@ri said:De@nO said:Glad you got your car back so soon @ri:clap:
Haha shot buddy. 30km down, 1970km to go!![]()
HELLAS NC said:They only gave you 2000km on the new diff?
Major said:So, cliffnotes:
1) You buy a 120i, a car that's marketed and designed to be an economical daily runner, not a performance-orientated vehicle.
2) You drive the balls off the car from the get go. I don't think you'll convince anyone here that you behaved for the first 2000km, seeing as your Potenza's are shredded at 2995km. And if you did behave for 2000km, how did you destroy Potenza's in 995km?
3) You admit to constantly lighting up the rear tires and breaking it loose, saying "Man there's almost not a time I drive where I don't kick out the back or hit some wheelspin... To me, the drive feels incomplete when I reach my destination if I haven't done so... Dunno just a mental thing..."
4) Your diff gives up on your driving habits at 2995km, and the first thing you blame is a defect at BMW.
@ri, I don't know you personally, so please take this with a grain of salt. I'm not looking to embarrass or antagonize you, but perhaps bring you down to earth. You can't expect a 120i to handle a thrashing like that, and refuse to accept responsibility when the diff clearly broke as a result of your driving habits. I haven't seen you drive, and will avoid doing so, but I wouldn't be surprised if your diff shredded itself as a result of a few handbrake pulls with the clutch out. That, and any non-LSD diff will suffer during burnouts or whatever it is you were doing. On a brand new car, the chances of your diff oil being low unless you smashed it with a rock or drove over something nasty is highly unlikely, and you would've noticed a nasty vibration and noise long before any of this happened.
And, no, the 135i doesn't have a mechanical LSD, and instead uses an electronically controlled brake within the diff instead of clutch plates. It's lame, and doesn't do the job nearly as well as a mechanical LSD. It's called E-LSD, and it's the same one that's in your car, just a lower ratio. Basically, as I understand it, what it does is it applies the brakes (that are inside the diff) to the wheel that's spinning faster than the opposite wheel in a slip. You've probably noticed a slight to moderate shudder when you break the wheels loose. So this isn't actually an LSD, it doesn't distribute power to each wheel equally, it simply removes energy from the 'excitable' wheel by means of an electronically-controlled brake. I'm sure that this constant braking happening within the diff during full-throttle burnouts/slides would more than account for your diff ripping itself apart.
Again, I'm not looking to cause an argument, but you really have yourself to blame here. Drive it normally for 2000km, and only then should you even consider messing around. Break-in periods are for everyone including you, and for a very good reason. Otherwise this diff will also last 2995km. As I've pointed out, if you want to do burnouts/slides on a regular basis, get a proper mechanical LSD. Unfortunately for you, BMW don't make mechanical LSD's for any 1-series. You'll only find them in the M cars, and I'm not sure which one would fit if at all in your car.
Major said:The thing is, Nicholas, although they might both use the same diff technology (don't hold me to it), this one in particular was abused. We don't know exactly (and probably won't get the truth) as to whether or not the first 2000km were driven normally, and without breaking the tires loose. I'm sure the 135i's diff would survive just as long as a 120i's diff if they are both run-in properly and not abused daily. To me this is a simple case of a young guy getting a BMW and driving it like a supercar. It's just not going to last.
I'd like to know if BMW get back to you on what caused the seize, and post it here. Whether something got dislodged or it simply broke a whole bunch of teeth off the gears and it ground to a halt. You're right, a 125kW engine isn't likely to shred a diff, but I don't think a diff made for a 120i was intended to be abused quite like this. A couple of handbrake pulls or bad clutch/braking decisions while messing around would destroy any diff.
And everyone, I'm not being high and mighty. I'll happily admit here that I managed to stuff up the LSD on my E30 323i, which has less power than your 120i, because I would draw my name in the tarmac and do drifts around the Monte Casino circles. Although the previous owner had the LSD serviced before I bought the car, no doubt due to some of his own abuse.
It seems as if the only person i'm not "convincing" here is you? Besides, why do I need to prove it to anyone? The truth of the matter is: yes I did run-in the car on quite a strict basis. Did not drift etc. before I reached 2000k on the dot. Believe me, don't believe me, I really couldn't care less. I don't recall saying that my tires were "destroyed".. Sure I said "evident wear"Major said:I don't think you'll convince anyone here that you behaved for the first 2000km, seeing as your Potenza's are shredded at 2995km. And if you did behave for 2000km, how did you destroy Potenza's in 995km?
Ok so maybe I made use of a little thing called exaggeration in that post.. Besides, I wouldn't necessarily call it "lighting up the rear tires"Major said:3) You admit to constantly lighting up the rear tires and breaking it loose, saying "Man there's almost not a time I drive where I don't kick out the back or hit some wheelspin... To me, the drive feels incomplete when I reach my destination if I haven't done so... Dunno just a mental thing..."
Yep. And I still blame a defect differential. Or maybe it's like I said. They don't make em like they used toMajor said:4) Your diff gives up on your driving habits at 2995km, and the first thing you blame is a defect at BMW.
One thing I notice in your post is you like to assume things. I wouldn't call it a thrashing, and my mates who know me personally here (De@nO, 1two5guy and Eternal) would agree.Major said:@ri, I don't know you personally, so please take this with a grain of salt. I'm not looking to embarrass or antagonize you, but perhaps bring you down to earth. You can't expect a 120i to handle a thrashing like that, and refuse to accept responsibility when the diff clearly broke as a result of your driving habits.
As a matter of fact I have never pulled the handbrake during a turn or anything of the sort.Major said:I haven't seen you drive, and will avoid doing so, but I wouldn't be surprised if your diff shredded itself as a result of a few handbrake pulls with the clutch out.
As a matter of fact I did come off the road at one point, so this may very well have happened. And I have never done a burnout in the car.Major said:That, and any non-LSD diff will suffer during burnouts or whatever it is you were doing. On a brand new car, the chances of your diff oil being low unless you smashed it with a rock or drove over something nasty is highly unlikely, and you would've noticed a nasty vibration and noise long before any of this happened.
Major said:And, no, the 135i doesn't have a mechanical LSD, and instead uses an electronically controlled brake within the diff instead of clutch plates. It's lame, and doesn't do the job nearly as well as a mechanical LSD. It's called E-LSD, and it's the same one that's in your car, just a lower ratio. Basically, as I understand it, what it does is it applies the brakes (that are inside the diff) to the wheel that's spinning faster than the opposite wheel in a slip. You've probably noticed a slight to moderate shudder when you break the wheels loose. So this isn't actually an LSD, it doesn't distribute power to each wheel equally, it simply removes energy from the 'excitable' wheel by means of an electronically-controlled brake. I'm sure that this constant braking happening within the diff during full-throttle burnouts/slides would more than account for your diff ripping itself apart.
Major said:Again, I'm not looking to cause an argument, but you really have yourself to blame here. Drive it normally for 2000km, and only then should you even consider messing around. Break-in periods are for everyone including you, and for a very good reason.
De@nO said:The only wheelspins he pulls are small chirps.
@ri said:Oh and I really do not wish create a bitter atmosphere around here.. Hope my post doesn't come across that way.
Major said:@ri said:Oh and I really do not wish create a bitter atmosphere around here.. Hope my post doesn't come across that way.
:spit:
Perhaps you should've thought of that before saying "glad someone sees some sense around here", but whatever, I'm not easily offended. :thumbsup:
@ri, understand, I'm basing my assumptions on what I see here.
- Your diff is stuffed after only 2995km.
- Your tires are already showing visible signs of wear, and most Potenza's are rated for upwards of 20'000km, some of them past 30'000km.
- You stated (although exaggerated) that you like to break the tires loose once in a while.
I'm just going with what I know. As you've done here, you've proven me horribly wrong, so it must obviously be a faulty diff, in which case I eagerly await news from BMW. No harm, no foul. A broken diff after so short a time says a lot if it isn't a manufacturing fault, that's all.
And hey! I'm friends with De@nO too, he brought me here. I didn't click that you're the Ari from all the Facebook videos and pictures.
I'm not making enemies here, it just seemed from what I'd seen in your posts that you tend to abuse your car, and when it broke you pointed fingers. If what you say is true, and you don't treat your car like a whore, then I apologise. You see where I'm coming from though, don't you.
HELLAS NC said:opcorn: Yeah, you just came in time to see the end credits being played...