Gory photos of the sort of thing you *don't* want to see when your engine is stripped after a sudden stoppage:
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10151753584927783.1073741826.789867782&type=1&l=a91bdffd30
It's likely that the valve spring broke, the collets let the valve drop and the subsequent carnage ensued. There is swarf in the intake plenums, which means it's likely also in the crankcase and then in the rest of the engine. Steve Bull's have said it would be approximately £5k to rebuild the engine and that's just uneconomical for me at the moment.
So, I'm after advice. As I see it I have a bunch of options, some of which make sense and some of which don't. I'm listing all the ones I've thought of and would appreciate comments and steers. I'm trying to be practical and subjective, rather than emotional.
1. Buy a new engine from Porsche. At £10-12k (ish) this is plainly silly for a car which cost me just under £8k to buy.
2. Buy a reconditioned engine which has a warranty. £4k plus VAT plus fitting plus WYAIT things like metal-bladed water pump, low temp thermostat, upgraded IMS (if not fitted), new clutch and DMF if warranted. Possible, but the bill's already going upwards and the numbers won't match.
3. Buy an engine out of a Boxster which has had a front-end crash, int he region of £2.5k. Assuming I can find a decent one, from a vehicle where the DME records little or no range1/range2 ignitions, there's still a risk as the general state of the engine will be unknown. Add in the cost of fitting and a warranty and you're up to about £4k or so (£1k for a warranty, £500 to fit...) plus the clutch stuff.
4. Get the engine rebuilt. If the swarf hasn't damaged anything else it's still a starting point of a £5k bill for a new cylinder head, replacement liner and the labour involved, plus the "WYAIT" stuff as (2). At least the numbers will match, and I know the 4-6 cylinder head and camshafts should be ok
5. Part the car and engine out - the accessories are in generally good nick, the bodywork's ok, the electrics are good. How much could I realistically expect to achieve this way?
Despite all this, I'm determined to get back into a Porker as soon as I can - the driving experience is sublime, and I miss it.
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10151753584927783.1073741826.789867782&type=1&l=a91bdffd30
It's likely that the valve spring broke, the collets let the valve drop and the subsequent carnage ensued. There is swarf in the intake plenums, which means it's likely also in the crankcase and then in the rest of the engine. Steve Bull's have said it would be approximately £5k to rebuild the engine and that's just uneconomical for me at the moment.
So, I'm after advice. As I see it I have a bunch of options, some of which make sense and some of which don't. I'm listing all the ones I've thought of and would appreciate comments and steers. I'm trying to be practical and subjective, rather than emotional.
1. Buy a new engine from Porsche. At £10-12k (ish) this is plainly silly for a car which cost me just under £8k to buy.
2. Buy a reconditioned engine which has a warranty. £4k plus VAT plus fitting plus WYAIT things like metal-bladed water pump, low temp thermostat, upgraded IMS (if not fitted), new clutch and DMF if warranted. Possible, but the bill's already going upwards and the numbers won't match.
3. Buy an engine out of a Boxster which has had a front-end crash, int he region of £2.5k. Assuming I can find a decent one, from a vehicle where the DME records little or no range1/range2 ignitions, there's still a risk as the general state of the engine will be unknown. Add in the cost of fitting and a warranty and you're up to about £4k or so (£1k for a warranty, £500 to fit...) plus the clutch stuff.
4. Get the engine rebuilt. If the swarf hasn't damaged anything else it's still a starting point of a £5k bill for a new cylinder head, replacement liner and the labour involved, plus the "WYAIT" stuff as (2). At least the numbers will match, and I know the 4-6 cylinder head and camshafts should be ok
5. Part the car and engine out - the accessories are in generally good nick, the bodywork's ok, the electrics are good. How much could I realistically expect to achieve this way?
Despite all this, I'm determined to get back into a Porker as soon as I can - the driving experience is sublime, and I miss it.