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Carrying LH 2.4 spare parts

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Old Aug 9th, 2018, 21:30   #1
Stephen Edwin
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Default Carrying LH 2.4 spare parts

From the forum it is clear that some LH 2.4 components cause serious failure, and are not readily available, in particular if one breaks down. If that is a long way from home a breakdown service might place the car with a local agent for repair and, well, what hope. The T&C of a recovery membership might not apply if for example the agent says they can repair where the car is? Who wants an argument over T&C in such circumstances? I don't.

Some items such as air mass meter and the voltage amplifier are classic parts, can be over a month from Sweden.

So carry spares yes. Clifford Pope wisely advises fuel pump relay, crank position sensor and the amplifier module. I feel like adding air mass meter and temperature sensor. I make that over £400 at discount from a volvo dealer. Oh and fuses are a good idea, ceramic with copper brass fusible metal. And a bit of wire with a clip each end. (And of course one needs knowledge/print outs to advise re use of the spares.)

So. Who carries what? Are you carrying secondhand parts, or cheapo new parts? Do you have reason to have confidence in the parts?

One argument is to just replace the likely troublesome items as a preemptive maintenance. It's a lot of money. And then carry the known working items as spares.

If one bought new items and kept them in pristine original packaging, they could be sold for a fair price in due course if not used?

Ideas and experience would be appreciated please.

Discuss....
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Old Aug 10th, 2018, 10:40   #2
Clifford Pope
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I carry all of the above, but not necessarily new ones.
Crank sensor, ign amplifier and fuel pump relay are cheap, so you might as well have new.
It's easier if you have the ign amplifier already mounted on a spare heat sink. That way you can swap it over in seconds and leave it dangling until you get home.

I have once had an HT lead mysteriously go bad and cause misfiring, so a spare long one makes sense just in case. Also some plugs.

A list of the diagnostic codes plus notes on how to read the box might be handy. (If yours works. Mine's completely dead so all I can do is disconnect the battery to reset)

The short wire with a crocodile clip can be handy if you know the fuses 4 to 6 trick.

Both the headlight relays, the stepper and the other one. Having the lights fail at night is to be avoided

Wire coat hanger. At least you can hitch a dangling silencer off the road to get home.

Light bulbs. They are all easy to replace on the spot. If stopped for a failed light nothing works better than replacing it while you are thanking and apologising to the police officer


This has diverged a bit from your LH2.4 specific list, but they are just useful things I've used over the years.
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Old Aug 11th, 2018, 19:51   #3
Stephen Edwin
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Clifford part of my question is because Volvo themselves are not cheap for the parts you mention as worth carrying new ones. I am quoted:

Crank position sensor .... £40.39
fuel pump relay .... £47.33
ignition amplifier .... £135.

And as I remember the air mass meter is about £150.

I prefer to buy genuine Volvo, but if one is buying a range of serious spares it adds up a lot for parts one hopes never to need.

So ....

A good cheapo supplier?
Secondhand?

But can one rely on such parts? I think it might be more reliable to say get parts from one of our forum members sadly breaking a car with known nicely running engine? Rather than a cheapo new part supplier, or from Farmer Lakes Breakers?

Your additions to the list of parts is good yes. Re ignition parts I'm planning to fit new HT leads, dizzy cover and rotor arm in the coming months. The ones I have work OK. So the ones I remove will be spares. I change spark plugs regularly, an old habit re all my cars. So the parts removed go as spares. Many spares are known good items removed from my own car so I know they were OK when removed.
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Old Aug 11th, 2018, 20:39   #4
Triple-S
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Although not strictly relevant to this Volvo-model section, yes I do carry some spares round in my 164 but seriously would you stand at the roadside replacing say a fanbelt when you could easily get driven into by a careless truck? Also I thought it was not allowed to do such on a motorway anyway - a tyre yes but a belt?

I have a spare set of leads etc in the boot of my 164 and swapped them when in trouble recently: that wasn't the problem so my rescue organisation towed my car back to where it lived. Then a couple of days later collected it again and took it to a Volvo garage I knew and was happy with. For free.... My thoughts - seek out a decent rescue company.

P
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Old Aug 12th, 2018, 10:07   #5
Clifford Pope
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I'm not sure I now believe this mantra of "only genuine Volvo parts".
Do Volvo really have teams of dedicated craftsmen making spares for old cars in the traditional quality Volvo way? Or do they just buy them from the usual manufacturers, supposedly to Volvo spec, and put their labels on?
All the other once-reliable makes do - "Lucas" for example is well known to be just as shoddy as any other manufacturer.

The last Ignition amplifier I bought was Motorcraft, Motorpoint (?) I think, if that's the name. It was about £25 and has been reliable. The CPS was whatever Brookhouse supply - much cheaper than quoted above, I think?

I take the point about stopping on a motorway - it's a matter of judgement and how busy. But you can drive gently a bit with no fan belt, I think, if you watch the gauge. I know its the pump not the fan that's important, so you could I suppose just tie a bit of cord round two pulleys as a makeshift for a few miles?

(Some years ago a tyre collapsed on the caravan, and I pulled over into some handy coned-off roadworks and stopped behind a site hut. There was no one around. I had no spare, so took the wheel and drove on, found a tyre place, and returned via two roundabouts. Nothing had happened, still no one about, as I fitted the wheel and drove on)
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Old Aug 12th, 2018, 11:56   #6
Stephen Edwin
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Triple. I think Plod would move one along, call in a tow vehicle, if one tried to do very much on a motorway. Even on an ordinary road Plod will push the car off the road if possible. On either road the law would be, keep the highway clear.

My point about a good breakdown service is, if they try a local repair instead of recovering the vehicle. Producing the necessary difficult to obtain part, can solve that issue.

And where possible I would prefer to cogitate and consider for myself before calling in a very nice person who perhaps rarely sees a 240. I remember about 1971 a lorry specialist being turned out by the AA to attend to my non-starting motorcycle. He was very nice, but he was lost as to the problem. The motorcycle shop sorted it for free in two seconds the next morning.

I'm impressed that your breakdown organisation took the car home AND then took it to your garage of choice. Spill the beans then. Who is your breakdown organisation. I'm still long standing with the AA. I did call them out a decade or so ago for a jump start. I get a VERY good price now by persistent haggling.

Fan belts. Of course my old 240 has a matched pair anyway. But. I remember a patrolman on the M4 talking up how I should change the fanbelt as a very important precaution. He got my goat. So I happily agreed, I produced my brand new spare and he had the job of fitting it, on my Austin 1100 which was a slightly time consuming job as we know, but he got no sale!

Clifford. Useful pointers there thank you. Quality and price have indeed become a minefield. Angie has paid more than a Volvo dealer price to (I think it was) Brookhouse for an air mass meter, which failed. I have at times found Brookhouse DELIVERED price is higher than a Volvo dealer. But then again, my new distributor cap in a Volvo box, is a Bosch part number. Is it the upgraded lacquered Volvo special edition we have heard of? I doubt it.

Anyways, I shall cogitate and shop around.
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