JHZR2
Staff member
Not too long ago, I got mixed reviews on a repair from a local muffler shop, for my 2008 ML320:
The shop has always been friendly and helpful. Well, a year prior, I needed a flex pipe replacement on my 1991 350SD, because it had gotten a hole in it and was leaking. I didn’t test it much, and I also know that there’s a slight manifold leak, so I didn’t think to look closer.
Today after work, I set up my smoke machine to reverify leaks. I had used a shop vac and soapy water before. Smoke is so much better.
Smoke didn’t come out as readily at the manifold. It came out lots at a weld.
This one:
I put my hand on it and condensed clear baby oil was wet at the leak point. I could hear the leak.
So not so great a repair here.
What should I do to repair it? I am tempted to take it back, they probably would fix it, but I’m also hesitant to cut the OE system more or anything like that.
I doubt that chemical patches will work. I don’t weld but it seems like I should learn.
Might it be smart to lightly grind the entire weld, and then try to solder it or apply something else?
Or is a specific type of welding the only approach? Can they weld and seal it over top of the existing weld? Should I maybe try to paint over it before (to attempt to seal) or after (to attempt to protect)?
The car sees little rain and no salt.
My 2008 ML320 had a cracked flange clamp. It was a female-male flange.
I changed the clamp but it didn’t matter. The one side of the pipe was cracking at least 180 degrees around and so it needed a repair.
I took it to a local shop that I’ve been pretty happy with for other small jobs. They did this:
Three issues I see. One is that the OD of the repair piece the not stretched seems smaller than the OE pipe. It’s only a few inches, but I suspect the flange is also smaller. Is this enough to be concerned with?
The second is the use of the red sealant...
I changed the clamp but it didn’t matter. The one side of the pipe was cracking at least 180 degrees around and so it needed a repair.
I took it to a local shop that I’ve been pretty happy with for other small jobs. They did this:
Three issues I see. One is that the OD of the repair piece the not stretched seems smaller than the OE pipe. It’s only a few inches, but I suspect the flange is also smaller. Is this enough to be concerned with?
The second is the use of the red sealant...
- JHZR2
- Replies: 39
- Forum: Mechanical/Maintenance Forum
The shop has always been friendly and helpful. Well, a year prior, I needed a flex pipe replacement on my 1991 350SD, because it had gotten a hole in it and was leaking. I didn’t test it much, and I also know that there’s a slight manifold leak, so I didn’t think to look closer.
Today after work, I set up my smoke machine to reverify leaks. I had used a shop vac and soapy water before. Smoke is so much better.
Smoke didn’t come out as readily at the manifold. It came out lots at a weld.
This one:
I put my hand on it and condensed clear baby oil was wet at the leak point. I could hear the leak.
So not so great a repair here.
What should I do to repair it? I am tempted to take it back, they probably would fix it, but I’m also hesitant to cut the OE system more or anything like that.
I doubt that chemical patches will work. I don’t weld but it seems like I should learn.
Might it be smart to lightly grind the entire weld, and then try to solder it or apply something else?
Or is a specific type of welding the only approach? Can they weld and seal it over top of the existing weld? Should I maybe try to paint over it before (to attempt to seal) or after (to attempt to protect)?
The car sees little rain and no salt.