rustytoolss
Well-Known Member
Are the Chrysler 3.5 V6 engines any good. Like the ones in the 2010 dodge chargers? Do they have a bad reputation as far as durability, failure, or other concerns ?
Hope they aren't the same motor as the Intrepids had in them.
You should see how they cast the rod journals in one peice and then stap the end off to put bearings in them.
Then they use the rough snapped off cap and rod surfaces as a guide for reassembly.
Point is they had narrow rod bearings as well as timing chain issue's.
Are the Chrysler 3.5 V6 engines any good. Like the ones in the 2010 dodge chargers? Do they have a bad reputation as far as durability, failure, or other concerns ?
Hope they aren't the same motor as the Intrepids had in them.
Point is they had narrow rod bearings as well as timing chain issue's.
The 3.5 is an awesome motor.
Nooho. On what planet?
I was a Chrysler tech myself until recently. I never had any love for those things or the 4.0s that came in the Pacificas.
They had timing belts - dual overhead cam. Even the factory had issues clocking the cams and belt properly.
You guys need to do a little reading on these before slamming them. They were single cam, not dual.
If it was such a bad motor why was it around for so long? It wasn't until the 3.6 came around that they dropped it. Ive owned and worked on several cars with the 3.5 and never had any real issues. Timing belts are stupid simple, and changing plugs a monkey could do. And they had nice power for what it is. The transmissions on the other hand were and still are junk. The 4.0 Benz motor is a gigantic piece of garbage. What is it that you hate so much about them?
If it was such a bad motor why was it around for so long? It wasn't until the 3.6 came around that they dropped it. Ive owned and worked on several cars with the 3.5 and never had any real issues. Timing belts are stupid simple, and changing plugs a monkey could do. And they had nice power for what it is. The transmissions on the other hand were and still are junk. The 4.0 Benz motor is a gigantic piece of garbage. What is it that you hate so much about them?
Good info. Again, the 4.0 was a Mercedes Benz engine, and nothing at all in common with the 3.5.They all dyno pulled 20-30 HP less than advertised. I used to get the weekly dyno engine pulls from the engine plant. :evil3:
When they were advertised at 210, they usually pulled 180 HP. :finga:
When they increased to 240 advertised HP, they would only pull 210 on the dyno. :finga:
I drove a Prowler with one of those engines and couldn't get the tires to spin off the line in a straight line, I had to nail it around a corner to break them loose..... :finga: :violent1:
That is why they increased it to 4.0 L, because of many customer complaints about lacking horsepower.rotest:
Guess I should have made it simpler to understand. SOHC. As in single over head cam. One cam per bank. DOHC means dual over head cam, as in two cams per bank. Because it has two cams, doesn't make it dual over head cam. Look at the 3.0 DOHC motors that came in the Steath\3000 GT. Now that would be a DOHC.
THAT timing belt is not simple. Ever done one? I've done a few. Hyundais are simple, that one is not with the two cams and the tensioner. It's not like the ones where you crack the tensioner loose, slip the belt off and back on and you're done. You have to align it, clip the belt on to one cam, align the next one and hold that, then set the tensioner, rotate it a bunch of times... at least 2 hours with all the accessories and the cover. I'm sure there were guys that could do it faster but you can't rush timing that thing, you'll bend all the valves. I remember the last one I did, it was a cam code, Px116 I think it was? Water pump blew up, coolant everywhere, (inside the cover) timing belt was soaked and jumped. No typical outward signs of coolant leakage either, just the code.
Plugs on those were a ***** actually. And there was that stupid two piece plenum. And trust me, doing ANYTHING on a Pacifica with a 4.0 (same as the 3.5 just larger) was difficult. I've done many jobs on those things from engine mounts, engine rebuilds, transfer cases, etc. The engine was always the problem, it was in the way of everything because of it's size.
Really, are they THAT bad? I think that they are. For all the complexity it's performance is really pedestrian. I don't know if they had a bad reputation but I guess for me, I just thought they were poorly executed. Why did they keep it around for so long? Because they invested zillions in development and tooling, then zillions more trying to improve it because they knew it sucked. Eventually they threw in the towel and retired that design. The 3.6 went to a timing chain which was no simple thing either until you do them a lot but they were more robust than the 3.5 for sure.
Ive done several belts on these, and many other engines. Foreign and domestic. These are one of the easiest to do. Ever do one on a twin turbo stealth? You don't know difficult until you do. The transverse setup makes it a real *****. The 3.5 being situated where you can access the belt from the front made it even easier.