ttforcefed
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Don't most manufacturers recommend changing the timing chain around 100k-120k, the LR4 at 150k? It seems that Land Rovers have a high failure rate of many components while still relatively low mile engines, <70k. Is it the high cost of repair that let the timing chain repair grow disproportionately?
Allow me to chime in for the SCV6 contingent.
- 2015 SCV6
- OE oil and change intervals, all at the dealer
- At 49,900 miles (no joke) noise became very obvious. Dealer originally dismissed as normal but after a second visit agreed there was an issues and replaced tensioners, guides. Mine still had the steel pins and aluminum guides, with obvious deflection in the guides. Replacement guides have a steel button where the pin contacts it. I have pics somewhere if people are interested.
What was your oil change interval?
As noted above, factory intervals (~15k)
Post the pics if you have them, thanks!Allow me to chime in for the SCV6 contingent.
- 2015 SCV6
- OE oil and change intervals, all at the dealer
- At 49,900 miles (no joke) noise became very obvious. Dealer originally dismissed as normal but after a second visit agreed there was an issues and replaced tensioners, guides. Mine still had the steel pins and aluminum guides, with obvious deflection in the guides. Replacement guides have a steel button where the pin contacts it. I have pics somewhere if people are interested.
I've never heard of this. Timing chains (unlike timing belts that need replacement every 60-80k miles) have traditionally been lifetime parts. I believe that is the case for the LR4 as well. I don't recall a replacement interval for the chain and I'd think it would have come up in one of the many discussion we have had here over the years.
Usually it's other things that make one have to dig into the engine, such as a head gasket, valve issues, etc. And that typically happens at over 150k miles. Cars aren't usually worth much at that point, so to decide not to trash it and pay for the expensive repairs is an indication you want it running much longer, at which point might as well go all-in and replace all sorts of stuff "while you are in there," including the chain.
Separately, I can get behind the theory that carbon buildup is messing with the tensioner. I imagine that more frequent oil changes can only help.
The amount of panic mongering out there about this(mostly by LR3 owner keyboard warriors on FB) is unbelievable.