ChasingOurTrunks
Well-known member
Hi folks,
I just spent my long weekend on my back under my 2013 JK removing the transmission for the 3rd time. The first time was because the Throwout bearing went bad at 20,000 kms. The second time was at around 90,000 kms when the factory clutch finally went. At 120,000 kms, the slave cylinder gave up the ghost, and then most recently at 180,000 kms, our JK had an issue with the pilot bearing (which was my weekend project). In short, the service life of the transmission components has left me wanting.
This experience has given us a good lesson on how to ensure reliability, and for us, we've decided that we'll be doing a transmission pull every 75,000 kms and replacing everything in that system -- pilot bearing, clutch, throwout bearing, master and slave cylinders, etc. -- just for peace of mind, even if there are no symptoms of failure. It'll cost us $1000 every two years or so, but that's worth it. In our context, our day to day driving is only 20-30 kms, but on our trips at a minimum we are doing 100-200 times that distance, sometimes more (one trip was 15,000 kms in a month). If one of these parts breaks on a trip, we're in trouble, because even if we had the spare parts, it's a beast of a job to pull & reinstall a trans at home in the comfort of my garage; I can't imagine doing it on the side of a muddy track in Columbia. And at least in Columbia I could probably afford to get a local to help -- here in NA, the dealer quoted us north of $2k just to diagnose the problem when the Throwout Bearing first failed.
So, onto my question to this group: Obviously the service schedule doesn't call for a clutch replacement every 75,000 kms and most stuff is "replace when symptomatic of a problem". However, for an Overlander, it is probably worth replacing some things before there is a problem, in anticipation of ensuring the problem doesn't happen on a trip. What other "Routine Maintenance for Overlanders" do you folks recommend for the Jeep (or any other) platform? In other words, What should be replaced every X thousand kms, whether it needs it or not, for peace of mind in your books?
I know there isn't a "right" answer but I am very curious to see people's opinions and perspectives.
[Edited to clarify the question I was asking]
I just spent my long weekend on my back under my 2013 JK removing the transmission for the 3rd time. The first time was because the Throwout bearing went bad at 20,000 kms. The second time was at around 90,000 kms when the factory clutch finally went. At 120,000 kms, the slave cylinder gave up the ghost, and then most recently at 180,000 kms, our JK had an issue with the pilot bearing (which was my weekend project). In short, the service life of the transmission components has left me wanting.
This experience has given us a good lesson on how to ensure reliability, and for us, we've decided that we'll be doing a transmission pull every 75,000 kms and replacing everything in that system -- pilot bearing, clutch, throwout bearing, master and slave cylinders, etc. -- just for peace of mind, even if there are no symptoms of failure. It'll cost us $1000 every two years or so, but that's worth it. In our context, our day to day driving is only 20-30 kms, but on our trips at a minimum we are doing 100-200 times that distance, sometimes more (one trip was 15,000 kms in a month). If one of these parts breaks on a trip, we're in trouble, because even if we had the spare parts, it's a beast of a job to pull & reinstall a trans at home in the comfort of my garage; I can't imagine doing it on the side of a muddy track in Columbia. And at least in Columbia I could probably afford to get a local to help -- here in NA, the dealer quoted us north of $2k just to diagnose the problem when the Throwout Bearing first failed.
So, onto my question to this group: Obviously the service schedule doesn't call for a clutch replacement every 75,000 kms and most stuff is "replace when symptomatic of a problem". However, for an Overlander, it is probably worth replacing some things before there is a problem, in anticipation of ensuring the problem doesn't happen on a trip. What other "Routine Maintenance for Overlanders" do you folks recommend for the Jeep (or any other) platform? In other words, What should be replaced every X thousand kms, whether it needs it or not, for peace of mind in your books?
I know there isn't a "right" answer but I am very curious to see people's opinions and perspectives.
[Edited to clarify the question I was asking]
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