Originally Posted By: Carzzz
Originally Posted By: cool_breeze
great....
can you point me in the direction of the rod problem
A rod gets loose and destroys the engine block. It is not uncommon for the 5S engine, and i know it happens to quite a few people.
I had a 98 camry I4, and it threw a rod before it hits 100,000 miles(under 160,000km) mark . That thing is seriously underpower. You cannot feel anything below 3500rpm
Is it oil problem or toyota problem?
That's one of the reasons I joined BITOG.
That sounds like an oil problem. Either the car having too many close calls with almost no oil in the pan, or actually hitting the point where its dry.
Same thing happened to my last car (a Protege). No fault of the car or its design. I punctured the oil pan, and the service station that replaced it used the wrong gaskets. They "fixed it" by replacing one, but left the top gasket on while assuring me the problem was corrected. A few days later, while doing 65 mph on the TCH, the engine threw a rod and blew a second after the oil light came on. Pan was bone dry.
Edit: too many people go way too long between checking their oil levels imho. The "check every fill up" thing isn't just a make work project thought up by the auto maker. Its sound common sense that is in short supply these days. I check mine more frequently, but that's partly because I'm still paying off the Protege so I have good reason to be a little OCD about oil.
-Spyder
Originally Posted By: cool_breeze
great....
can you point me in the direction of the rod problem
A rod gets loose and destroys the engine block. It is not uncommon for the 5S engine, and i know it happens to quite a few people.
I had a 98 camry I4, and it threw a rod before it hits 100,000 miles(under 160,000km) mark . That thing is seriously underpower. You cannot feel anything below 3500rpm
Is it oil problem or toyota problem?
That's one of the reasons I joined BITOG.
That sounds like an oil problem. Either the car having too many close calls with almost no oil in the pan, or actually hitting the point where its dry.
Same thing happened to my last car (a Protege). No fault of the car or its design. I punctured the oil pan, and the service station that replaced it used the wrong gaskets. They "fixed it" by replacing one, but left the top gasket on while assuring me the problem was corrected. A few days later, while doing 65 mph on the TCH, the engine threw a rod and blew a second after the oil light came on. Pan was bone dry.
Edit: too many people go way too long between checking their oil levels imho. The "check every fill up" thing isn't just a make work project thought up by the auto maker. Its sound common sense that is in short supply these days. I check mine more frequently, but that's partly because I'm still paying off the Protege so I have good reason to be a little OCD about oil.
-Spyder
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