awkwardbob
Well-Known Member
Hi,
I acquired a 2003 4.4l (BMW) L322 last year as a runaround while my daily (Audi) was off the road.
I have grown quite attached to the car as, annoyingly, she’s in great nick inside and all the toys work !
There’s a bit of rust in the underside (mostly
Surface) and a wee bit of panel damage in the rear wing but other than that she’s good. -except for the gearbox.
It’s the ZF-5HP24 and changes are silky smooth and predictable, the only issues are that she’s developed a leak from one of the shaft seals and that I think the Torque Convertor is done as I get that characteristic rumble at 50 and 65 (under light load -if I floor it, it all locks up nicely).
What I’m trying to weigh up is whether I should repair it or not.
Obviously there’s little point of going to all the hassle of stripping down to do the torque convertor only to have to rebuild the gearbox a few months later but costs vary from £2K-5K.
Planet gears in Peterborough seem to know what they’re talking about but they’re not very local to me (Glasgow) and fuel would be around £250 there and back plus time, hotel and entertainment for the family.
Locally, I’ve been quoted between £3200 and £5000 for a complete overhaul.
So my question is this:
Given that, even with a rebuilt gearbox and new torque convertor the car is only likely worth a maximum of £2500, logically it would be madness to spend anything like that on getting it fixed properly.
So what are my options ?
Sell it as-is with a potentially dodgy torque Convertor ? (Which is pretty much what happened to me, but I feel I’d have to disclose that to any buyer)
Scrap it ?
Break it for parts ?
Fix just the torque convertor and leaky seal and then sell it ?
Do the whole repair at around £3000
Logically I should just get shot -the car I want to look after and keep is my P38 Autobiography and the £3K could do a lot for her.
But…. It just doesn’t feel ‘right’ somehow to just let her rust away -she’s too good a car for that -and I guess that how they get you !
Any sensible help and advice would be very welcome. I have put a fair amount of love into the car (a 3-owner example) and maybe I’m being too sentimental.
Thanks again
Bob
I acquired a 2003 4.4l (BMW) L322 last year as a runaround while my daily (Audi) was off the road.
I have grown quite attached to the car as, annoyingly, she’s in great nick inside and all the toys work !
There’s a bit of rust in the underside (mostly
Surface) and a wee bit of panel damage in the rear wing but other than that she’s good. -except for the gearbox.
It’s the ZF-5HP24 and changes are silky smooth and predictable, the only issues are that she’s developed a leak from one of the shaft seals and that I think the Torque Convertor is done as I get that characteristic rumble at 50 and 65 (under light load -if I floor it, it all locks up nicely).
What I’m trying to weigh up is whether I should repair it or not.
Obviously there’s little point of going to all the hassle of stripping down to do the torque convertor only to have to rebuild the gearbox a few months later but costs vary from £2K-5K.
Planet gears in Peterborough seem to know what they’re talking about but they’re not very local to me (Glasgow) and fuel would be around £250 there and back plus time, hotel and entertainment for the family.
Locally, I’ve been quoted between £3200 and £5000 for a complete overhaul.
So my question is this:
Given that, even with a rebuilt gearbox and new torque convertor the car is only likely worth a maximum of £2500, logically it would be madness to spend anything like that on getting it fixed properly.
So what are my options ?
Sell it as-is with a potentially dodgy torque Convertor ? (Which is pretty much what happened to me, but I feel I’d have to disclose that to any buyer)
Scrap it ?
Break it for parts ?
Fix just the torque convertor and leaky seal and then sell it ?
Do the whole repair at around £3000
Logically I should just get shot -the car I want to look after and keep is my P38 Autobiography and the £3K could do a lot for her.
But…. It just doesn’t feel ‘right’ somehow to just let her rust away -she’s too good a car for that -and I guess that how they get you !
Any sensible help and advice would be very welcome. I have put a fair amount of love into the car (a 3-owner example) and maybe I’m being too sentimental.
Thanks again
Bob