fixed valve stem seals, bought a Mercedes project, realized it wasn't just the seals but the piston rings too. in that order. now I have no time to work on the Volvo while I try to get the Mercedes in shape.
on the other hand, the Volvo hasn't given me any trouble for six months! still burns oil, still blows out the dipstick, and will probably blow out another seal soon, but it pulls hard under boost and carries anything with a minimum dimension under 30".
The NEW (2018) BLOOPERS AND BLUNDERS THREAD
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PS78
- Posts: 186
- Joined: 6 February 2016
- Year and Model: 2000 S70
- Location: Northeast PA
- Has thanked: 2 times
- Been thanked: 3 times
Not long after purchasing my Volvo, I tried to familiarize myself as much as possible with the nuances and issues of the p80 cars. But I overlooked an item that is universal across all car lines. The infamous battery hold down. Small in stature but very important as we all know. I found myself lost one day when I was out on an adventure in the middle of nowhere with my phone offering me no help. Dirt Pennsylvania back road built like a washboard, and as subtle as a cinder block slamming into an old freezer. Anyway, the battery got trounced to the point that the b+ cable snapped off of the terminal and the car stopped dead. I knew it was something electrical when the car conked out, since all power was gone. As soon as I has the hood up I saw the pull and peel twizzler (b+ cable) laying there indignant with its metal end snapped. I had nothing with me in the way of tools, or even duct tape, and no reception to call anyone. I looked around the engine bay for something, anything to cinch or rig the cable up to get me back. I settled on a length of electrical tape from a wire loom, just enough to hold the ends and keep contact and it worked. The moral of the story is, if something is missing replace it as soon as possible, no matter how small or seemingly insignificant it might appear. And yes, I did get a hold down and replaced the 90° cable lug the next day. Ooops... 
Always first off the line, while all the cool people are still staring at their phones.
- wizechatmgr
- Posts: 1798
- Joined: 12 January 2017
- Year and Model: 1999 V70 XC AWD 2.4T
- Location: Albany, NY area
- Has thanked: 45 times
- Been thanked: 126 times
- Contact:
I hear you on this one. I had a seemingly random cut out of the engine & etc for a while. No codes, no telemetry to indicate any issues. Threw an ignition switch at it but the old one tested fine and the new one made little difference. Turns out the B+ wire was loose and I too didn't have a battery hold down clamp. Tightened the nut and finally purchased the $3 part. Installed and I've had no issues since. I guess occasionally the engineers get it rightPS78 wrote: ↑02 Dec 2017, 18:25 Not long after purchasing my Volvo, I tried to familiarize myself as much as possible with the nuances and issues of the p80 cars. But I overlooked an item that is universal across all car lines. The infamous battery hold down. Small in stature but very important as we all know. I found myself lost one day when I was out on an adventure in the middle of nowhere with my phone offering me no help. Dirt Pennsylvania back road built like a washboard, and as subtle as a cinder block slamming into an old freezer. Anyway, the battery got trounced to the point that the b+ cable snapped off of the terminal and the car stopped dead. I knew it was something electrical when the car conked out, since all power was gone. As soon as I has the hood up I saw the pull and peel twizzler (b+ cable) laying there indignant with its metal end snapped. I had nothing with me in the way of tools, or even duct tape, and no reception to call anyone. I looked around the engine bay for something, anything to cinch or rig the cable up to get me back. I settled on a length of electrical tape from a wire loom, just enough to hold the ends and keep contact and it worked. The moral of the story is, if something is missing replace it as soon as possible, no matter how small or seemingly insignificant it might appear. And yes, I did get a hold down and replaced the 90° cable lug the next day. Ooops...![]()
Wisdom requires knowledge as a prerequisite, but knowledge can be developed due to a lack of wisdom.
In order to learn how to fix something, you must first learn how to break it.
1999 V70 XC AWD 2.4 T -- ~231k miles
1998 V70 2.4 NA -- ~184k miles
In order to learn how to fix something, you must first learn how to break it.
1999 V70 XC AWD 2.4 T -- ~231k miles
1998 V70 2.4 NA -- ~184k miles
- bmdubya1198
- Posts: 6338
- Joined: 30 December 2014
- Year and Model: 2K V70R M56
- Location: Charlotte, NC
- Has thanked: 304 times
- Been thanked: 517 times
I made the mistake of leaving my battery connected while "adjusting" my alternator. Everything was going quite smoothly until the socket and extension grounded out the B+ terminal after I slipped off the bottom alternator bolt. It made some pretty lights and a nice little burn mark on my socket. And somehow I didn't damage anything electrically.
Remember kids, always disconnect your battery BEFORE working on electrical systems!
Remember kids, always disconnect your battery BEFORE working on electrical systems!
00 V70R Venetian Red/Charcoal M56 Swapped 214k
07 XC90 V8 AWD Sport Titanium Grey/Black 220k
92 245 White/Beige 249k
91 944 Turbo 175k
…and a bunch of other stuff
Sold-
03 S60 2.4T
00 S70 GLT
98 V70 GLT
93 944
98 S90
95 850 GLT
01 S60 2.4T
05 S60R M66
08 S40 2.4i
88 744 Turbo M46
07 XC90 V8 AWD Sport Titanium Grey/Black 220k
92 245 White/Beige 249k
91 944 Turbo 175k
…and a bunch of other stuff
Sold-
03 S60 2.4T
00 S70 GLT
98 V70 GLT
93 944
98 S90
95 850 GLT
01 S60 2.4T
05 S60R M66
08 S40 2.4i
88 744 Turbo M46
- June
- Posts: 2275
- Joined: 4 May 2016
- Year and Model: 2004 S80 T6,1991 740
- Location: Arkansas
- Has thanked: 523 times
- Been thanked: 261 times
Awww, you thought of me! Sweet, Juneabscate wrote: ↑01 Dec 2017, 10:39 Yes...get all that dirty laundry out of those dark closets and post those dark times you messed up your Volvo through idiocy, neglect, stupidity, or even just bad luck
Special note to June - letting your full synthetic oil change go for 3005 miles DOES NOT COUNT
All bloopers and blunders should be ended with the infamous..
DOH!!
My Volvo cars owned
1989 740 GLT ordered
1994 850 4door standard shift ordered
1996 960 ordered
1998 S90 ordered totalled after 3 weeks
1998 V70 GT dealer stock car
2002 S80 T6 ordered totalled
2004 S80 T6 dealer stock car and current car owned
1989 740 GLT ordered
1994 850 4door standard shift ordered
1996 960 ordered
1998 S90 ordered totalled after 3 weeks
1998 V70 GT dealer stock car
2002 S80 T6 ordered totalled
2004 S80 T6 dealer stock car and current car owned
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PS78
- Posts: 186
- Joined: 6 February 2016
- Year and Model: 2000 S70
- Location: Northeast PA
- Has thanked: 2 times
- Been thanked: 3 times
Glad I'm not the only one overlooking the simple stuff. Haha. I should've noticed it wasn't secure when I was in there replacing the crumbling evap lines. I carry tools in the trunk now so I'm better prepared for the mishaps that might come along.
Always first off the line, while all the cool people are still staring at their phones.
- FLXC90
- Posts: 1132
- Joined: 18 August 2014
- Year and Model: 98 V70 T5
- Location: Florida Panhandle
- Has thanked: 16 times
- Been thanked: 45 times
The list would be long and not distinguished. But the two that come to mind most readily, had the tire change/jack slip like cuhfs, but at home, so I found another jack, learned how simply the door sill cover comes off, and how easily the rocker bends-doh!
Driving to the bank last year, pulled too close to the parking curb, whoosh and a green cloud at the front of the car. Ghostbusters couldn't help. Upper mount for the A/C accumulator came loose, accumulator dropped on the hose, got crushed between front of subframe and curb. Doh! A year plus later, saw to the old accumulator to remove frozen line, still haven't gotten it all reassembled. (Have all parts and system is sealed, just haven't changed O-rings and recharged it. Starting to need it for defrost now, so yeah, whenever!
Driving to the bank last year, pulled too close to the parking curb, whoosh and a green cloud at the front of the car. Ghostbusters couldn't help. Upper mount for the A/C accumulator came loose, accumulator dropped on the hose, got crushed between front of subframe and curb. Doh! A year plus later, saw to the old accumulator to remove frozen line, still haven't gotten it all reassembled. (Have all parts and system is sealed, just haven't changed O-rings and recharged it. Starting to need it for defrost now, so yeah, whenever!
Current Volvos:
1998 V70 T5, 112k sat 5 years, still in mechanical coma (finally at the top of the pile )
2004 XC90 T6 AWD: 186k, 60 on transaxle ( traded in )
1998 POS70 N/A: DD/training aid, 236k but really about 240k, I think...ABS module( passed on to son who sold it)
1998 V70 T5, 112k sat 5 years, still in mechanical coma (finally at the top of the pile )
2004 XC90 T6 AWD: 186k, 60 on transaxle ( traded in )
1998 POS70 N/A: DD/training aid, 236k but really about 240k, I think...ABS module( passed on to son who sold it)
- wizechatmgr
- Posts: 1798
- Joined: 12 January 2017
- Year and Model: 1999 V70 XC AWD 2.4T
- Location: Albany, NY area
- Has thanked: 45 times
- Been thanked: 126 times
- Contact:
I had heard this rumor that you folks in the Orange state (next to the peach state) never used said function of cars =)FLXC90 wrote: ↑03 Dec 2017, 17:16 The list would be long and not distinguished. But the two that come to mind most readily, had the tire change/jack slip like cuhfs, but at home, so I found another jack, learned how simply the door sill cover comes off, and how easily the rocker bends-doh!
Driving to the bank last year, pulled too close to the parking curb, whoosh and a green cloud at the front of the car. Ghostbusters couldn't help. Upper mount for the A/C accumulator came loose, accumulator dropped on the hose, got crushed between front of subframe and curb. Doh! A year plus later, saw to the old accumulator to remove frozen line, still haven't gotten it all reassembled. (Have all parts and system is sealed, just haven't changed O-rings and recharged it. Starting to need it for defrost now, so yeah, whenever!
(At least you'd prefer not if the weather would stabilize just a tad more...)
Wisdom requires knowledge as a prerequisite, but knowledge can be developed due to a lack of wisdom.
In order to learn how to fix something, you must first learn how to break it.
1999 V70 XC AWD 2.4 T -- ~231k miles
1998 V70 2.4 NA -- ~184k miles
In order to learn how to fix something, you must first learn how to break it.
1999 V70 XC AWD 2.4 T -- ~231k miles
1998 V70 2.4 NA -- ~184k miles
-
brunocerous
- Posts: 486
- Joined: 27 October 2015
- Year and Model: 1998 V70
- Location: Maplewood, New Jersey
- Has thanked: 284 times
- Been thanked: 36 times
Where to begin?
My first car was a stick 1982 Toyota Corolla Tercel (some kind of hybrid model). Driving it in heavy Long Island Expressway traffic one summer, I popped the hood like the cabbies did to increase air flow and reduce the likelihood of overheating, or so I thought. Traffic eventually cleared when I noticed the hood was now rattling at highway speed. I slowed down and figured I'd shut it at the Midtown Tunnel toll booths. Once I get in a lane and queue up, I hop out and shut the hood ... only I forgotten to put the parking brake on and the car started to roll toward the fancy sports car in front of me. Hands on the front quarter panel didn't stop it, so I jammed my foot in front of the front driver-side tire, and the car rolled right over it.
Thankfully, I had left the window open, so I leaned in the window as it was about to roll past me and pulled up the parking brake before it rear-ended the car in front of me. My foot was fine. It was, after all, a Toyota.
DOH!!
PS: To address a coolant leak years later, I poured in "stop leak" pellets into the radiator, eventually clogging it and overheating the engine to its demise. RIP. And DOUBLE-DOH!!!
My first car was a stick 1982 Toyota Corolla Tercel (some kind of hybrid model). Driving it in heavy Long Island Expressway traffic one summer, I popped the hood like the cabbies did to increase air flow and reduce the likelihood of overheating, or so I thought. Traffic eventually cleared when I noticed the hood was now rattling at highway speed. I slowed down and figured I'd shut it at the Midtown Tunnel toll booths. Once I get in a lane and queue up, I hop out and shut the hood ... only I forgotten to put the parking brake on and the car started to roll toward the fancy sports car in front of me. Hands on the front quarter panel didn't stop it, so I jammed my foot in front of the front driver-side tire, and the car rolled right over it.
Thankfully, I had left the window open, so I leaned in the window as it was about to roll past me and pulled up the parking brake before it rear-ended the car in front of me. My foot was fine. It was, after all, a Toyota.
DOH!!
PS: To address a coolant leak years later, I poured in "stop leak" pellets into the radiator, eventually clogging it and overheating the engine to its demise. RIP. And DOUBLE-DOH!!!
2000 V70, base, MT, 'The Silver Bullet'
1998 V70, base, AT, 'Blue Steel'
1998 V70 T5, AT, project
2004 XC90 AWD (sold)
1999 V70 XC AWD, AT (RIP)
1998 S70 T5, AT (RIP)
1998 V70, base, AT, 'Blue Steel'
1998 V70 T5, AT, project
2004 XC90 AWD (sold)
1999 V70 XC AWD, AT (RIP)
1998 S70 T5, AT (RIP)
- bmdubya1198
- Posts: 6338
- Joined: 30 December 2014
- Year and Model: 2K V70R M56
- Location: Charlotte, NC
- Has thanked: 304 times
- Been thanked: 517 times
Yeah, after my cousin's Durango began knocking from never getting up to temperature (decided it would put a ring on the intake... a piston ring... in many pieces...), I made my final decision that stop leaks are no good!
Only place I'd use them is power steering or A/C. Only Lucas for power steering.
Only place I'd use them is power steering or A/C. Only Lucas for power steering.
00 V70R Venetian Red/Charcoal M56 Swapped 214k
07 XC90 V8 AWD Sport Titanium Grey/Black 220k
92 245 White/Beige 249k
91 944 Turbo 175k
…and a bunch of other stuff
Sold-
03 S60 2.4T
00 S70 GLT
98 V70 GLT
93 944
98 S90
95 850 GLT
01 S60 2.4T
05 S60R M66
08 S40 2.4i
88 744 Turbo M46
07 XC90 V8 AWD Sport Titanium Grey/Black 220k
92 245 White/Beige 249k
91 944 Turbo 175k
…and a bunch of other stuff
Sold-
03 S60 2.4T
00 S70 GLT
98 V70 GLT
93 944
98 S90
95 850 GLT
01 S60 2.4T
05 S60R M66
08 S40 2.4i
88 744 Turbo M46
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