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gmatov -> RE: Possible Buy - Need advice. (5/27/2005 4:47:58 PM)
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Offramp, Yes, as I mentioned before, I have had to tear down and rebuild the 3 speed auto in my kid's '85 5000 Turbo. The main reason was as you said above, bad differential. '85 was one of the years under recall for "evaporating" gear lube. When I tore the differential apart, I found the pinion to have razor sharp teeth, about half or less their original thickness. The shock from hammering caused the front bearing fit to open up, heat up, and sieze. Why I had to open and rebuild the tranny itself, is that I bought a transaxle, complete from a bone yard, with convertor. Foolish me, instead of opening the box and checking it out, simply installed and ran, for 1 day, next day, no reverse. Called the yard, they told me to have it checked at tranny shop, they said it was no good. Got my money back for the tranny, 1/2 the price as I really only wanted the differential, anyway. PO'd, now, got a local mech to pull the tranny out, put my old 1 back in, which worked well, before. They did so, but couldn't get it to run, said it needed a rebuild, I said at your rates, never happen, took it home and dropped it again myself, after buying a complete rebuild kit, some 130 USD. When I pulled the tranny from the spigot fit, found that they had left the washers on the studs, automatic 2 mm shims, no sealing effect from the fibre gasket between the faces, no pressure to speak of in the system, massive leak. Took it back to the mech, told him he caused my prob, least he could do, since I'd paid him for the original work, was to use his clean room and tools to do the rebuild for me. He said OK, but, y'know, having a sign saying you are a mechanic doesn't mean you are one. Every time I stopped to see what progress he made, he was even more befuddled, trying to fit a stack a foot and a half high into a foot deep "box". Finally got it together, I reinstalled, ran about a week, pulled it, found he had some friction plates in the wrong order, redid them, flushed it, reinstalled, week later, same thing, went deeper, found more out of order stuff, in the end, the only thing he did right was the oil pump in the rear. So, yes, I have been inside an Audi tranny, more times than I like to remember. My second biggest mistake on that car was throwing the parts away when I changed it out. This "new" convertor was obviously as full of crap as the "new" tranny was, kept contaminating the fluid, siezing valves in the valve body. Pull the pan, pull the valve body, dismantle, clean, reinstall, refill. Probably used a drum of fluid in that thing. Clean really counts in an automatic tranny. Still, depending on the price, I'd not be afraid to buy the car the OP asked about. I did buy an '87 5000 a couple years ago, gave up on it when I couldn't get it started. Have spark, have fuel, have timing on the nut. (Reason I bought it was I thought I knew it all about Audis, he didn't know how to time it, I'd have it running in half an hour. Ha, ha, good one on me. Still sitting here, still not running, 300 bucks worth of scrap iron, some parts I can use, most I can't. So far saved 75 bucks for a headlight from it rather than the boneyard, need the side mirrors, used the hood props, too. Ah, well.) I like my '90 better, anyway. Cheers, George
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