His first 2 mins is about how everyone that commented wand watched help pad his wallet. All I could think of was Darth Vader saying "Good I can feel your anger" followed by cash register sounds.
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As somebody with a chequered and drawn out academic history I won’t criticize him for that. Cadogan has hit on a formula that gets him an audience, that formula relies on making grand and controversial statements, I am sure he gets some income from the videos and his sponsors but its basically a vehicle to drive traffic to his main business which is basically a car buying service. I’ll give him kudos for his business ability but I take any advice particularly on car brand recommendations from him with a large grain of salt. I don’t think I have ever owned a car brand he approves of and I kind of wear that like a badge of honour.Cado took 8 years to get his basic degree; either dumb, lazy or chasing one of his 5 ex wives whilst working at Maccas to pay for his petrol and chips.
Tell us what happened Cado; we're pretty canny here, and can smell a dodgy story![]()
Man Tazzie! I’m actually crying with laughter over that post! Well Done on making my dayCado took 8 years to get his basic degree; either dumb, lazy or chasing one of his 5 ex wives whilst working at Maccas to pay for his petrol and chips.
Tell us what happened Cado; we're pretty canny here, and can smell a dodgy story![]()
Neither would I mate, sorry I was making light of a serious situation, we need a chuckle now and then.Not saying it would be easy!
True, but at couple thousand rpm, you'd think the failure would be quite the loud mess, as soon as it happened. Is that what occurred?Perhaps damage was indeed done at the river crossing such as a slightly tweaked/cracked rod just enough so the engine basically ran normally for a while giving no indication until a few more miles of fatigue or additional load made the problem evident?
Air pulled from the top of the air box and enters at the bottom. If the drain is plugged, can envision water in the air box, not draining and then after they started moving faster, which they were, it got sloshed into the engine.I'm not reading 15 pages, and watching that guys vid's is painful, so, I'm choosing to subject you all to a completely uninformed comment...
That is... How can there be a delayed hydrolock? When I did it, it was "slurp, stall, winch, pull plugs, do the billagio fountain imitation, wd40 every fucking thin in sight, start and go. Pure luck, but that fj40 is on its 4th owner since me, and same engine I built 3 decades ago.
Whats the theory how something can hydrolock a day after it goes thru a river? Can the airbox hold a few pints without draining and then suck it in the next day? The insurance is paying out, so, something like that must have occurred. Any actual word?
I'm assuming that wasn't a full blown hydrolock that stopped the engine mid stream and they then towed the vehicle out and pulled the plugs to eject the water. Not all water ingestion damage shows instantly. A small amount of water can do huge amounts of damage while leaving the engine running for a while before it succumbs to the damage, this is what I wager happened. The possible damage includes:I'm not reading 15 pages, and watching that guys vid's is painful, so, I'm choosing to subject you all to a completely uninformed comment...
That is... How can there be a delayed hydrolock? When I did it, it was "slurp, stall, winch, pull plugs, do the billagio fountain imitation, wd40 every fucking thin in sight, start and go. Pure luck, but that fj40 is on its 4th owner since me, and same engine I built 3 decades ago.
Whats the theory how something can hydrolock a day after it goes thru a river? Can the airbox hold a few pints without draining and then suck it in the next day? The insurance is paying out, so, something like that must have occurred. Any actual word?
Agreed, coupled with drivers adrenalin/excitement of bumpy, splashy river crossing he might have missed the engine bogging for a microsecond but by then the damage is already done.I'm assuming that wasn't a full blown hydrolock that stopped the engine mid stream and they then towed the vehicle out and pulled the plugs to eject the water. Not all water ingestion damage shows instantly. A small amount of water can do huge amounts of damage while leaving the engine running for a while before it succumbs to the damage, this is what I wager happened. The possible damage includes:
1. Bent connecting rods
2. Cracked Piston and crushed ring lands allowing blow-by into the crankcase and over pressurizing the system which blows out oil seals.
3. Cylinder wall deformation or cracking which again allows for over pressurization of the crankcase
The result of any or all of the above is that the system blows a seal somewhere and dumps the oil. Then the driver keeps on going starving the engine of oil on critical components. This results in a completely destroyed block and rotating assembly.
If you wonder how I know this... I did it to a ski boat engine when I was 17 years old. A boat wake forced it's way through the transom exhaust and enough water got into the engine cause a slightly bent rod. It took the rest of the weekend for the engine eat itself alive. My dad wasn't happy but I lease it wasn't really operator error.
You might have more luck posting that here:On a slightly divergent tack, and without drawing a specific conclusion from the subject at hand. Has anyone tried or have any opinions on using something like an expanding foam or silcone to seal the spot where the RAI enters the wing panel? I know this doesn’t make it a proper sealed snorkel system, but if for example you combined it with a radiator blind as long as you kept momentum going in water crossings it might add a little extra insurance??
Assuming it was water through the engine the rod could of got a very minor bending from water ingestion and the rod can fail later, total luck of the draw. The other item every one is focusing on the air box and forgetting the charge aircooler/after cooler/intercooler. Depending on inlet and outlet position and the mounting position a CAC can hold a lot of water after the fact and possibly alow air over the water at slow engine speed an low boost. Most CAC do hold oil and condensation from crankcase ventilation but this is not an issue as it pulls through as a vapour and water in the intercooler in very small quantities will do the same. When checking for water in the inlet I look at three areas 1. Air box for previous pooling water near that can pass through to the clean side. 2. Remove the turbo inlet if accessable and check the compressor for very clean fins or bent tips. 3. Remove the inlet and or the outlet hoses for the intercooler and check for excessive water.I'm not reading 15 pages, and watching that guys vid's is painful, so, I'm choosing to subject you all to a completely uninformed comment...
That is... How can there be a delayed hydrolock? When I did it, it was "slurp, stall, winch, pull plugs, do the billagio fountain imitation, wd40 every fucking thin in sight, start and go. Pure luck, but that fj40 is on its 4th owner since me, and same engine I built 3 decades ago.
Whats the theory how something can hydrolock a day after it goes thru a river? Can the airbox hold a few pints without draining and then suck it in the next day? The insurance is paying out, so, something like that must have occurred. Any actual word?
Apparently it was a Filigree Siberian Hamster called Basil that did it.All this fixation on the river crossing
My own personal theory based on nothing other than the influence of my night time prescription meds, is a giant a rodent with a rubber fetish chewed a hole in a flexible oil line while they were camped after the river crossing, subsequent loss of oil resulted in lack of pressure and rapid onslaught of loud, expensive sounding knocking noises typical of a terminally knackered power plant.
Honest, the voices in the wind told me so.