Spoke to the dealer and he agreed to cover half of all the costs
so far. New clutch, flywheel, shaft seals, pinion seals and diff mount. The main reason i agreed to pay half was that i was at no financial loss if i agreed.
The cost of the car + repairs (paid by me) does not exceed the lower end forecourt value of the car yet. There where also other benefits:
- time (i am starting a new job soon)
- dealer is over an hours drive away from me (he wanted to repair at his garage to save money and could have insisted)
- at his garage parts would have been cheap, at my chosen garage i specified genuine parts.
- since the dealer was paying half the costs i would only have saved maybe a tenner by doing the diff myself. Spending the tenner saved me a day on the floor and a delay waiting for parts.
For anyone curious,
at full price the diff was quoted as £250, the clutch was £550 and the flywheel was £440 extra while the clutch was being done. Some quotes where about 50% more expensive for the same job and parts from others, so it pays to shop around.
Got new genuine turbo hoses, BMW crankcase breather, filters and fluids ready. Gonna give the EGR and inlet manifold a second clean to catch any crud that may have remained in the intake system.That should hopefully take care of the performance issues unless the T-solenoid or MAFF are shot. None of this should be a problem, in fact it should be enjoyable.
The steering seems to have steadied out a bit of it's own accord since first posting, but i still need to inspect further when i get the car back. I reckon a bush has gone allowing something to shift when i jacked the car up to do the drop links.
I didn't get chance to test the remaining issue, the VCU, before taking it to the garage. I will have to test it friday when i have the car back. I am expecting the worst, but am unsure about how to approach it if so. Obviously it's better if i can get it paid for [at least in part] by the dealer or warranty. If they contribute it will mean i can get the GKN unit fitted opposed to a recon.
Assuming it is faulty: If a garage can't test it 'properly' i am not sure i could prove it failed (thus recover costs from the dealer or warranty). Any ideas on how i could prove a VCU failure to a dealer/warranty? Maybe the free test advertised by that reconditioning company would suffice (even if it's no more accurate than the home test)?
I don't think they will be convinced if i have to explain that i jacked my car up and did a test i read on the internet.
Cheers