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Oldsmobile Aurora Maintenance & Repair

4283 messages, Last post on Nov 25, 2009 at 10:33 AM
You are in the Oldsmobile Aurora Forum. Your Hosts are pat & karens
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Replying to: aurand210 (Jan 16, 2009 7:22 am) |
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Replying to: mastecutor (Jan 16, 2009 7:30 am)
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Replying to: pscheid (Jan 16, 2009 1:02 pm) That being said, 10 years is pretty incredible! However, I think your pushing it by letting your battery levels go so low . Warning this is a GM, very very sensitive to electrical bugs/problems. Your quite a risk taker. Me... I dont like to ride the fence, too hard on the back side. |
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Replying to: mastecutor (Jan 16, 2009 7:27 am)
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Replying to: d_stenulson (Jan 18, 2009 11:42 pm) Enjoy the ride. |
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Replying to: d_stenulson (Jan 14, 2009 8:43 pm) You and I have a similar scenario.... I got mine from a family member for $1000, and when I got it there was an exisisting problem with overheating. Thought it would be a simple fix (thermostat, water pump) but there was more to it then that. I've had the car for almost 2 years now and have put more into it then what I paid, one repair alone cost me $1697.00 and once again she is sitting in my driveway and I am asking my fellow Aurorians here on the forum questions... look at posts #4063 thru 4071 (those are all me, and one shows a breakdown in repairs). What I'm actually trying to say to you is have the car FULLY inspected by someone that knows Aurora's. You have a power steering issue right now, but there could be something else leading to the problem since it has been repaired once. You are young, and there are a lot of other things you can do with your money (school, etc) besides put it into a car that you may soon decide you no longer want. Again, it is an awesome car, but the maintenance is $$$$ if you can understand what I mean. Not trying to discourage you, I mean I have so many times wanted to throw the towel in on mine but here she still sits... For this car you have to keep a piggy bank. lol Good luck to you, and Happier Aurora days to you! Monique
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Replying to: ndeysayau95 (Jan 19, 2009 10:56 am)
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Replying to: d_stenulson (Jan 20, 2009 3:31 pm) I wish you nothing but the best! Enjoy the thrill of an Aurora! |
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Replying to: ndeysayau95 (Jan 13, 2009 10:22 am) Your codes are from too many different areas to be tranny alone. Did all those codes show up since the tranny problem? I would be suspicious of wire damage if they pulled the tranny last time. To get the end pan off, they had to at least shift the transmission sideways and may have damaged something. You need to get some good charts such as All Data would have for the car. The fee is quite reasonable. With that assortment of codes I have to wonder if there is wire damage. And those charts will allow you to check for any shorts that might have caused the ECM to fail. You have a code related to the cruise control circuit and the release of cruise when you push the brake. The throttle position sensor is right on the throttle body and hooked to the end of the butterfly shaft. I'm not sure what they might be calling throttle switch off the top of my head. Maybe the idle air controller. One thing I notice is that the signals for these codes, except the ECM, go through a common connector that is located near the rear of the engine, top of the transmission housing. Careful, old plastic may be brittle. But you have those two ECM codes saying that the computer is bad. All Data charts will tell you which are the most important codes. That is if you look up one code, it will tell you that certain other codes can not be set, meaning they have a higher priority.
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Replying to: d_stenulson (Jan 20, 2009 3:31 pm) The Rack and Pinion is located against the firewall horizontally. If something to the output end of the rack broke, you'd have movement on one of the tires. So it would have to be internal or the shaft from the steering wheel. I think I read that the subframe needs to be lowered to change the rack. That would make it labor intensive. But those labor books are very generous with time usually. Considering that shop refused to do it a second time makes me suspicious that the problem is related to something they did. Because of the danger evoked that such a failure would occur the part has to pass a high safety standard and I've never heard of such a failure to a rack. Maybe they used some cheaper than dirt part. If you can find the manufacturer of the part you can probably talk them out of a free one considering the age. Labor is a separate issue and listed in a manual such as Chiltons Labor book. Back to the input. I'd check to make sure the steering shaft is turning with the steering wheel and is connected at the rack. The connection is accessible fron inside and covered with a rubber boot assembly. You might have to roll the carpet back a little and there are several small bolts holding it in place. The shaft connection is splined and there will be a single bolt, sideways, pinching the coupling tight to the racks input shaft. If something is broken between the steering wheel and that point, you have a different breed of problem, nothing to do with the rack.
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