I have given up trying to get compensation from BMW SA including approaching the Motor Industries Ombudsman (MOISA), but as the saying goes “he who pays the piper”. I wanted BMW SA to pay the below repair bill and extend the warranty on engine oil related faults to 60 000km.
I now feel obligated to warn other BMW consumers of the pitfalls of the Motorplan. which is not “free” but built into the sticker price but limits your choice to do proper maintenance.
I bought the car at the end of 2019 with 32 000km on the clock and until December 2021 remaining on the warranty/Motorplan. The car was inspected by BMW so the Motorplan could be transferred to my name. During that inspection and undisclosed to me until now, the valvetronic cam was replaced at a cost of R39000 to the Motorplan. Had I had known this, I would not have bought the car, I would have asked for the full-service record and would have seen the below oil change history.
The car has been fully serviced since then either under Motorplan and by BMW agents, in fact it has had 3 oil changes between 32 000km and now at 37 000km.
Now out of warranty/Motorplan and at only 37 000km, the car developed an oil leak from the turbo. BMW wanted to charge an estimated R77000 to fix this as they replace the entire turbo and exhaust manifold and do not sell sub-parts such as the Centre Housing Rotation Assembly (CHRA- the part that was worn out)
I took the car to a performance workshop, and they removed the CHRA and sent it to a turbo specialist who produced a report with photos showing that the leak and play in the turbo was due to carbon clogging from a too long service interval. This was repaired for R16635 including a new CHRA
I reviewed the service record in detail and to my horror found out that the first service was only done at 28 300km and I only then saw that the valvetronic cam was replaced during the change of ownership. Both these failures are well documented on BMW N55 engines on websites and Youtube and are due to carbon clogging small oil galleries and slinger grooves due to too long service intervals.
Ask any turbo specialist and they will tell you that doing any oil change at 28300km, let alone the first service, is not only negligent but borders on criminal. BMW defend this by saying the Condition Based Service (CBS) allows changes up to 30000km, as if CBS is God and must be obeyed! Any other manufacturer would void your warranty if you exceeded 15000km on a normal engine, never mind a turbo. Even BMW Service Managers, off the record, say BMW is exceeding acceptable limits but will not permit them to deviate.
This is due to BMW skimping on doing oil changes, as with Motorplan, this comes off BMW SA own bottom line and will only come back to bite the consumer with heavy repair bills after warranty, adding a second bite of the cherry for BMW profits.
A great business practice, if you can get away with it, that appears to be condoned by MIOSA, who say that although the damage may have been done in the first 18 months, now that the car is out of warranty their hands are tied.
So, my advice to anyone who buys a BMW and intends keeping it beyond 5 years- DON’T!!! Now I know why BMW values plummet when the Motorplan expires. This will get worse as people realise a Motorplan is optimised to get to 5 years at the lowest cost to BMW, then all bets are off.
I now feel obligated to warn other BMW consumers of the pitfalls of the Motorplan. which is not “free” but built into the sticker price but limits your choice to do proper maintenance.
I bought the car at the end of 2019 with 32 000km on the clock and until December 2021 remaining on the warranty/Motorplan. The car was inspected by BMW so the Motorplan could be transferred to my name. During that inspection and undisclosed to me until now, the valvetronic cam was replaced at a cost of R39000 to the Motorplan. Had I had known this, I would not have bought the car, I would have asked for the full-service record and would have seen the below oil change history.
The car has been fully serviced since then either under Motorplan and by BMW agents, in fact it has had 3 oil changes between 32 000km and now at 37 000km.
Now out of warranty/Motorplan and at only 37 000km, the car developed an oil leak from the turbo. BMW wanted to charge an estimated R77000 to fix this as they replace the entire turbo and exhaust manifold and do not sell sub-parts such as the Centre Housing Rotation Assembly (CHRA- the part that was worn out)
I took the car to a performance workshop, and they removed the CHRA and sent it to a turbo specialist who produced a report with photos showing that the leak and play in the turbo was due to carbon clogging from a too long service interval. This was repaired for R16635 including a new CHRA
I reviewed the service record in detail and to my horror found out that the first service was only done at 28 300km and I only then saw that the valvetronic cam was replaced during the change of ownership. Both these failures are well documented on BMW N55 engines on websites and Youtube and are due to carbon clogging small oil galleries and slinger grooves due to too long service intervals.
Ask any turbo specialist and they will tell you that doing any oil change at 28300km, let alone the first service, is not only negligent but borders on criminal. BMW defend this by saying the Condition Based Service (CBS) allows changes up to 30000km, as if CBS is God and must be obeyed! Any other manufacturer would void your warranty if you exceeded 15000km on a normal engine, never mind a turbo. Even BMW Service Managers, off the record, say BMW is exceeding acceptable limits but will not permit them to deviate.
This is due to BMW skimping on doing oil changes, as with Motorplan, this comes off BMW SA own bottom line and will only come back to bite the consumer with heavy repair bills after warranty, adding a second bite of the cherry for BMW profits.
A great business practice, if you can get away with it, that appears to be condoned by MIOSA, who say that although the damage may have been done in the first 18 months, now that the car is out of warranty their hands are tied.
So, my advice to anyone who buys a BMW and intends keeping it beyond 5 years- DON’T!!! Now I know why BMW values plummet when the Motorplan expires. This will get worse as people realise a Motorplan is optimised to get to 5 years at the lowest cost to BMW, then all bets are off.