Vanagon EuroVan
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Date:         Sun, 25 Feb 2007 23:51:47 -0500
Reply-To:     Karl Mullendore <groups@WESTYVENTURES.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Karl Mullendore <groups@WESTYVENTURES.COM>
Subject:      Catastrophic failure, a week-long saga, not-so-happy ending
Comments: To: Syncro <Syncro@yahoogroups.com>,
          TDI-conversion@yahoogroups.com, Diesel-Vanagon@yahoogroups.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

As a few folks have asked for an explanation of what happened to me/my van, here goes: First, I'm ok, it's only the van that is hurting. Well, truthfully, I've gone through a lot this week because of this...

I've been trying all winter to get away on a roadtrip, and finally got far enough ahead with work and such that I decided to attend a camping event in Florida. (Full Moon Bus Club) The van seemed ready, even though, as always, there were numerous 'small jobs' still undone. But everything seemed in good order mechanically. I hadn't driven the old van in a long time on any significant journey, and Sunday, without my GF along in the passenger seat I for once floored the throttle on every occasion I felt like. :-) It was then that I noticed the scraping noise in the transmission, under hard throttle in first and second. No worries, not too bad, and the camp organizer said he had a parts Syncro at his place if needed a tranny by the time I drove the 1000 miles south. A call to Daryl at AA confirmed what I suspected, that a mainshaft bearing was likely on it's way out. The sound never really got worse, but Monday morning as I left a friend's home near Harrisonburg VA, I noticed an increasing vibration in the drivetrain. Nah, couldn't be, I thought...so after a cup of coffee and some breakfast, onward down I-81 I drove. About 20 miles later, the vibration became even more robust. Now, I thought, what would a normal person do in this situation (besides have a mechanic check it, but I was already there!)? I turned tail and drove two plus hours back to my shop. Good decision. That evening I pulled the tranny and disassembled it, finding the exact bearing we had discussed to be MIA, as in the shaft was basically floating in the gear carrier case. But the low-reverse gear housing had to be pried and beaten to remove it, when normally it just slides off...well, the dual-row bearing in low (or reverse, I forget which) was totally ground up and had dug a nasty trench in the pinion shaft. OK, I thought, this isn't going to be a quick-n-easy fix. The next morning, a good friend of mine allowed me to borrow a good used Syncro tranny that he had been holding onto for one of his many projects. Keep in mind here that my 'old' tranny had undergone a gear change years ago and third/fourth gears were much higher than stock, in ratio. No worries, with the borrowed 'stock' tranny I would just drive more slowly. I managed to get back on the road Tuesday evening, tranny smooth and quiet. Somehow I caught up with my planned itinerary and made the vet appt. I had for my dog in Asheville NC at noon on Wednesday. A friend, who wanted to visit his mom in Tampa, rode along as we departed Asheville Thursday am for an evening arrival in Tampa....or so we thought. At a fuel stop in Greenville SC, I checked the oil, fine. I could swear the engine sounded a little different, maybe just paranoia after the tranny issues, I thought. About 30 miles later, driving down I-85 toward Atlanta, we looked at one another and both had the same words: the engine sounds a little different, doesn't it? A scan of the six gauges showed oil pressure to be lower than I had ever noticed at 3000 rpm. I noticed a gentle throb in the clutch pedal, which when depressed became a sickening BIG throb, and immediately the oil pressure dropped, followed by several loud bangs, and silence. The starter just clicked....

I couldn't believe a perfectly-running engine would degrade so quickly, but when I looked under the van and saw the crankshaft pulley askew, I knew it wasn't going to be a happy ending. I released all the belt tensioners and then pried the pulley...nope, still attached to the crankshaft, but why the angle? Then I pried the flywheel, it only moved a quarter-inch at best. Oh, and the pulley? It didn't move with the flywheel. My educated guess is that a rod broke (after losing it's bearing), crashed into a fast-moving crankshaft, and snapped the sucker in half.

The van is now resting at the friend's house near Asheville, empty, waiting to be retrieved. It's very sad to say, but after these major failures and once again seeing how deeply the east-coast rust has invaded the 20-year old body, I'm inclined to throw in the towel for saving this van and start anew with a different body. When I pulled the tranny, I looked up to realize the only thing holding the fuel tank up was the rust and debris, plus a short section on the ends of the now-mostly-gone tank straps. Not so bad, except the place on the body where they bolt on would collapse from rust if I tried to move the bolts.

This is a very sad thing, after spending ten years and almost 400,000 km in the driver's seat of this wonderful old beast. I'd like to keep it on the road, but I think it really is best to move on with a different body now, and besides, won't it make a lovely guest cottage for visiting friends?

Karl Mullendore 1987 Westy Syncro m-TDI (RIP?) 1990 Syncro 16" TD highroof 1995 *ahem* Euro-bago, coming...(I needed a get-in-and-go camper for the winter trip and until I get the 16" project done!)


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