Sandevino
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Mike
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2022
- Threads
- 21
- Messages
- 946
- Reaction score
- 1,828
- Location
- North Texas
- Vehicle(s)
- 2023 Jeep Gladiator Rubicon
I don’t see why not.
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This manually disconnects the drivelineYes but you need to pull the emergency thing in front of the shifter.
edit: I’m not 100% sure why the AAA tow guy had to do this with the blown HPFP. when I stopped at the dealer to clear out my personal belongings from the truck I noticed he popped the cover.
Yes but my battery didn’t die. Are you able to shift if the power is on ACC?This manually disconnects the driveline
Yes, but he likely didn't want to risk it.Yes but my battery didn’t die. Are you able to shift if the power is on ACC?
For reading pleasure only-I was told by my service advisor that Bosch says the pumps are within spec and the issue is not theirs. This is the same stance they have taken with other auto manufacturers like VW, Ford, etc... This is supposedly why it is taking so long, everyone is jockeying for position. If Bosch falls here they will probably be on the hook for everyone else too.
That’s news. I guess neither good or bad. Mine is still in the shop. The service manager makes an effort to call me every Friday even though the update is the same. Maybe end of August. Keep us posted.“An update:An update:
The service advisor called this morning to inform me of the regional reps decision. They have decided to replace my fuel system with currently available parts.
This leads me to believe that the “recall fix” is still up in the air. Rumors have been floating about that August is when the parts will arrive to fix the recall. I can’t imagine that’s true if they are just going to replace my entire fuel system being so close to August.
I asked if they tested the engine oil for any metal particulate and was told they have not yet. I requested that be performed before they replace the fuel system.
I hope this goes smoothly and I’m back in the drivers seat of my truck soon. I have faith in the dealer that they are taking care of me and my interests.
Will update when more information is available.”
Copy/Paste from my build thread.
Wouldn't you think the spec would include the required fuel quality and, with the pump being sold in the US market, that the fuel quality spec would be what is available in the US? If the spec calls for higher quality fuel than that typically found in the US and if Jeep/Ram, Ford, etc. all used the pump anyway then, yes, it falls on the car manufacturers, not Bosch. But I find it awfully hard to believe they would all do that. It is much more likely Bosch said it would work with US diesel, and were wrong. In my opinion, anything with rollers is going to fail eventually and typically creates shrapnel/shavings when it does. Putting that shrapnel in the fuel path to the rest of the system is a poor design.Bosch is within spec…. It’s the trash ultra low sulfur fuel.
Typical German engineering. Over engineered. That's why you don't buy a German car that's out of warranty. When something fails, it's $$$$If it was me, I'd be happy they were replacing it with currently available parts versus waiting until August, then September, then October... for the recall parts.
Wouldn't you think the spec would include the required fuel quality and, with the pump being sold in the US market, that the fuel quality spec would be what is available in the US? If the spec calls for higher quality fuel than that typically found in the US and if Jeep/Ram, Ford, etc. all used the pump anyway then, yes, it falls on the car manufacturers, not Bosch. But I find it awfully hard to believe they would all do that. It is much more likely Bosch said it would work with US diesel, and were wrong. In my opinion, anything with rollers is going to fail eventually and typically creates shrapnel/shavings when it does. Putting that shrapnel in the fuel path to the rest of the system is a poor design.
Well said. Agreed 100%.If it was me, I'd be happy they were replacing it with currently available parts versus waiting until August, then September, then October... for the recall parts.
Wouldn't you think the spec would include the required fuel quality and, with the pump being sold in the US market, that the fuel quality spec would be what is available in the US? If the spec calls for higher quality fuel than that typically found in the US and if Jeep/Ram, Ford, etc. all used the pump anyway then, yes, it falls on the car manufacturers, not Bosch. But I find it awfully hard to believe they would all do that. It is much more likely Bosch said it would work with US diesel, and were wrong. In my opinion, anything with rollers is going to fail eventually and typically creates shrapnel/shavings when it does. Putting that shrapnel in the fuel path to the rest of the system is a poor design.
I am happy to get my truck back asap. I just want verification that the engine has not sustained any damage due to metal particulates in the oil.If it was me, I'd be happy they were replacing it with currently available parts versus waiting until August, then September, then October... for the recall parts.
I doubt anything of significance would get past the injector itself. Only way to tell is to have the cylinder walls bore scoped and checked for scoring.I am happy to get my truck back asap. I just want verification that the engine has not sustained any damage due to metal particulates in the oil.