Mar-01-2012 05:53 AM
Dec-06-2012 06:08 PM
Dec-06-2012 06:03 PM
Dec-06-2012 04:40 PM
NinerBikes wrote:
Here is the link of correspondence between Bosch and Volkswagen, plenty of it is redacted, yet very easy to read between the lines.
Volkswagen / Bosch correspondence.
Dec-06-2012 02:28 PM
Dec-06-2012 01:23 PM
NinerBikes wrote:dbbls wrote:onekg wrote:X 2
On goes the one man rant to destroy Ford..Good Luck
Go to the NHTSA website and enter "EA 11003", then do a search under VW's latest PDF documents with their correspondence with Bosch early on in the HPFP designs and warranty issues dating back to 2008 to the present. BTW, the VW Touareg and the Audi Q7 as well as the Porsche Cayenne, all with V6 3.0 liter TDI common rail motors, use the exact same CP4.2 pump as Ford and GM. BTW that "EA" stands for Engineering Analysis" over at NHTSA... obviously, with NHTSA discovering VW's correspondence with Delphi and their patent with a square shoe'd follower to prevent the roller and piston rotating in the bore and getting out of alignment with the cam, causing hammering, scuffing and eminent failure.
Hammering is only one of the key issues
You have a lot of reading to do to catch up and get up to speed. The problem stems from Bosch... QC problems in manufacture, dirt and not enough cleanliness in assembly, not a fine enough RMS finish in manufacture and in finish on rollers, and on, and on. Bosch quit making them in Germany, too low a quality, and started producing them in Slovakia in 2011 on, with much better results.
Oh my, if true, then design 101 stuff lost to their design team
DLC can be deposited in many ways, but for this kind of final finish,
Plasma (Ion beam) the best. The finish of the base material/surface
critical and several finishing processes needed.
Generally for this level of finish, rounds and flat surface best. A
Cam would be tough (expensive), but you say rollers. So a 'bit' better
but still in a very poor lubrication environment. Both poor lube and
poor cavity lube flow, there is backwater areas with little to no
flow around the cam/follower/roller area
Also says that there is both assembly QC and such high PSI's that anything
getting in-between gouges the DLC or it's mating surface (now non-coated)
to create debris
After you've done your homework, you are then welcome to come back and open your pie hole on the subject matter of Ford, and their lame warranty policy based on their decision to go with a POS designed HPFP by Bosch. It is a flawed design, without a retained roller and follwer, with counting on diesel fuel to lubricate adequately, with running a steel piston in an aluminum bore. A recipe for disaster, with no failure analysis ever performed in the testing stages before release. No other HPFP design has ever had as much collateral damage as a Bosch CP4 HPFP when failing, to the rest of the complete, whole fuel system.
Aluminum is sacrificial (anodic) to iron (cathodic). The voltage
differential (millivolts) dependent on the alloy of both. This is
yet another potential oxide debris.
I would not get in a rocket ship as an astronaut, ever, if it had a Bosch designed fuel pump or fuel system.
BTW, it's only fair to say I have skin in the game, I own 2 current TDI's, one with a CP4.1 HPFP, the other with a CP4.2 HPFP, as in the Ford and GM. VW has extended the warranty on the Touareg to 100k miles, and it includes the HPFP and whole fuel system, in the event of failure. The other is a Passat 2.0 CKRA motor with CP4.1 with solenoid injectors, and the pressure requirements have been dropped to 1600 or 1800 bars max on the HPFP.
I went in to the two cars I have with my eyes wide open. I would strongly recommend, based on what I have observed failure wise, in looking at the data on TDI club, to steer clear of truck stop rude crude grade of diesel brands, and also would stay away from Shell diesel fuel. Both tend to show up with higher rates of HPFP failure on TDI club than other brands of diesel fuel.
YMMV, I would strongly encourage anyone that has a Bosch HPFP failure on their vehicle, regardless of brand or badge, to file a complaint immediately with NHTSA, BEFORE hauling your truck in for being repaired. I would also make the service writer aware that you have done so, and that they will be contacted by NHTSA shortly for some fuel samples and an engineering review of the failed pump and fuel system.
Provide them with a NHTSA file number. Is the one above the correct
one or is there a more specific one?
Sometimes, the owner needs to know more about the fuel system than the service advisor, and needs to adjust their expectations up front. Saying "your fuel system is contaminated" is double talk BS... of course it's contaminated, your sh*tty bosch pump is what contaminated the fuel... pull the metal filings out and identify where they came from, or how about opening up that pressure sensor on your fancy HPFP by removing 2 torx screws, and look at all the metal fillings in that sieve screen sitting there. The apple doesn't fall very far from the tree.
If you pay for a HPFP repair, demand that all the parts be returned to you. You will need them as evidence for your attorney in the event you decide to file a lawsuit against Ford and Robert Bosch. There are no serviceable parts or 'core charge' parts on your trashed HPFP.
IMHO.... Bosch has done this to themselves, all the manufacturers have been sold a Bill of Goods and empty promises by Bosch, with this******design that functions better as a hand grenade in your fuel system blowing shrapnel everywhere in the whole complete fuel system, than as a High Pressure Fuel Pump. Way way too much collateral damage when this bomb goes off.
Dec-06-2012 03:44 AM
Dec-05-2012 09:11 PM
Dec-01-2012 10:09 AM
Dec-01-2012 09:55 AM
NewsW wrote:FishOnOne wrote:ricatic wrote:
New discussion taking place at The Diesel Stop about the 6.7...Kinda funny...the discussion takes on the appearance that this is a recent development. It includes some comments about the new dieselsite product...
I posted my Broken drum story over there when it happened...the thread lasted about an hour and was deleted...I am surprised this one has lasted 3 pages...I posted...any bets on how long it lasts...
Good bye Ford thread at TDS
Regards
If the drama is left out of the discussion, my bet is it will stick around!
OK, lets start betting on the thread.
1 round of drinks (for the 3 of us) that it will be gone by 12/08/12 noon.
Dec-01-2012 09:04 AM
FishOnOne wrote:ricatic wrote:
New discussion taking place at The Diesel Stop about the 6.7...Kinda funny...the discussion takes on the appearance that this is a recent development. It includes some comments about the new dieselsite product...
I posted my Broken drum story over there when it happened...the thread lasted about an hour and was deleted...I am surprised this one has lasted 3 pages...I posted...any bets on how long it lasts...
Good bye Ford thread at TDS
Regards
If the drama is left out of the discussion, my bet is it will stick around!
Dec-01-2012 07:09 AM
ricatic wrote:
New discussion taking place at The Diesel Stop about the 6.7...Kinda funny...the discussion takes on the appearance that this is a recent development. It includes some comments about the new dieselsite product...
I posted my Broken drum story over there when it happened...the thread lasted about an hour and was deleted...I am surprised this one has lasted 3 pages...I posted...any bets on how long it lasts...
Good bye Ford thread at TDS
Regards
Dec-01-2012 06:59 AM
Nov-30-2012 10:23 PM
#1, poor choice to use diesel as the lube
#2, poor cam/crank cavity design
#3, poor piston to crank/cam design and should be positively captured
#4, poor cavity/routing/valving/etc that creates cavitation potentials
Nov-30-2012 05:50 PM
Porsche wrote:
“It’s a matter of lubricating the high-pressure fuel pumps,” he adds. “They’re delicate.”
Thomas Herold, manager of ?Special Operations R&D
Nov-30-2012 04:28 PM
NewsW wrote:
You are not seeing the discount because refiners are making good money shipping finished product (diesel) to Europe, playing the spread between Brent and West Texas Intermediate.
If the Iranian embargo is not there, Brent price would have equalized with West Texas by now.