JReichenbach
TDR MEMBER
What is the $375.00 x 2 clean and dirty HPCR?
Unfortunate reality of the business model and practices when a substandard product cost significantly more than new when purchased thru certain channels. When they said they were warrantied for 12 months did that INCLUDE the labor to swap them if they do go bad? If it did not you might might find yourself on the hook for a $300-500 bill per injector to use that warranty. Again, this is the reality and cost we deal with to offload the responsibility and work. If that works for you then it is a good solution.
Given how simple it is to change these injectors with some basic hand tools, you could have bought new, had a better product, learned some new skills, and had some satisfaction and peace of mind. Hope the choice works out well for you.
What is the $375.00 x 2 clean and dirty HPCR?
Like I said before, what criteria is being used to gauge failure. If I can buy new for the same price as reman then the reman had better exhibit the same quality.
Reman compared to new, the remans do not consistently meet even the sloppy criteria of production run NEW injectors. This has consequences down the line that will add to cost. Cannot look at just number of sales and number of returns, there must be a quality modifier in there somewhere for a fair comparison.
What constitutes a failure?
I have installed and use several sets of new, reman, and BBI injectors. Consistently I have encountered more issues with remans than the others combined. I cannot address balance and setup issues, do not have the knowledge or tools to do it correctly. If an injector is showing 106% contribution percentage it is failure right from the start. If it shows 104% and I can validate that will follow the injector and it is creating either a wobble at a certain rpm or some aberrant noises in specific circumstances it counts as a failure.
All the remans are directly from a local Bosch authorized dealer and are certified Bosch remans.
On the flip side, if the injectors would last 200k and the engine self destructs would that be an engine failure or injector failure? Postmortem on the engine failures I have seen and been involved with, injector failed and was not caught until the engine failed.
Trying to get true valid statistics info on actual failures of a commodity product like CR injectors is near impossible. ALL that can be seen is this many were sold, this many were returned as bad, if that is even kept separately from cores. Is it really feasible to think that cores are being sorted for what was originally new and is a core, what was a reman and is a core, how many miles or hours were on an injector when it actually failed. ALL that can be seen is how many were sold and how many flagged as warranty returns in the 12 month warranty period.
Dodge service departments would use high quality remans, keep good records--and more importantly, those records are likely in a central corporate data base that can be easily accessed and collected.
That is a non-starter as dealers use the WORST reman injector available out there.
I had forgotten that Bosch is collecting statistics by VIN number of reman injectors. They have stats for whatever they are worth but I doubt somehow they will share the raw data. However this exact instance does present a problem with accuracy. The VIN of this truck is now showing 4 reman injectors that I have done, only one will show as a reman replacement when in reality it is 2.