, since the head work shouldn't involve
messing with the wiring, other than unplugging and replugging, and
the van did run correctly when they were done.
So, I blustered and argued with the shop owner, and he finally
agreed to replace the harness for cost of the part only (which I
later found out he jacked up quite a bit...). I paid the hundreds of
dollars, and went on my way, poorer but no wiser.
So, my question (at long last) to the collective expertise of this
fantastic list is, was it a coincidence, or did I get $crewed? If
the latter, what could those guys possibly have done when replacing
the heads to cause the meltdown?
Serious hypotheses, wild speculation, and wise-acre remarks are all
quite welcome. (I'm on the digest...responses lagged).
Steve R.
'90 carat
ex's: '84 vanagon
'77 rabbit
'71 westy
'70 bug
'60 sunroof super90 (that was a fast VW!)
-------------------------------------
Name: Stephen B. Reilly
Southwest Fisheries Science Center, NMFS, NOAA
PO Box 271, La Jolla, CA 92038 USA
E-mail: steve@caliban.ucsd.edu
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