MountainRunner
Member
- Joined
- Aug 7, 2014
- Messages
- 88
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- 95
On of the things that attracted me to buying a Panda 1.3 multijet was its excellent economy and the fact it had a Timing Chain. Great me thinks 
Because timing chains last the life of an engine and in a diesel that could be over 200,000 miles! My old VW lupo by comparison needed a new timing belt at 70,000 miles or 5 years, even then the belt was in excellent condition at 14 year old.
So here's me thinking I got an excellent 2007 Panda, only done 40,000 miles no worries about changing timing belts and 50 mpg urban which I'm getting
£30 road tax and cheap insurance 
That was until I discovered an oil leak from the Timing chain cover
I suspected the Chain had recently been changed at less than 40,000 miles! Ok its been changed but its gonna have to be done again in 40,000 miles!
So I looked on the Internet and found on many sites that only 40,000 miles is about the life of a multijet timing chain
It's something to do with the tensioner.
Now I'd gone from a car with a perishable timing belt that lasted 70k to a car with a timing chain that only lasts 40k

These chains are expensive to replace around £1000 so what I save in fuel, cheap insurance and tax disc costs is a false economy
Why on earth did Fiat use timing chains in the multijet ? Why couldn't they use belts instead if they can't 'perfect'
chains? The Peugeot HDi has a belt that lasts 120,000 miles!
I have read of other issues too: clutches that need frequent replacement , air Filters that fill up with rain ruining the engine, car keys that fail, cylinder head issues etc.
Now my lovely lupo is gone
It looks like my economical Panda is forever gonna have me digging deep in my pockets for the latest maintenance bill, whilst I may as well have got a 5 litre rolls royce, after all the running costs couldn't be much more!
Multijet? Pure false economy!
Because timing chains last the life of an engine and in a diesel that could be over 200,000 miles! My old VW lupo by comparison needed a new timing belt at 70,000 miles or 5 years, even then the belt was in excellent condition at 14 year old.
So here's me thinking I got an excellent 2007 Panda, only done 40,000 miles no worries about changing timing belts and 50 mpg urban which I'm getting
That was until I discovered an oil leak from the Timing chain cover
I suspected the Chain had recently been changed at less than 40,000 miles! Ok its been changed but its gonna have to be done again in 40,000 miles!
So I looked on the Internet and found on many sites that only 40,000 miles is about the life of a multijet timing chain
It's something to do with the tensioner.
Now I'd gone from a car with a perishable timing belt that lasted 70k to a car with a timing chain that only lasts 40k
These chains are expensive to replace around £1000 so what I save in fuel, cheap insurance and tax disc costs is a false economy
Why on earth did Fiat use timing chains in the multijet ? Why couldn't they use belts instead if they can't 'perfect'
I have read of other issues too: clutches that need frequent replacement , air Filters that fill up with rain ruining the engine, car keys that fail, cylinder head issues etc.
Now my lovely lupo is gone
Multijet? Pure false economy!
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