Hello all,
I have a 2009 Honda Civic GX (a rare vehicle that runs on CNG out of the factory) that is in really pretty good condition with 140k on the odo. However, it currently needs repairs to the cylinder head. that will cost me $4,600 and then further repairs to diagnose some type of issue that spontaneously caused the vehicle not to fire on any of its cylinders. (Probably some sensor went bad)
In short, it will cost me at least around $5,000 to get this car running. There is one catch though, when the previous mechanic stripped 3 of the spark plugs into the cylinder head, he also left the car sitting outside with nothing covering the holes into the cylinders. The new mechanic said there was some rust in the cylinders that he tried to clean up. I want to spend the $5,000 to get this back on the road because it was a nice condition car that saved me a lot on gas as well as an inheritance from my grandfather. But I am concerned, if I spend the $5,000, will I come to find out it just burns oil like crazy as a result of the rust that was in the cylinders? If I decide to scrap the car, I'm still out another $1,000 for the diagnostics that the new mechanic did.
If you are curious about the previous context and story of this vehicle, here are my previous threads:
Thank you for your thoughts
I have a 2009 Honda Civic GX (a rare vehicle that runs on CNG out of the factory) that is in really pretty good condition with 140k on the odo. However, it currently needs repairs to the cylinder head. that will cost me $4,600 and then further repairs to diagnose some type of issue that spontaneously caused the vehicle not to fire on any of its cylinders. (Probably some sensor went bad)
In short, it will cost me at least around $5,000 to get this car running. There is one catch though, when the previous mechanic stripped 3 of the spark plugs into the cylinder head, he also left the car sitting outside with nothing covering the holes into the cylinders. The new mechanic said there was some rust in the cylinders that he tried to clean up. I want to spend the $5,000 to get this back on the road because it was a nice condition car that saved me a lot on gas as well as an inheritance from my grandfather. But I am concerned, if I spend the $5,000, will I come to find out it just burns oil like crazy as a result of the rust that was in the cylinders? If I decide to scrap the car, I'm still out another $1,000 for the diagnostics that the new mechanic did.
If you are curious about the previous context and story of this vehicle, here are my previous threads:
Hey all, about a year or so ago I had a crankshaft position sensor go out so I had it replaced, but they did it with a non-OEM part. a couple months later it wouldn't start again all of the sudden. I assumed it was because they used a cheap sensor instead of OEM and it went bad again, so I provided the OEM Honda part and had them replace it but before they could the car magically started working and starting again. Nonetheless, I had them change it out to the OEM part anyway
Fast forward to now, and it won't start again. I took it to a different mechanic this time and told them my story...
Fast forward to now, and it won't start again. I took it to a different mechanic this time and told them my story...
- dan7055
- Replies: 23
- Forum: Mechanical/Maintenance Forum
Hey all, I'm looking for some advice on an unfortunate situation with an automotive repair center
I have a 2009 Honda Civic GX, a rare vehicle that runs on CNG out of the factory, one of the few. It was a family heirloom passed down from my Grandpa and used to save me tons on fuel costs. The car is identical to a normal civic but with a higher compression and a different fuel system
One day I was driving it and everything was fine, I shut the car off and went back to start it again and it would crank easy but no firing at all. This had happened to me before and it was the crankshaft...
I have a 2009 Honda Civic GX, a rare vehicle that runs on CNG out of the factory, one of the few. It was a family heirloom passed down from my Grandpa and used to save me tons on fuel costs. The car is identical to a normal civic but with a higher compression and a different fuel system
One day I was driving it and everything was fine, I shut the car off and went back to start it again and it would crank easy but no firing at all. This had happened to me before and it was the crankshaft...
- dan7055
- Replies: 66
- Forum: Mechanical/Maintenance Forum
Thank you for your thoughts
Last edited: