Buckle up, friends! I've got a wild car story that'll make you think twice before buying a used vehicle. Here's what happened:
A few months back, I bought what I thought was a reliable Toyota Corolla 141 (2008). I did some checks before buying, and everything seemed fine. Boy, was I wrong!
Day one disaster: I'm driving from Negombo to Wijerama, feeling good about my new ride. Suddenly, near Kelani bridge, the car starts overheating. Not a great start!
First round of repairs: At the garage, they find a leaky radiator and two bad ignition coils. I replace those, plus the tappet cover for good measure. I thought my troubles were over. Soon, I notice the coolant level keeps dropping. I took it to Toy#ta L#nka , and they told me not to worry. But my gut says something's off. I took it to another garage, and that mechanic suggests replacing the radiator cap. The old one was 108 kPa, but TL said I need an 88 kPa one. I made the switch, but surprise! The problem sticks around like a bad smell.
Things get weird when the previous owner calls, insisting the car is "100% good, bro." Now, I don't know about you, but in my book, if someone has to tell you something's 100% multiple times, it's probably about 0%. This got my detective senses tingling. I check the engine number and – bam! – turns out someone swapped the original 1.6L engine for a 1.8L (1ZZ).
Last month, on Poson Poya day, I take the family to Dambulla. The car overheats again.
I brought in my uncle for a consultation. His diagnosis? A blown head gasket, complete with the telltale white, creamy goop oozing from the radiator neck. As if that wasn't enough, we discovered some past bass had decided the thermostat valve was more of a suggestion than a necessity and removed it entirely.
Now the car's in the garage, needing a new head gasket and valve. But here's the kicker – TL won't sell me the parts because of the engine swap. They only work with the original chassis numbers. I'm stuck!
The car's collecting dust in the garage. I don't want to sell it – I had big plans for this vehicle. But I'm in a fix. I need to find trustworthy Toyota parts that'll fit this swapped engine, and I have no clue where to start. I've learned more about cars in the last few months than I ever wanted to know. If anyone's got advice on finding reliable parts or dealing with swapped engines, I'm all ears. Help a confused car owner out!
Remember, folks: when buying a used car, check, double-check, and maybe get a mechanic to triple-check. You might just save yourself from starring in your own car repair soap opera!
Officially joined the thel-hinganna normie horde with ....drumroll... a 2025 Vezel... I am eagerly anticipating joining the 'thel keeyak karanawada' debates at almsgivings.
Recently, got the opportunity to see and get inside of The one and only Japanese V12, Toyota Century(a.k.a Japanese Rolls Royce). Is it really upto Rolls Royce standards? Nope, I don't think so. Items like Switches and mirror housings are in plastic. But, we can be assured that the dashboard will not light up like Christmas and would run forever....
...and just like that from having parking space issues a few month's back I'm car-less.
The cost of renting something for a month or two (even more - personal imports have been quite messy of late) made me wonder if it actually makes sense to buy a quickly disposable car and get rid of it in a couple of months - but it seems the 'popular' models aren't moving. A few messages to sellers (registered owners) on marketplace resulted in them sending me daily price reduction updates.
Sleepless nights have begun. I'm twisting between SL320 and SL500. Should I just pay additional 2000 euros more and go for the SL500 and go broke or settle with a SL320?
Question
nobody
Buckle up, friends! I've got a wild car story that'll make you think twice before buying a used vehicle. Here's what happened:
A few months back, I bought what I thought was a reliable Toyota Corolla 141 (2008). I did some checks before buying, and everything seemed fine. Boy, was I wrong!
Day one disaster: I'm driving from Negombo to Wijerama, feeling good about my new ride. Suddenly, near Kelani bridge, the car starts overheating. Not a great start!
First round of repairs: At the garage, they find a leaky radiator and two bad ignition coils. I replace those, plus the tappet cover for good measure. I thought my troubles were over. Soon, I notice the coolant level keeps dropping. I took it to Toy#ta L#nka , and they told me not to worry. But my gut says something's off. I took it to another garage, and that mechanic suggests replacing the radiator cap. The old one was 108 kPa, but TL said I need an 88 kPa one. I made the switch, but surprise! The problem sticks around like a bad smell.
Things get weird when the previous owner calls, insisting the car is "100% good, bro." Now, I don't know about you, but in my book, if someone has to tell you something's 100% multiple times, it's probably about 0%. This got my detective senses tingling. I check the engine number and – bam! – turns out someone swapped the original 1.6L engine for a 1.8L (1ZZ).
Last month, on Poson Poya day, I take the family to Dambulla. The car overheats again.
I brought in my uncle for a consultation. His diagnosis? A blown head gasket, complete with the telltale white, creamy goop oozing from the radiator neck. As if that wasn't enough, we discovered some past bass had decided the thermostat valve was more of a suggestion than a necessity and removed it entirely.
Now the car's in the garage, needing a new head gasket and valve. But here's the kicker – TL won't sell me the parts because of the engine swap. They only work with the original chassis numbers. I'm stuck!
The car's collecting dust in the garage. I don't want to sell it – I had big plans for this vehicle. But I'm in a fix. I need to find trustworthy Toyota parts that'll fit this swapped engine, and I have no clue where to start. I've learned more about cars in the last few months than I ever wanted to know. If anyone's got advice on finding reliable parts or dealing with swapped engines, I'm all ears. Help a confused car owner out!
Remember, folks: when buying a used car, check, double-check, and maybe get a mechanic to triple-check. You might just save yourself from starring in your own car repair soap opera!
Edited by nobody4 answers to this question
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