The radiator hose on the Bentley did not end that car's life. It was the idea to keep driving after it was overheating.
@SigvaldsAmazon9 ай бұрын
More than once I’ve had someone say “I wasn’t far from home so I just kept going”. Usually “not far” is about an hour. It’s also usually the people that can’t afford basic maintenance let along a new engine or major repair
@bendino90169 ай бұрын
mother in law has blown a few engines with this logic.
@RogueRestorationsLTD9 ай бұрын
Woman driver or not mechanically minded trying to make it home driving in the dark i guess.
@billsmith2819 ай бұрын
If he was driving at a highway, the failure of that hose may not have been as obvious as you think, the temp gauge wouldn't rise much, as there is no longer any coolant, the only indication would be a drop in oil pressure the longer he drove it & possibly a burning smell. I know coz it's happened to me.....but not in a Bentley 😮
@feedingravens9 ай бұрын
I was once just curving in to accelerate at the beginning of the autobahn when I saw a wiff of fog going across my hood. I looked in the rear mirror and saw only a white wall. The cooler had blown. Luckily, I could just keep in the curve and get right off the autobahn again, and even more luck that there also was directly a parking lot. That was just a few hundred meters and maybe a minute, and the engine was already beginning to run rough. I had the spleen to have the cooler repaired (solder the leak), cost as much as a new one, did a nice job with a new mesh and painted black, so my "throw noghing away when you can fix it" conscience was satisfied. Already back then (>20 years ago) this specialist usually only repaired truck coolers. there it was worth it.
@PSB-9009 ай бұрын
Reminds me of years ago I needed to put out $2K for a car that wasn't worth more than $4-5K (it was paid off). I decided to fix it and in the end I got another 7-8 years of trouble-free driving. Much cheaper than new car payments for sure.
@Kevin197009 ай бұрын
Always a gamble but for you it paid off
@talltom11299 ай бұрын
I think that way too
@pulaski19 ай бұрын
And fixing was _a lot_ less than depreciation.
@Pedroisanickname9 ай бұрын
Wizard recently produced a video on that very topic. The customer needed 2k to fix a Buick that had north of 300k on it. Of course, it featured the venerable 3800 V6, the Wizard's favorite. Cheers.
@NVRAMboi9 ай бұрын
I love stories with a happy ending. Good for you man.
@TheJimbodean679 ай бұрын
Many years ago in my youth a friend of mine had the opportunity to buy a Porsche. I think it was a 944 or a 928 pretty cheap. This was the late 80’s and it had a 4 cylinder engine. He brought it to a shop where another friend worked to have it checked out. It was ok shape, no major issues, it did need a lot of tlc from neglect and poor maintenance. I will never forget when another older mechanic sauntered over to take a peek as we’re all looking it over, and said “yes you can afford to buy it, but can you afford to own it?”. He proceeded to inform my friend about the REAL cost. Registration, insurance, specialty parts that have to be imported, who’s gonna work on it, etc. the realization why the car was ok but ratty sank in and the enthusiasm for having a cool sports car quickly dissipated. He bought his grandparents’ 2 year old Buick lesabre with the 3.8 instead, his grandma could no longer drive. Drove it for about 17 years and gave it to his oldest son who drove it all through college. Transmission finally gave out with about 240k miles on it.
@jazzventura9 ай бұрын
If it was a 4 cylinder it's the 944, the 928 are V8 only. And 944 were never that expensive to run and mantain.
@EdDale441359 ай бұрын
Man, what a shame your friend did not have the experience of having a cool ratty old car when he was young. Youth is for having a fun car or two. I heard similar curmudgeon comments when I bought a 911 as a middle aged man. You know what? It was worth it to have a car I loved, not just an appliance for transportation.
@TheJimbodean679 ай бұрын
@@EdDale44135 you obviously had the means to afford a 911, good for you and I hope you have fun with it. this story is coming from a time when driving a mustang or camaro was all we could afford. My friend later restored a gto and still has it to this day. Yeah sure we all thought it would be cool to own a porsche, who wouldn’t, but raising a family and needing a dependable car over rode that at the time. So we stuck to domestic stuff we could play with on the weekends. None of us could justify spending 300 bucks for brake pads when that was almost a weeks pay and new pads for any gm car was 20. We never gave up on wanting cool rides, we just agreed to have cars we could drive and not sit in the garage for years saving up for parts.
@TheJimbodean679 ай бұрын
@@jazzventura well, at the time for any of us it was. Parts were just too expensive. We looked up general stuff it needed at the time like plugs and wires, brake pads, rotors, new clutch, tie rod ends, at least one ball joint, and we came up with a number that was almost the cost of the car. This is before factoring in all the other stuff.
@EdDale441359 ай бұрын
@@TheJimbodean67 The 911 was $12K. A Mustang or a Camaro was something I would not have been able to afford.
@mcmoose649 ай бұрын
My dad once told me ," if you can't afford a new luxury car , you definitely can't afford a used one !". Smart man my dad .
@worldhello12346 ай бұрын
That is an ultra luxury car. That is totally different. Your dad didn't make much sense, unless he meant running costs.
@MP-po6fjАй бұрын
His wisdom is correct a used luxury car cheaper to buy.. But mega miles and all the electrical gremlins start to factor in. All those ECUs start to break down.
@catfishakaAMC9 ай бұрын
Volvo enthusiast here. My current Volvo has 247,000 miles. It's been a faithful and extremely reliable companion. Fuel pressure sensor, engine mount, both axles, and a wheel bearing have been the only repairs. 2016 was the first year of the SPA platform, the 2.0 engine, AND the redesigned XC90. They did have a lot of problems with the rings, as Volvo attempted to use "energy conserving" rings and caused the cars to burn oil. Also, the spark plugs are supposed to be changed at 70k miles. Were they? I've heard of the plug tips falling off and destroying the cylinder. Also, did they use premium fuel? If the car never got a drop of anything other than 87, you're causing a lot of detonation in that engine. Think about it. When you're making 316HP out of a 2.0 liter 4 cylinder, you're doing it by ramming more air pressure in with a turbo and a supercharger. You need higher octane fuel to stand up to the extra heat and pressure. They're good cars, but they require care, maintenance, and attention just like anything else.
@GoldenCroc9 ай бұрын
Detonation? That would have to be one faulty ECU that permits that with 87 petrol and cant adjust the parameters accordingly.... Nah, more than likely the fuel used had nothing to do with it, at least not regarding detonation.
@apatrevi19 ай бұрын
The T6 version of this engine with both the turbo and supercharger in these requires premium fuel. Not recommends, requires. The T5 turbo only recommends but doesn't require premium.
@GoldenCroc9 ай бұрын
@@apatrevi1 It should still run without too much detonation on 87 though, but with enormously reduced power.
@NicholasPellow9 ай бұрын
Most if not all Volvo engines will detune via ECM if you run 87 octane, but EVERY Volvo manual going back to the 850 recommends 91 octane always whether or not the engine is N/A or turbocharged. I would agree that once you are both supercharging and turbocharging with only 2L displacement, you do not want to run anything below what's recommended in the Volvo manuals, that is to say 91 Octane or better. I run 93 octane in my 1998 S70 T5 manual and it runs like a champ and eats up the miles effortlessly. In my '99 V70 N/A 2.4, I ONLY run 91 octane.
@mehrzahl22199 ай бұрын
@@NicholasPellowI only run 98 in my C70 T5 from 99. Running 95 you can feel it hesitate under load. Same with my 2020 V60 T4.
@nzxt12349 ай бұрын
I love that when opening the Bently he said Let's open the BONNET! Since it's a British car a not open the hood :)
@landedzentry9 ай бұрын
Now you know what it's like!😎 🇬🇧
@TheEulerID9 ай бұрын
Wizard is very respectful about such things.
@williamsquires30709 ай бұрын
Nah. It may. E a British car, but it’s over here in the States, so I say, “poppen ze hood!”
@tedburnard8419 ай бұрын
The Bentley even had English March to Sept 04 plates. BTW, the yellow plate goes on the rear, the front plate is white background.
@kevinbarry719 ай бұрын
Then he should use the Japanese word for hood when doing that with a Japanese car. Likewise Italian car. But he doesn't. Because it's nonsense
@Flies2FLL9 ай бұрын
The Volvo owner should sell the old bad engine to Erik from "I Do Cars". It would make for a great video! David and Erik could even do a collaboration.
@iamgermane9 ай бұрын
Makes the last gen Ford Crown Vic look like quite the bargain!
@deansapp46359 ай бұрын
Agreed
@NicholasPellow9 ай бұрын
YEAH! Although Eric just did a Bentley 6.75L a couple weeks ago, I've been bugging him for a while to get some Volvo engines in.
@stravis32699 ай бұрын
Good thinking. I know you can dig into the Bentley and rebuild. The Volvo just replace the engine. These vehicles are worth a lot of money just in parts . Someone out there has a totalled Volvo with same engine. Easy fix. It just locating and time consuming
@inaz19639 ай бұрын
Sounds like an incident with my mother years ago. She saw the temp gauge spike, she saw the idiot light go on, she saw the steam pouring out from the front of the car....she kept driving. She murdered that old Mercury because she 'didn't feel like stopping'. She spent the next four years bitching that the Olds she ended up with wasn't as nice as that old Marquis.
@josephtrunk35659 ай бұрын
Sorry that happened. One reason why no one drives my car but me, and another reason why my car has spare upper and lower radiator hoses and a couple gallons of coolant onboard.
@gregt86389 ай бұрын
A lady friend of mine did her SUV in, when she ignored all the buzzers and lights going off, ignored the smoke & smell..and actually drove even faster trying to get to her destination. Women! Can't live with them and can't live with them!😅
@gisellesbikeseat5 ай бұрын
@@gregt8638 that pretty much sums up female nature 😂
@bm77609 ай бұрын
It's BS that two tonnes of perfectly good car can be rendered scrap by a small failing in the engine. I hate that things are now so disposable. It's crazy. I'm shopping for a used car right now and the biggest thing in the back of my mind is the cost of repair when something fails. That £2k Mercedes has to run for a couple of years. I can't afford for it to die because of an uneconomical repair. Things were greener in my dad's day. It broke. You fixed it. You didn't fire a parts cannon at it either. You actually fixed the thing that was broken. Cheers, CW. Enjoy the channel.
@the_mowron9 ай бұрын
Get a mass produced car (Honda, Toyota, Ford, etc.) and you can just get an engine from the junk yard.
@MrDuncl9 ай бұрын
I have been looking at 1980s newspapers and was surprised how there were national adverts for a chain of shops that would fit a refurbished gearbox in cars like an Allegro for less than £100 and give you a guarantee on it. An engine would only be a couple of £100s. There again by the 1990s a colleague bought an Allegro for about £100 which came with nine months MOT and a full tank of petrol.
@curmudgeon19339 ай бұрын
@@MrDuncl . True...but in 1982 I bought a 2-bedroomed terraced house for £10,500...so there is that. Also, it would mean driving an Allegro. lol
@MrDuncl9 ай бұрын
@@curmudgeon1933 The Allegro was ahead of its time. Look at the number of cars with "Quartic" steering wheels today.
@edc15698 ай бұрын
Haha greener, people used to shove engine oil down the drain, where the MG plant was the ground is permanently full of toxic crap. You can recycle cars with reasonably low environmental damage.
@NicholasPellow9 ай бұрын
I am still daily driving a 1999 Volvo V70 with the 2.4L 5 cylinder. It is BULLETPROOF if maintained. Just turned 421,000km (I'm in Canada) on the factory installed engine and transmission. I am religious about engine & transmission oil changes and check the cooling system regularly. I even tow a 4x12 utility trailer with it regularly. I also own and drive a 1998 S70 T5 (5 cyl high pressure Turbo model) with the 5 speed manual and it is simply one of the best cars I've ever owned and driven. Only 235,000km on that one since I only take it out once a week. Currently also sitting in the driveway is a 1986 Volvo 244DL with 210,000km that I plan to swap an American V8 into soon. Volvo for Life!!
@fuelupclassic9 ай бұрын
As an Arnage owner here in the UK, it's sad to see this one is dead. Although I have to admit, I'd love to see this one live on with a crazy engine swap!
@Sonofsun0019 ай бұрын
The wizard likes to write things off.
@pbattis19 ай бұрын
Why not an engine swap. Why is that considered not an option?
@Thanos.m9 ай бұрын
@Sonofsun001 he does but US parts labour prices are insane this in UK would probably maybe £2-3 to put it right. So it does make sense that 30k its not worth fixing
@bck00019 ай бұрын
@@Thanos.mthis is true, I consume a lot of car related content in the UK and vs USA, labor cost is drastically hugher here, (local Texas BMW dealer here is $260 an hour) and we have fewer shops competent enough to handle actual mechanical work.
@fuelupclassic9 ай бұрын
@@bck0001 My local BMW dealers here in the UK are currently charging £205 per hour (roughly $258), so pretty much the same. When the head gaskets and a few other minor jobs needed replacing on my Arnage - the bill was over £9,000 (Circa $11,340) at an independent specialist six years ago! We are lucky to have a number of great specialist all around the UK that are willing to look after all types of classic cars, so finding somebody to look after your car isn't too difficult, but I wouldn't say it's ever considerably cheaper than the USA etc...
@boblachance70149 ай бұрын
I used to know a lady who found a "bargain" Rolls Royce Corniche(?). Long story short, she bought a Rolls Royce that needed quite a bit of work. The car she bought sat for many years in her carport! She did not realize that owning a Rolls Royce brought along very expensive parts to repair. Even when the Rolls dealer offered her a discount on repairs she could NOT afford basic repairs the car required. I felt bad for her but she should have known better regardless!
@ChrisPatrick-q6k9 ай бұрын
Is it just me, or wouldn't it be cool to fit an old Bentley/Rolls with a diesel engine?
@HenrySomeone9 ай бұрын
@@ChrisPatrick-q6k Yeah, it's just you...
@HenrySomeone9 ай бұрын
Yup, the only way to own and maintain a Rolls somewhat "cheaply" is if you're a seasoned mechanic with access to reasonably priced parts, therefore pretty much only possible (and still very rare) in the UK.
@nikolakarovic59649 ай бұрын
@@ChrisPatrick-q6k 1.9tdi 🤣
@aussie2uGA9 ай бұрын
I’d make the rolls electric. It’s already so heavy, replacing the engine with a battery pack would make little difference. Then you’d have the silent powerful experience the rolls driver desires. And let’s face it, they aren’t road tripping the rolls, just going to the country club.
@kafarske1239 ай бұрын
Hi. Volvo master tech here to. Have worked on Probably 1000+ of these engines, and i have never seen a failiour like that on that type of engine. I did see something similar on an older t4. The one that is the same as the Ford 1.6 ecoboost. On that one cyl 3 was completly destroied. We figgured that the injector was at fault, but we never realy found the actual cause.. Would love to se a folow UP, if the dealer figyres out what happend 😋
@georgebettiol83389 ай бұрын
Agree - to establish the root cause of the failure would be interesting. However, I suspect 'we, or more importantly the owner' will never know, because the dealer would only be driven by profit - so damaged engine out and off to the scrap yard and new engine in as fast as practically possible.
@Jcarini159 ай бұрын
hey bruh I'm looking to trade in my 2022 xc60 for a used xc90 (want the 3rd row) what year and engine should I avoid? I had a 2019 s60 with the T6 and it was a solid car up till 80k when I traded it for the xc60 T5. The XC60 has been a bit of a disappointment.
@kafarske1239 ай бұрын
@@Jcarini15 they are basicaly all the same. Mening The base 2.0 is the same, whit only yearly variations. And power output variations. The engines themselvs rearly have issues. There are other problems we deal whit more. Like bad wiering, leaks, and air suspensjon issues. 🤔 How ever, i would personaly stay away from the diesel, if you only run short trips. And the New mild hybrid cars whit ad blue are werry complex, but have not had to manny issues yet. Dont know if this helps at all 😂
@Jcarini159 ай бұрын
@@kafarske123 thanks 👍
@bobjohnson2059 ай бұрын
Do you still work on the B230 engines?
@albwilso99 ай бұрын
Hello, a lifetime Volvo owner. I have driven several Volvos which went over 200,000 to 400,000 miles on them and were still running . One of them went AT Least 500,000 miles in not sure because the odometer stopped at 400,000 for the second time . As long as you change oil, and maintain them, the Volvos las forever!!!
@nirfz9 ай бұрын
Old Volvos did, new ones with heavily boosted 2L I4 engines might not. Especially not in huge heavy cars like the XC90 i think.
@TrashLefties8 ай бұрын
Agreed. But I wont own any new ones..Same as Merc, Bmw. Cars ive loved but no more because of disposable build mentality.
@nevinkuser98925 ай бұрын
Anything supercharged or turbocharged is going to be less reliable.
@redavis4609 ай бұрын
So much truth in these videos; when I taught automotive, this was the hardest concept to convey. 1) It costs money to go down the road; it is not a right but a privilege. 2) Understanding when to walk away from a losing proposition is a painful but necessary lesson; most times, the owner has someone screaming in his ear (spouse or otherwise) that they know from some friend's 3rd cousin's boyfriend that that same issue is only a $400 fix, and that is all they will pay. . .then it ends up sitting on the garage's lot for months. It amazes me that you haven't suffered from burnout!
@AeroGuy079 ай бұрын
If price was no object, the Bentley. If price was an object, neither.
@NVRAMboi9 ай бұрын
hahahaha
@PrimalGecko9 ай бұрын
This is the winning answer!
@ralphchristopherson7829 ай бұрын
This video clearly demonstrates what a honest mechanic handles themselves.
@NVRAMboi9 ай бұрын
In a perfect world, we should all have a Wizard nearby. If you have a wrench that's even close in talent/honesty, keep him.
@peter455sd9 ай бұрын
"Honest" 😅😅😅😅😅😅
@lincolnmarklt9 ай бұрын
Honest😂😂😂😂😂😂 the guy over charges based on how "wholesome" he is. Arrogant as hell. Even charges hoovie more than parts cost online😂😂😂
@roxie48749 ай бұрын
i have a 2006 volvo S40 2.4 LI engine non turbo , 170.000 miles and still going strong , as long you keep your eyes in oil, water and good maintenace , it will go forever . :)
@Mariazellerbahn9 ай бұрын
I remember that the TH350 on my 1979 Camaro went bad and I was quoted £2,000 at a gearbox shop to rebuild it. My local American car shop said that a new crate gearbox shipped in from the States and fitted would only cost £400 and in that price, they also fixed my shifter linkage. This was back in 1993 .... so 30 years ago now.
@602br614589 ай бұрын
I truly enjoy your diagnosis on most vehicles. I am a 75 year old retired mechanic, with 40+ years working at GM dealerships. You explain your reasoning quite well.
@mickmc32509 ай бұрын
The Bentley registration comes back as a Blue Daewoo here in the UK....just saying!
@jasonheaton-hy8es9 ай бұрын
And it’s off the rear 😂
@DJOllieK9 ай бұрын
Hahahaha! So funny that I'm not the only one that's noticed it's got a rear UK number plate from a blue Daewoo Nubira on the front of the Bentley 😂
@drunkenhobo80209 ай бұрын
And it was last taxed in 2007!
@lillexus55899 ай бұрын
@@DJOllieKA Nubira would be more rare in the US then a Arnage
@DJOllieK9 ай бұрын
@lillexus5589 😄 the Nubira would be rare here in the UK also! Most have rusted and have gone off to the scrap yard by now!
@Gary7even9 ай бұрын
The Green Label Arnage had a BMW-derived 4.4 liter V8, with heads by Cosworth. Only the Silver Seraph had the BMW V12.
@LateNightCable8 ай бұрын
And twin turbos.
@Gary7even8 ай бұрын
@@LateNightCable True. The point is, Car Wizard doesn't know nearly as much about these cars as he thinks he does.
@777gordini11 күн бұрын
@@Gary7even He's great but everybody's allowed a slip up now and then and compared to say some leading politicians my BS alarm doesn't go off every 30 seconds.
@Barbarapape9 ай бұрын
I live only 25 miles away from the Bentley factory in Crewe, and have a friend who worked there when these Arnage models were been made, back then he warned me to never buy one, when they fail, they do a good job of it, and it costs many thousands to repair the damage. Here in the UK you can find them at low prices, way less than a typical new car, but they are money pits.
@georgebettiol83389 ай бұрын
It would be very unfair to attribute the failure to the 'car'. The damage only occurred because the driver IGNORED the overheating information provided by the light/gauge fitted to the dash and just continued driving the car without any coolant in the engine.
@Barbarapape9 ай бұрын
Very true, but the harsh reality is that a car that is very expensive when new is also very expensive to repair when they go wrong, as David has said many times the parts don't get any cheaper as a car ages. My friend who worked on them said they were all top show, with inferior parts hidden by the wood and leather. You don't always get what you pay for. @@georgebettiol8338
@lillexus55899 ай бұрын
Then again, I wouldn't mind a beautiful Arnage T parked in front of my house
@Barbarapape9 ай бұрын
They are highly desirable and a very nice way of passing the miles, until it all goes wrong.@@lillexus5589
@docbryn9 ай бұрын
Could you drop a ford or Chevy v8 in the Bentley
@elitemechanics93829 ай бұрын
Just a heads up the Green Label has a 4.4 BMW V8 with a Cosworth twin turbo set up. The Red label has the old single turbo engine from the Turbo R. The 2003 and on are Arrange T & R with the twin turbo set up. The BMW V12 only came in the Silver Seraph. The only reason that the Arrange did not continue to use the BMW 4.4 V8 was the beef going down between BMW & VW over the RR & Bentley marks. Not from consumer demand. The Arrange was originally designed for the 4.4
@jamesbowen21059 ай бұрын
Then VW brought they're own engine into play and made a great car out of it. Instead of the traditional crapmobile it used to be. BTW VW sold RR label and Morris works to BMW to finance rebranding Bentley, then Lutz abandoned BMW to rebrand Bentley for VW. That was the Beef.
@elitemechanics93829 ай бұрын
@@jamesbowen2105 When you say they brought their own engine into play, are you referring to the W12?
@jamesbowen21059 ай бұрын
@elitemechanics9382 yes, understanding, all built by Audi division, except Bugatti engine, hand-built by VW internally.
@withheld5669 ай бұрын
@@jamesbowen2105that's not what happened re the Bentley / RR sale. VW thought it had bought the whole lot - including the RR name. But the RR name is actually owned by the people that make the Aero engines and was licensed back to the car maker. BMW had been working with RR/Bentley for years - hence the seraph had the V12 and the Arnage their V8. BMW assumed this would give them first refusal on the buy. When VW swept in and bought it out from under them they were upset. But knew enough to go to the aero manufacturer and get the name. This blindsided VW and they were extremely upset about it. They certainly didn't sell the name to fund the purchase they never owned it and it was a massive part of what they thought they were buying. In the ensuing argument BMW threatened to stop supplying parts - not just the engine but HVAC etc all BMW. It eventually ended that BMW would see out their contract engine wise but that left Bentley without an engine. To save face they brought back the old warhorse and completely re-worked it. There had been some complaints about the BMW engine not having the torque of the 6.75 so it's not entirely untrue that consumer demand brought it back but the major thing was saving face after losing the BMW engine
@jamesbowen21059 ай бұрын
@withheld566 that totally conflicts with the business contracts and LAWSUIT brought by BMW against both VW and Lutz. During that period around 94 and onward Vzw bought up (on paper) all the orphaned British auto olive industry in vluding parts and materials manufacturing. The only part they wanted, and kept was the Bentley. Name and physical works as well as the parts manufacturing components and the physical plants, material supplies (Fabrice, wood leather etc) that were shared by Bentley RR Aston Martin etc. They had no interest in the rest and brought in Ford and BMW. Among others to part out what they didn't want in order to finance the deal. They had full intentions to dump the BMW engine and components in favor of all new next gen development of their own. Bob Lutz was CEO of BMW at the time and he went for the deal, along with Ford. BMW alleged that he knowledgeably defrauded BMW in the process with a promise of the new Bentley CEO and rebrand position in a major lawsuit. I was closely following the business deals as they occurred. And read the full interviews with both Piech and Lutz in Business Week concerning the long range plans for the Bentley label and the holdings that went with it. This merger of VWs traditional parts holdings and the ones acquired in Britain and Spain gave VW ownership of over 70% if ALL uatoparts and supplies manufactuing in Europe. Including critical Technology and parts for BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Ford and others
@hectorvazquez79299 ай бұрын
I have a 2016 V60 with that same engine set up and I’m now at 125k miles and it’s been all trouble free other than regular maintenance and oil changes every 5K miles. I also have an 89 Volvo 240 with 325k miles and starts every day.
@kapparaaliach9 ай бұрын
Some people underestimate the importance of maintenance (oil changes is a part of maintenance). If you treat your machine well, the machine spirit will shine on (unless you're very unlucky and got one of the cars that came out faulty from factory). The 240 is a beautiful machine!
@Paramount531Ай бұрын
That red block in your 89 Volvo is bulletproof. I had to have one rebuilt that was seriously abused but that was an anomaly. I have had two white blocks, a 95 960 and a 06 XC70, I love those engines. My current 13 XC70 has the 3.0 T6 and so far it has also been great. I wouldn't touch one of the current 4 cylinder Volvos.
@sombra61539 ай бұрын
I figured there’d be a lot of comments posted for swapping an LS into the Bentley, but the one who suggested a Cummins swap got my vote. It would be a toy, and toys always cost money. The Volvo, on the other hand, if it was mine, would become someone else’s parts car.
@BobBasshead9 ай бұрын
Have Roadkill Garage drop a LS in that Bentley.
@paulharrold71519 ай бұрын
So how would you stop after the engine swap? The brakes and suspension rely on the pumps on the original engine to work 😔
@petrosaguilar89169 ай бұрын
@@paulharrold7151 they didn't think that far ahead.
@Dreddy729 ай бұрын
@@paulharrold7151 engine swaps are more than just pull and drop in other engine. theres usually a lot of little issues to cover. theres no reason to beleive that theres not 2 options here. 1. replace the pumps. im sure electric or belt driven pumps could be added to the engine to keep the systems working. might be hard to match specs, although the belt driven could be easier to fine tune if necessary with adjusting pulley sizes. 2. you're already engine swapping, replace the break and suspension components too. this can vary from very hard with lots of fabrication, to just really expensive if its actually done on a somewhat regular basis on this car(doubt it on a bently) and very likely a combonation of the 2. will it be easy? no, will it be cheap? well if your a gearhead tinkerer, doing all the work yourself with an LS/Cummins just laying around in your shop, maybe? but still probably not. it would be an interesting final product though
@jamesfrench72999 ай бұрын
Not worth it. It would taint the prestige. You're buying pedigree and exclusivity with these vehicles.
@Czechbound9 ай бұрын
If the owners are watching, we all feel for you. I hope respectively they get a good price from a breakers yard, and decent deal on the engine replacement work. And closing in on 1 million subscribers Mr & Mrs Wizard and team That's fantastic ! I remember watching your first videos with Crazy D, the shady car dealer. Seems like yesterday !
@carlam66699 ай бұрын
As opposed to other comments about the Volvo … I am the original owner of a 2016 XC90 with about 100,000 miles and have been very happy with it. Didn’t buy it because it was a luxury vehicle but because it had the features we needed. Have only had oil pressure sender fail otherwise just normal maintenance. We chose the base model with halogen headlights because they emit full spectrum light and LEDs don’t. The super turbo-charged 2 liter four is not as smooth as a six or V-8 but still puts out 300 horsepower upon request while still giving 28 highway MPG. Opted for the air suspension because we wanted additional off-road ground clearance and has nicer ride than standard suspension. Keeping my fingers crossed that the suspension air bags hold up long term. The rough idle of the car in the video reminds me of the rough idle of my smart car but then it only has three cylinders.
@kylemontano2289 ай бұрын
air suspension and halogens is definitely a pretty rare spec !
@theschrom9 ай бұрын
I had a 2018 XC90 T6 and it was in he shop, no exaggeration, every other month. It was so unreliable that I finally lemon lawed it in 2022. Also, there’s no way you’re getting 28 mpg on that car. It’s a very common complaint on the forums that the T6 engine gets around 16 - 19 mpg mixed and about 19 - 21 on the highway. Ironically, I never had issues with the engine but I think we had an issue on everything else. Also, the front rotors were so poorly designed by Volvo that they replaced my rotors twice before I even hit 40K miles. They fully admitted the rotor design was defective. They eventually redesigned the rotors.
@donmoore77859 ай бұрын
Have you researched to see if your car might be affected by the oil ring carbon clogging issue of 2015-2016? I don't know if it affected XC90s. but it was in 4 cylinder and 5 cylinder engines. They may have fixed it for the 2016 model year in the 4 cylinder.
@carlam66699 ай бұрын
I checked my maintenance log and see that I replaced the front brake pads at 38,000 miles (sooner than I really had to) and front & rear pads plus front rotors at 90,000 miles. When we bought the XC90 the new version had just come out and none were available on the dealer’s lot. So ours is a built-to-order car. Also got the head-up display, tow hitch and pilot assist. Love the head-up display. Glad I didn’t pay a lot of money for the pilot assist. We often drive between S.F. Bay Area and Humboldt county (300+ miles) and always get 28 mpg on those trips. Mpg around town is much worse. Prefer to drive our Chevy Volt or smart car for local trips.
@Jonbarfour9 ай бұрын
If volvo ever puts a 6 cylinder back in the xc90, i'll be first in the queue. As of now, i am not convinced that a 4-banger power plant is reliably up to the task for the long haul, and thats quite defeatist of the volvo image of reliablity but i guess it is still built Tank-Robust structurarily
@harleyrider46299 ай бұрын
You are a truthful person. Thanks so much for keeping it real. Thanks for everything you do to share what you know.
@JCZ0RR09 ай бұрын
Surprised not to see this at the very top of all comments, but the green label used the M62 4.4 BMW V8, with the addition of 2 turbos (integrated into the manifolds). So did the Corniche for those years, but you're right that the Silver Seraph used the BMW V12 5.4 M73.
@JCZ0RR09 ай бұрын
wait brain fart, the Corniche rocked the 6.75L!
@freefall82439 ай бұрын
“Sounded like it ate a Harley Davidson”.. I nearly sprayed my coffee everywhere. 😂
@ChrisPatrick-q6k9 ай бұрын
A coffee fountain
@SerbanCMusca-ut8ny9 ай бұрын
Sounded more like a USSR Gaz engine.
@barackblows19429 ай бұрын
It wasn’t that funny. 👎
@jerrysmith18879 ай бұрын
I instantly sent this video to my Harley owning brother 😂
@sorokolu9 ай бұрын
Only 17k left to a million! Yoohoo! I am here since the channel was up and I am so happy to watch every single video. Thank you David :)
@anthonysipos10029 ай бұрын
For the Volvo, the early driveE 4 cylinder engines (14/15/16) and some of the last 5 cylinder engines made (12 to 16) sadly had piston ring issues (low friction). There was a program to apprently fix at least the driveEs permanently. They changed the design and the new ones allegedly no longer suffer from the problem. Google... there is a or was a class action lawsuit out there for the problem.
@jimmyaber59209 ай бұрын
Problems that were the cross between low tension rings and too long oil drain interval for the majority of drivers.
@Stressless20239 ай бұрын
So basically the owner drove it low on oil or with no oil? Seems to be a theme with modern cars now - Probably because many cars don't have oil dipsticks anymore to check the level smh... My 2015 Jaguar XF is one of them, and now that it's older I just get the oil changed every 2,500 to 3k miles at the most and hope for the best.
@donmoore77859 ай бұрын
The new style oil rings clogged with carbon prematurely, which caused greatly increased oil consumption. Volvo settled the class action lawsuit with the low number of litigants who filed the suit (10 or less) - I believe in 2022. Too bad for all the others out there, including people who bought CPO cars when they hit 70 or 80k miles when the issues arose.. Volvo did cover a lot of repairs, but thousands of people likely were handed bills for $4000-5000. Doesn't seem to be the cause of the issue here though. I bought a 2014 Volvo XC70 with the 6 cylinder (wanted the old smooth 5 cylinder - they put it in the 2016 I think, which I have owned 3 cars having it) but simply would not chance it. You can find used Volvos 2015 t0 2016 with 80k-120k miles - do your research to see if a candidate was affected.
@HypocriticYT9 ай бұрын
I had an early 70’s Caddy and it overheated on the highway. Old oil on the valve covers were in flames 🔥 when I pulled over to look. I drove it a few miles to a garage. The water pump belt had broken and the coolant and oil mostly boiled out 😮 Once cooled down the mechanic replaced the belt and topped up the coolant and oil. It was fine after that, can’t do that with modern engines 😮
@wagonmaster19749 ай бұрын
Cadillac 472 engines were pretty much bullet proof. Really had to have a bad/neglectful owner to fail. I got 197K out of my '68 Fleetwood Brougham and 165K out of my '73 Coupe de Ville. Both were running strong at their respective sales. Wish I'd kept the Fleetwood, but an offer for the car I couldn't pass came about...hindsight.
@HypocriticYT9 ай бұрын
@@wagonmaster1974 My 74 sedan had over 300,000 miles and ran strong but the body had rusted badly.
@jzap82019 ай бұрын
Wizard, how about a used Volvo engine from a dismantler? Surely there has to be a “lower” mileage parts car out there that was rear ended. Those engines usually come with warranties also.
@gw74779 ай бұрын
I can't even imagine buying a $90,000 Volvo to have it die 7 years later
@bjthedjdutchdude19929 ай бұрын
That's like $14.000 per year
@tombob6719 ай бұрын
Somewhere in California there is a guy screaming " swap in a LS " You know there's one out there😜
@GoldenCroc9 ай бұрын
It happens. We dont know what happened to this one, but its very often (for all cars) user induced...
@CarGeek3609 ай бұрын
Exactly why I’ll always prefer my dad’s MDX (also my friend’s mom used to have a 2021 XC90 and I didn’t like it personally)
@jackbauer46079 ай бұрын
Volvo quality hasn't been the same for many many years. You basically buy an unreliable chinese product.
@donmoore77859 ай бұрын
Volvo had an issue in late 2015 and 2016 with the oil rings on some engines. I believe all 5 cylinder, and some 4 cylinder. They changed the design, and the new rings were susceptible to carbon buildup. At 80k miles or so, they would stop working, and oil consumption would go way up. Likely not related to this one, but I came across this while researching a new used car. I bought a 2014 straight 6 XC70 Turbo two weeks ago and I love it. If you are looking at a 2015-2016 Volvo with a 4 or 5 cylinder, do your research!
@GuyChapman9 ай бұрын
Ah, the familiar “door open” sound. I’m in my second SPA platform Volvo. My son has one too! Very comfortable, but ludicrous power from a 2.0 4-pot.
@Radziot9 ай бұрын
Seen two of the same exact failures on 2016 and early 2017 Vovlo Xc90 T6's both the same issue. Volvo used bad spark plugs that fell apart and destroyed the cylinder wall. On one of them the scratches were so deep that they created holes in cylinder liner. Just Google 2016 Xc90 spark plug recall. There is NHTSA warning about this issue. The spark plugs are falling apart on the porcelain portion and that's a very hard material. It will decimate valves and liners on contact. Check the ceramic portion of the spark plug. Might be missing or the dealer replaced the damaged spark plug to cover their screw up. They supossed to change them free of charge when the car is on for the routine service. Should be an immediate recall as the issue occurs quickly and can disable the vehicle in seconds causing a very hazardous situation for the occupants.
@petrosaguilar89169 ай бұрын
It's the same problem Ford had with the three valve Triton V8 and thin spark plugs, they'd break apart.
@hottew_twat39639 ай бұрын
probably what happened and never changed at 100 thousand miles when it was running like shit at 80
@MrJaggg888 ай бұрын
That makes complete sense. He did show the spark plug ceramic insulator had broken and that probably took a chunk out of the valve as well as destroying the piston wall.
@ingrampowell91119 ай бұрын
The Green Label Arnage had a turbo BMW v8, while the Rolls-Royce Silver Seraph had the v12. Parts car? NO WAY - I would install an M62 v8 and manual 6-speed box from a junkyard BMW (using Green Label engine mounts, etc) and drive that Arnage forever.
@concordelounge8 ай бұрын
The BMW V8 really struggled to pull the Bentley along and had to be thrased. It was the very opposite of the understressed 6.75 litre.
@S70AMG8 ай бұрын
@concordelounge no it did not. Also underpowered isnt the same as understressed.
@clivehaynes21838 ай бұрын
The BMW engine in the green label Arnage was a 4.4 liter although it pulled the car along okay it was a bit revvy and sales for the green label was poor.
@colchronic9 ай бұрын
You can buy those engines for the Volvo for really cheap online like some of them go for a thousand some of them go for $3,000 but still that's a lot cheaper than dealership now that's a used engine with little miles but still that's probably what I would do
@paulbolick61439 ай бұрын
The used engine will likely have the same issue as this engine with burning oil. You'd be throwing your money away.
@colchronic9 ай бұрын
@@paulbolick6143 not necessarily I've had good luck with used engines I replaced one in my Honda with 100,000 miles and it's still running 200,000 miles later it's not always the case but you do need to inspect the engine with a borescope before you purchase it
@paulbolick61439 ай бұрын
@@colchronic I'm talking about in this exact example with this volvo. If you replace your 2015-2016 volvo with a used 2015-2016 engine your going to have the same problem. All of those engine have bad rings.
@colchronic9 ай бұрын
@@paulbolick6143 last time I checked all engines are generally the same they all have shitty oil control rings especially after 2005 there's no voodoo magic about Honda that makes used engines better it's just a matter of inspecting the engine before you buy it
@paulbolick61439 ай бұрын
@@colchronic There's nothing to inspect. Your not going to see anything on the engine to tell you the rings are bad. Your talking about generally on any car I'm talking about on this exact volvo. They don't just burn a little oil they empty the oil pan and it's on every 2.0L engine from 2015 to 2016
@bernitup64929 ай бұрын
Thanks Mr./Mrs. Wizard for all the videos with knowledge dropped. I might be of an old mentality but my step father who worked on cars on the weekends told me that if you look at a car that you want, you have to ask yourself these questions, "Can I check and replace my own motor oil, can I check and replace my own transmission oil, can I check and replace my own coolant, can I check and replace my spark plugs/water pump/alternator/starter without ripping up the whole top end and are parts readily available at a reasonable price". Using these questions, I have made good decisions that have played out when purchasing vehicles. I have an '06 Trailblazer and '07 HHR that I have been able to keep on the road due to being able to work/maintain myself saving tons of money and with no car payment.
@ItzJuicee9 ай бұрын
I work at volvo and the older gen 4 cylinders had major piston ring issues. Thankfully the newer gen motors no longer have that issue
@jamesburns22329 ай бұрын
So, would you put in one of the new ones in this 2016 Volvo? Seems like that would be the balm for it. 😉
@ItzJuicee9 ай бұрын
@@jamesburns2232 it's cheaper to rebuild it with the updated parts
@chancock42229 ай бұрын
Correct. 2015-2017 were the ones effected. Fixed the design flaw in late 2017 models.
@eddietucker33343 ай бұрын
I had a customer who was a service writer at a local Bentley dealer. I told him I loved Bentleys, especially the Turbo R. He said he would bring one by for me to look at. The next day, there he was, all smiling, saying come see the Bentley. As we approached the car in the lot (a wedding white beauty) he mentioned he had it up to 130 mph coming up the hill from Palm Springs. What a gorgeous machine! He popped the hood. Coolant everywhere. A growing puddle underneath.
@davidhamilton63639 ай бұрын
It's very nice to hear you say open the bonnet 🎉 good luck with your programme from Scotland
@davidgoliath59019 ай бұрын
With older cars (I have quite a few!) the cooling system is most often where the trouble starts. Old rubber, brittle plastic, dodgy thermo-fans, stuck thermostats, corroded aluminum etc etc... Fitting a $100 metal to metal temperature alarm attached to say the thermostat housing is vital.
@LeeTheVet9 ай бұрын
Love the channel, Car Wizard! Thank you for all your dedication.
@PlanetTwilow9 ай бұрын
They stopped being Volvo's in 1999, my 98 V70XC has 244K on it, runs 20psi boost on mods+tune, and is rock solid. Starts sub-zero in a second every time, mid 150's compression in all 5 cylinders. My Fordvo, 07 S60R 200K just got a new head, cyl 3 crack in plug hole, above the plug, head gasket, compression fine, no exhaust in coolant, or coolant in oil, just increasing loss of coolant. But was worth the $2500ish to replace the head. Car worth maybe $5Kish, but I love it. After 2008 became Chinavo's and it's all crap from there. I'd rip that Bentley's engine out, drop an LS crate motor in it, yank the suspension shit and go shocks/springs. Damn good looking car.
@CN9ALoverowner9 ай бұрын
Keep it 6.75 liter but it wouldn't be crewe built its perfect for an LSX swap or Iron block LQ already has the 4l80e
@petrosaguilar89169 ай бұрын
Or just find a RR/Bentley 6.75 from a wrecked car and plug n play.
@jacquespoirier90719 ай бұрын
If the castings are still good, I'd go for the Bentley, for sure it is for somebody that can do the mechanical work himself, the newer Volvo are cheap cars with cheap engines and cheap drivetrain If the Volvo was a 100 or a 200 series in good condiotion, my verdict would be the same as for the Bentley remember that the bentley failure is due to a neglect to a certain point but the failure on the volvo is due to a design flaw, it is all the difference.
@georgebettiol83389 ай бұрын
The Bentley's engine starts and runs so an 'economic' repair could be undertaken by a knowledgeable home based mechanic. It's very likely that both heads need to be skimmed and at the very worst may also require the a skimming of the block's surface, where it interfaces with the head. The damage only occurred because the driver IGNORED the overheating information provided by the light/gauge fitted to the dash and the tell-tale steam emanating from the front of the vehicle - and just continued driving the car without any coolant in the engine. Coolant hoses and pipes are not a 'life-of-type' fitment and do fail - so the hose-pipe failure after circa 20 years is not unusual.
@attilacsepe49469 ай бұрын
I couldn't agree more!@@georgebettiol8338
@georgebettiol83389 ай бұрын
The Bentley's failed cooiing connnection is not responsible for the significant heat damage to the engine. The damage only occurred because the driver IGNORED the overheating information provided by the light/gauge fitted to the dash and just continued driving the car without any coolant in the engine. The car's engine can be repaired - it's just a question of economics - i.e. to expensive to repair with respect to the car's current value.
@petrosaguilar89169 ай бұрын
Thank you, somebody had to say it. Shame the dummy ruined such a nice car.
@covercalls884 ай бұрын
I remember the first cars I bought for my sons. They were the early cars from Korea. One was a newer salvage with about 7,000 miles for $6000. Fairly reliable, he drove it for over 175,000 miles. Sold it cheap when the catalytic converter went out, not worth to replace. The other was Accent for $2k, it had 120k, ran a little rough and the trans was a little rough shifting. It was a bridge car to last a year or so. Giving my son the time to save some money for a newer one. He drove it for over 3 years and 65,000 miles, sold it for $1100.
@DanielMurray-u4l9 ай бұрын
I own a small HVAC business and I realize I am put in the same position you are in now Dailey for HVAC repairs. I don't want to be a financial advisor, I don't want to spend peoples money for them, but at the same time there is so much that they do not know that only I can help with. Good video. Thanks
@davidapp37309 ай бұрын
Interesting video. Sad when we have reached a point where some cars can't be repaired economical. As the owner of a 1961 Triumph TR3A that I restored my self I realize that if it had gone to a specialist for restoration it would not have been worth it.
@NVRAMboi9 ай бұрын
BUT.......still a great little drivers car no matter the monetary value. Nice work.
@davidapp37309 ай бұрын
It is a great driving car and I have placed in British car shows. It was a pile of parts in a basement when I got it.@@NVRAMboi
@simonoldroyd50379 ай бұрын
Green label Bentley had the BMW 4.4 V8, the Roller had the V12
@hotpuppy19 ай бұрын
The best way to save that Bentley would be to find a hot rod shop or someone with the skills to do an LS swap. Ditch all that English expensive stuff and go with aftermarket suspension and brakes too. Used engines for those are out there but few and far between as well as expensive.
@romankravchenko47369 ай бұрын
Best way to save Bentley would be to make a photo and take it to scrap metal
@deadon48479 ай бұрын
LS is the pumpkin spice of engine swaps for soy boys.
@petrosaguilar89169 ай бұрын
Aside from this ruined engine that the driver caused, it's still cheaper to keep a Bentley or Jag running than the GM Acacias you people often have.
@williampatrickfagan75909 ай бұрын
If a car is overheating the best thing to do if you must drive is to turn up the cabin temperature to max and put the fan on max. You may roast but the engine will run cooler at least for a while. The interior heater will help cool the water. Make sure that the Air con is turned off.
@rogerpearson90819 ай бұрын
Not going to help if all the coolant has spewed out of a break like the one on the Bentley. Thats what killed it! No coolant in the cylinder heads, the hottest spot!
@williampatrickfagan75909 ай бұрын
@@rogerpearson9081 Agreed. But good tip for a broken fan belt or sticky Thermostat.
@jackpalczynski78849 ай бұрын
Hey Dave! I have solutions to both cars for way less than replacing the engine with a new factory engine. For the Bentley, an LS swap out of a Camaro with an automatic. $10k including labor. For the Volvo, swap in a Subaru normally aspirated engine. Yah, you'd need to weld up some custom motor mounts but you have the entire AWD system in place. Again, probably $10k to do the whole thing. For a non DIYer, well, I guess finding the guy to swap is going to be the hard part.
@petrosaguilar89169 ай бұрын
If you did that you'd ruin the resale value of the Bentley.
@sprague499 ай бұрын
A friend's Volvo C70's 5 cylinder overheated one day and never woke up. It made a beautiful parts car though. Live fast, die young and leave a good looking corpse.
@donmoore77859 ай бұрын
I have owned three Volvos with 5 cylinder turbo engines. Fantastic power plant, and solid cars. I have two left with the 5, and a newer one with a turbo 6. They do require maintenance, but we brick owners accept that. If you do your own work, it helps keeps operating costs down.
@NicholasPellow9 ай бұрын
yeah, the white-block engines are fantastic, but they do not like overheating AT ALL. The minute you see that temp gauge rise in 5-cyl Volvo, pull over, turn it off and you'll have a chance to save it. I'm on 421,000kms with a factory 2.4L 5-cyl in one car and 235,000kms with the factory 2.3L Turbo/manual trans in another.
@VDPEFi9 ай бұрын
As a brit, a yellow rear plate on the front end is jarring! Haha, a red label is still on my dream car list, beautiful when they are working correctly
@luviskol9 ай бұрын
They got it off a Daewoo that didn't last long enough to get it's first MOT
@ljisbister32119 ай бұрын
@@luviskolYou noticed that too?
@asdf94819 ай бұрын
When the Arnage and Silver Seraph were launched in 1998, the Arnage was supplied with a 4.4 liter V8 from BMW. The Silver Seraph was delivered with a 5.4 liter V12 from BMW. Both of these engines are very good, and offer very few problems. The 6.75 liter engine that the Arnage eventually got, unfortunately offered a number of costly and serious problems.
@petrosaguilar89169 ай бұрын
What serious problems considering this engine was in production since like the 60's?
@htimsid9 ай бұрын
Do please describe the 'costly and serious problems' and what causes them.
@asdf94819 ай бұрын
@@petrosaguilar8916 : Red Labes had issues regarding head gasket failures. Later models had terrible failures of the cam shafts, which also can be difficult to get replacements for.
@asdf94819 ай бұрын
@@htimsid Red Labes had issues regarding head gasket failures. Later models had terrible failures of the cam shafts, which also can be difficult to get replacements for.
@kevinconmy36259 ай бұрын
I dont know who I love more:Mr. Or Mrs. Wizard.The best couple ever.They both have GREAT youtube channels!
@Ezq959 ай бұрын
My 2012 Volvo S60T5 shared the serpitine belt. From there the timing belt went out. 112k miles. I had a mechanic work on it. He sent the out to get it restified and he put it together but he use the wrong gasket maker. Insted of the rolls on pink he use some blue silicone and that started the coolant to sipp in. It cost some $😊 I went and traded in for a 2018 Corolla SE With 39k miles and certified. Yes I paid $12k including the trade. I'm happy to get out of that Chinese own Volvo. Nice looking and peppy car. 😢 great videos keep on informing us. My trade was $3k at the toyota dealership I worked for 10 years as a salesman😅
@kencrouch6689 ай бұрын
LS the Bentley - It's a nice car on the out side! Convert the air bags to shocks!
@htimsid9 ай бұрын
What could possibly go wrong?
@destinyangel59 ай бұрын
This type of person who owned the Bentley Arnage is probably like the clueless person who buys a brand new 911 Porsche or similar and knows absolutely nothing about cars. EG: They order the Porsche and say , "I want a black one" , not understanding anything about how the car works or the servicing required , they only understand the badge branding or name. The driver of the Bentley most likely kept driving it without coolant not having a clue on the damage being caused, so stupid, avoidable and such a shame . Lots of people want these fancy cars but have no idea. Another common problem on these expensive cars is the owners never stick to the servicing schedules . We just sold a Kona Blue FN 10sp 5.0 GT Mustang recently and it had the optional factory Magna ride suspension, the customer wanted the car but had no clue or idea what Magna Ride was and just wanted a Blue Mustang.
@universalassociates68579 ай бұрын
When your mechanic says 'go get a fork, cause this one is done' you know you have a problem with your car.
@jamesblackwell51419 ай бұрын
I wonder how hard it would be for a machine shop to repair the Volvo engine? Unfortunately the ones in my home town shut down years ago. Great video as always Car Wizard!
@veedubgeezer9 ай бұрын
Main dealer parts person here. At BMW, there's actually a good chance that the dealer will charge retail for the replacement engine if it was fitted there. However, many manufacturers will offer major unit intervention on trade sales and so may be able to sell to you (the garage) for less. It's worth an ask if you're a repair shop.
@siemenstraffic9 ай бұрын
The Wizard made the right call on both cars
@channell119 ай бұрын
If it's otherwise well-sorted a used engine might be a good option for the Bentley.
@RogueBurn9 ай бұрын
Depending on the cost for one, I agree.
@CarWizard9 ай бұрын
It isnt unfortunatley
@lovequeen70809 ай бұрын
@@CarWizardPlease stop the sexual innuendos. Its gross.
@ronv66379 ай бұрын
Seems as if the higher cost to purchase the less they are worth to repair. Having worked on too many Volvos(semi tractors not cars) I can only conclude they are built to fail as quickly and expensively as possible( planned obsolescence) and to be as difficult to maintain/repair as can be designed. Very old Volvos might have had a reputation for quality but that is ancient history.
@Draconius10009 ай бұрын
@@ronv6637 Maybe it's because they wanted to move by 2025 to EV
@mikewasfaret95639 ай бұрын
In the old days you could convert the Bentley to a chevy engine. But now with all the body, chassis computers it's pretty much impossible.
@jacobmoses37129 ай бұрын
The Rolls-Royce in the Cannonball Run movie had a big block Chevy so yes, it could be done in them there days
@WorthlessNickores9 ай бұрын
For the most part I'd not ever consider a car "dead" because the engine is gone, there's a huge caveat to that statement though, I do my own work but ONLY on MY cars and would drop another engine in it that I rebuilt myself. When my 1.8T blew the head gasket in my 04 Passat because the past owner didn't refill the system correctly, the neighbors said "well it's scrap now" or "It's off to the junk yard now." Well I'm driving that car now. Have put 5,000 miles on it since 2019. It costed me all of about $650 dollars to do this myself. Throwing away an entire car because the head gasket blew is just a ridiculous thought to me. Thanks for all your extremely well done and thought out videos Car Wizard. You have a great team and shop, If I had 1/10th your car knowledge I'd be worth something.
@alessandropataro44227 ай бұрын
About 20 years ago I was driving on the highway (in Italy), passing trucks at around 135 km/h, when I saw the engine temperature warning light come on, with a loud "beep" sound that came right after that. My first reaction was to immediately put the car in Neutral; I was able to quickly moove to the right hand side of the highway betwen the trucks (that were traveling at 80 km/h, with a good distance between each other), and kept going to the emergency lane. Once on the emergency line, I started braking to lower the speed quickly and as soon as I was at a complete stop, I turned the engine off. It took less that 20 seconds between the moment I heard the alarm and the car was now with the engine switched off. Thankfully, the engine suffered no damage, not even the head gasket; I was very lucky....the conditions of the road at that moment played in my favour. The overheating issue was due the failure of the belt that ran the water pump.
@ronwolff59739 ай бұрын
Sounds like a LS swap and a set of coilovers
@sugentechnologies15279 ай бұрын
For sure!
@stevemyers20929 ай бұрын
exactly my 1st thought. sweet ride then.
@deadon48479 ай бұрын
LS is the pumpkin spice of engine swaps for soy boys.
@lsswappedcessna9 ай бұрын
you could probably even turbo it. No room in engine bay? Remote mount.
@petrosaguilar89169 ай бұрын
Sure, if you have the expertise to essentially re-enginneer half the car to make it all work.
@stuartpickles69079 ай бұрын
That Bentley would be sweet with a 12v cummins swap.
@12yearssober9 ай бұрын
We's Chamberlain where you at?
@danoakes86809 ай бұрын
That sounds really good. Not sure, but I don't think there is enough depth to the engine bay to accommodate a Cummins 8B Just saying, the old school guy.
@oldrrocr9 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@thomascordery79519 ай бұрын
How about finding another Red Label Arnage parts car with different horrible problems, then making one good one? Either that or some interesting engine swap? The first would require a deep search and good luck, the second lots of problem solving to make things work together.
@stevenatwater72989 ай бұрын
Every once in a while Mrs. Wizard has to be thinking…. I thought I left the middle school boy’s humor behind when I retired from teaching.
@admranger9 ай бұрын
Yeah, it is a distraction from otherwise good content.
@thomascordery79519 ай бұрын
I expect she appreciates it, along with the Wizard's boyish good looks.
@volvo099 ай бұрын
It's shop humor... And very mild. My 65yo mother isn't even bothered by humor like that.
@zappatx9 ай бұрын
I had a Volvo C30 which was a LOT of fun to drive BUT that's when they went to Chinese ownership and things quickly went south. It got stuck in a small flood and water near the gas pedal ruined the drive by wire electronics and insurance totaled the car surprisingly. That said - the SEATS were the best ever. Volkswagen seats are pretty good but these Volvo seats are so nice (R-Design) I managed to pull them for installation into the Corvair.
@Isaki1388 ай бұрын
They went south with Ford and using outdated tech, e.g. diesels from PSA. I tested the EX30 and it drives amazing. Can only get better.
@davidshettlesworth14429 ай бұрын
Thanks for another great video. I was sad to hear about the British auto history in repair cost. I had recently seen your Jaguar video on "timing chain" issues. A beautiful Jaguar with a engine time bomb made it not worth fixing. A very good cautionary video. Carry On Sir!
@Masteranddisaster139 ай бұрын
British number plates on that Bentley
@liamjackson69309 ай бұрын
Wrong plate though, should be white plate on the front and yellow on the rear
@Jaguarwhisperer9 ай бұрын
The plate is for a 2004 Daewoo.
@Rog_Ramjet9 ай бұрын
And it should be Blue
@cedhome79459 ай бұрын
For the USA viewers UK plates can be looked up to see the history of the vehicle including the yearly government compulsory inspection
@simonroyle28069 ай бұрын
@@cedhome7945 Good point, in the Uk the licence plate stays with the car (you can get a personal one but its a hassle and can be expensive). So most car s have the same plate throughout their life, that means it can be looked up to confirm if it has the MOT (annual safety certificate) and has road tax paid. The MOT is challenging and eventually most cars fail at about 12-15 years and get scrapped.
@flyonbyya9 ай бұрын
Almost …… ONE MILLION SUBZZZZ!!!!!
@universalassociates68579 ай бұрын
A 2L turbo 4cyl engine? What can possibly go wrong? The old 6cyl inlines can run a long time if you take care of them. I have one in my '04 Volvo S80.
@wernerdanler27429 ай бұрын
I had a 98 s90 for several years, and it had the 6 cylinder in it. I can't remember the mileage, but I think it was around 150k. It ran flawlessly. Sweet engine.
@GoldenCroc9 ай бұрын
Nothing wrong with 2 liter turbos per se, effectively not any more for normal usage than a inline 6 if they are designed to the same philosophy.
@ronv66379 ай бұрын
2litre turbo engine in a 2000# car, that is a way overburdened grenade in that 4000#+ behemoth
@fredwiley37319 ай бұрын
As an owner of older Volvos, I said the same thing. Heavy car with a tiny motor never works out for the best.
@leo33259 ай бұрын
Why this 2.0 call t6? I have t6 3.0 in my s80
@rudolfzweep89 ай бұрын
My Renault 4 was happily running around for at least one year on three cylinders, not even running uneven....
@joshuabrown35259 ай бұрын
My friend has a Geo Metro Convertible with a 3 cylinder engine, and the engine had to be replaced once. Why you may ask? He blew the number 1 cylinder, he didn't have the money to replace the engine. Upon hearing that, he decided to just drive it on two cylinders until he lost another cylinder or he got the money to replace it, but somehow maybe it refused to quit, and it lasted two years like that. After two years, the number 2 cylinder finally went out, and he had to buy a new engine. After that happened, he still stands with that car everyday because he says it is so tough. This begs the question why can't car companies make cars more reliable?
@catfishbilly74259 ай бұрын
There isn't an easy answer to your question. Fact is they actually could make cars more reliable and 20 years ago some car companies were making some very reliable and long lasting cars. Even Toyota quality is trending down these days. Why? Well, they have to meet the C.A.F.E. (corporate average fuel economy) standards imposed by the federal government and these standards are more and more stringent every year. If they don't meet the C.A.F.E. standards, they must pay very steep penalties if they want to sell cars in the U.S. Because of this, modern cars are jam packed with computers and sensors so they can squeeze every mpg they can out of them. Engines nowadays tend to be smaller in displacement and turbo chargers have become very common. A naturally aspirated v6 putting out 200 horsepower stresses the engine components FAR less than a turbocharged 4 cylinder the makes the same horsepower. Sure, the v6 will use a bit more fuel but it is a lower stress engine, so it lasts longer (generally speaking). The 4 cylinder turbo engine gets better mpg but the trade off for that mpg is reliability. Turbos place a lot of stress on an engine. CVT transmissions are also much more common in cars these days because they do help to increase mpg. CVTs in cars are historically problematic though. So better mpg is achieved, but again, the trade off is reliability. Another issue that is commonplace today is electronics. All that high tech gadgetry and those gimmicky features are just more things that can (and frequently do) break in todays cars. Cars today are not rolling computers but rather entire computer networks are in each and every car these days. Even the most basic car today has 30ish microprocessors on board and higher end cars can have 100 or more. Sometimes even one small fault in a seemingly unneeded system can have a cascading effect causing multiple systems to go haywire or possibly the entire network of computers in the car can just go offline, meaning the car just won't start. Check out this video kzbin.info/www/bejne/g4bOd6arntGJepI where what is seemingly a burnt out taillight cascaded into the vehicle not starting and a $5600 repair bill. Those Geo Metros were great little cars. They were slow as molasses but they were stupid simple. No bells, no whistles. Just a car that was nothing more than the bare minimum needed to be considered a car. They were also dead reliable but that's because there was nothing to them. They got great mpg but they also weren't the most emissions friendly in doing so. And Safety features? Pfffff.... you got a seat belt aaaaand that was about it. A car like that would never make it to market today. Our society today has become much more wasteful of our resources. We are more of a "throw away" society than ever before. If it breaks, throw it away and get a new one. This is true with phones, appliances, cars and everything in-between. The average consumer wants those high tech gizmos in their car. They want cameras, internet, driver assist automation features, OTA updates and an app they can unlock their car door with from halfway around the world. The importance of reliability/longevity is placed much lower by the average consumer today than it was 20 or even 10 years ago. Car manufacturers, of coarse, have absolutely no problem selling you a new car every 4 or 5 years... so they have no incentive to build a car that lasts any longer than that. Hopefully that sheds some light on the situation for you
@robertgi94959 ай бұрын
Really makes you want to buy a volvo
@volvo099 ай бұрын
I don't care one bit about modern Volvos.... My love for them ends after the RWD models (240/740/940) and some the early FWD models (850 and early V70). If it's newer than 01 I don't like it.
@GoldenCroc9 ай бұрын
Meh. It might have crapped the bed itself, or it might be user induced. We dont know.
@BlenderedGT29 ай бұрын
This is a rare case on the XC90, they really dont usually dont it
@rogerjohnson3789 ай бұрын
Junkyard motor in the volvo with a year warranty, done.
@johnpeters99039 ай бұрын
That's what I was thinking as well. No brainer.
@duancoviero97599 ай бұрын
If there is one available.....
@paulbolick61439 ай бұрын
It will have the same issue as the one that's bad unfortunately.....
@shaunchappell7849 ай бұрын
Just a correction, they used the 4.4 bmw v8 in the green labels, then changed to the 6.75 when they changed to a different gearbox.
@shaunchappell7849 ай бұрын
I sound like a real pendant, sorry Wizard. Just an FYI, I've worked a great deal on these engines and even when they are totally cooked, if you have the space and time they are quite easy to get running again. They love boost!! Add the head gasket upgrade and you can get hysterical levels of power & torque out of them.
@03BRGR539 ай бұрын
Correct. It was the Rolls Royce version that had the BMW V12.
@bennyhannover93618 ай бұрын
The 4.4 BMW was twin-turbo charged to about 440 bhp
@bennyhannover93618 ай бұрын
The 6.75 liters old Rolls Royce engine was developed at Cosworth during the sixties. BMW kept it during its cooperation from 1998 to 2003, then VW bought Crewe but didn’t receive the marque of RR as the RR Aero Engines had the rights for it and BMW Aero Engines was a development partner which RR could not get out of the game. So VW kept Crewe and the old 6.75 engine and introduced the 6.0 W12 Volkswagen Engine..
@shaunchappell7848 ай бұрын
@@bennyhannover9361 I'm afraid you're wrong. The 6.2 was first developed in 1959 and later enlarged to 6.75 to compensate for emissions rules. This engine remained unchanged until the mid/late 90s just components added and improved, it came with or without the turbo, different engine management etc. Now Bentley and rolls used the BMW derived 4.4v8 and V12 in the seraph chassis during 1998 until 2000, then VW acquired the Bentley mark 1998, and due to complaints by Bentley customers they reinstated the 6.75 after 2 years of development and a legal battle. At this time the 6.75 was tuned by cosworth(pistons, ECU, crank, turbos etc) and went back to the 4L80-E as it could handle the power, unlike the BMW 5 speed unit.
@redsidebiker9 ай бұрын
I'd have the Bentley every time
@benchmark33329 ай бұрын
Go buy it must be at a good price.
@tsriftsal35819 ай бұрын
Allegedly recently sourced a used engine on one of these. It was for a national "shop" and the owner was an employee above that shop, was told. Friggin, it seemed, the most beautiful salvage used motor ever seen.
@YoungVeteran20237 ай бұрын
I owned a Mercedes GL350 - yup the diesel…130k miles and the engine had to be rebuilt. It went down hill from there, a few years ago and I spent $10k in repairs in 1 year. NEVER AGAIN.
@craigtiano34559 ай бұрын
I find it impossible to believe that the Arnage's engine couldn't be repaired or rebuilt. I've personally done several RR engines in my home garage. They are straight out of 1960 with the carbs replaced with fuel injection. i.e., old school heavy block and head. Before I'd consign that to be a parts car, I'd bore scope the cylinders. If you don't have damage there, it's just a head gasket and the head may have to be skimmed, Based upon the fact that it runs, I'd discount the possibility of bottom end work. Isn't Hoovie looking for another dumb deal?
@rogerpearson90819 ай бұрын
Can and is it worth it are 2 different questions. $30k for a $25k car? Just as bad as the $60k battery for a $55k car ( Ioniq 5 with a minor scrape on the battery case recently in the headlines)
@BJ-qp5st9 ай бұрын
Bentley needs an LS swap. I said it first! 🤣
@matthewelliott22139 ай бұрын
13:47 "gotta clean the tip" .... Dead silence.....
@dclaet11359 ай бұрын
Get your mind out of the gutter! You read far too much into innocuous statements.
@edsmaleАй бұрын
@@dclaet1135it was right after several “schlong” statements. You’re just not paying attention
@ericvoneric50699 ай бұрын
Thank you,thank you! I got the 2003 Buick .what a wonderful car.
@georgevavoulis47589 ай бұрын
I will only buy a car if I find automobile mechanics as knowledgeable and HONEST as you Mr. Wizard
@theclown39679 ай бұрын
Wizard: Makes a jokes. Mrs. Wizard:"Oh, okay, dear." Lol. You can hear the eye roll.
@philipheyes6079 ай бұрын
The four cylinder Volvo engines lack the durability of the previous in line fives.
@evgenysavelev8379 ай бұрын
Very likely the Volvo had carbon deposits on the valve due to direct injection, which could have created a hot spot in the cylinder and caused knocking, which melted the valve and destroyed the head gasket etc, etc. Volvo engines do not tolerate prolonged oil change intervals, this might have created a leak in a turbo, which only accelerated the carbon depositing issue and also may be the reason you see oil on the spark plugs. If you own a turbo Volvo, change your oil every 3K. Use high quality oil and clean off carbon deposits (walnut blasting or plain old elbow grease) every 60K or so. The alternative is to be that guy, or selling your car before that happens to an unsuspecting victim.
@ChrisPatrick-q6k9 ай бұрын
Direct Injection belongs on Diesels IMO
@mikaelardnert12539 ай бұрын
Knowing nothing I feel inclined to agree. I have a Ford Ecoboost and I wonder a little about the oil change intervals, also small engine volume big turbo hauling a big car, with all sorts added to the petrol, carbon buildup makes sense. Could they be designed to be in hybrids and if you get the non hybrid it runs over the oil change without the computer realising? Time will tell I guess, but a 2016 Volvo shouldn’t have engine failure, not right… great video 😊
@ChrisPatrick-q6k9 ай бұрын
@@mikaelardnert1253 Change the oil every 5-7k, use the correct Ford oil, find out if it's fitted with one of those Wet Belt silly things.
@volvo099 ай бұрын
@@mikaelardnert1253what year ecoboost? Only the early years were direct injection only. The following revisions are dual injection so you don't get carbon buildup.
@mikaelardnert12539 ай бұрын
@@volvo09 2019, that's great news - thanks!
@user-klarson469 ай бұрын
Thank you for making these videos. My son just bought a 2016 Porsche Panamera with 140K on it that really looks good. We took your advice and had a pre-purchase inspection done at an independent Porsche specialist near where my son lives in Connecticut. The inspection revealed a coolant leak that is being repaired at this shop before my son takes possession of the car. The Porsche shop owner said that otherwise it is a "good solid car". The inspection did reveal a few other issues but nothing major or that had to be dealt with right away. The shop is Repasi Motorwerks LLC in Stratford, CT.
@Paulinthewyld9 ай бұрын
Volvo sales manager here… We just had a 2018 XC90 phev a customer tried to trade in…. Tried because another dealer called us and told us the car needed a new engine… we took the customers car into the shop, did a leak down test and so on and it turned out it did need a new motor. 167,000kms on it and it’s burning oil and has low compresssion in cyl3… It was owned by a doctor who went and had the codes cleared and tried to trade it in - human nature can be pretty $hitty…
@MrTilbin9 ай бұрын
Everyone wants to look like they have money until it comes down to they really don't. It's not some state secret these vehicles require extra and more expensive maintenance to keep them running. Although I don't consider Volvo "luxury". Depending on the year it's a lot of motorcraft stuff.
@ducky14969 ай бұрын
2016 was long after Ford was done with them. Geely motors owned Volvo during this time.
@kylemontano2289 ай бұрын
2016 is far past the ford era. the only volvos with ford parts are p1 and p3 cars from the mid 2000s to the early 2010s. no ford parts on my 2007 p2 volvo
@NVRAMboi9 ай бұрын
Just checked 2019 MSRPs and it suggests that this model of Volvo had prices ranging from $43,950 to $49,800. For "the poors" like me, that's low-end borderline luxury pricing (ignoring the current falsely steroid inflated pandemic pricing). Currently, that's only RAV4 or 4Runner pricing. World's gone nuts.