Michael,
Since Duallie only called me today to advise me what was going on, I had no idea. I wasn't told you called. You had emailed me regarding injection pump fuel plates months ago, but that was it. I'll try to keep this short and simple and that is all I'm going to say about all this mud being thrown around.
Yes, you popped a turbo at Carlisle. I was there. I saw it, not to mention that the dyno operator was on and off the throttle pedal like a kangaroo about half a dozen times. That kind of abuse while loaded up on a dyno could break anything, but I guess we forget such thngs. You told me earlier that day that you got dirt or gravel in the air intake tube when YOU did the install on that turbo and the blades were all chewed up and I told you it was up to you to dyno the truck. I stayed well past the time I was supposed to be there with newborn twins at home and a very tired wife who was calling me on the phone to only find out I hadn't yet left. You know this. Since I don't own a tow truck and had no tools or turbos with me, what else could I do? I hung out about an hour more and went home. And since we all drove to the show together, we all left together.
Regarding your cam gear, it was not torched to install it, but gently heated in an oven. Did not look over heated when we installed it. Perhaps all the stress it underwent when it broke caused some discoloration. Since it was not a brand new gear, it would not look new like the one you had recently installed "the right way".
Regarding your block heater... the block was hot tanked, so the block heater had to be removed and a new one was installed for that sake. O-rings are not guaranteed by the machinist to live through a night in the tank.
You had us do your engine and you picked it up on 2/26/04 after an owner before you gave the engine hell rides for his used car lot customers and just shut her off red hot. Aside from your own transmission issues and things you broke like turbos and stuff, the engine has run smoothly since then till 2006 when an unfortunate thing happened to it.
I just lost a ball bearing turbocharger on my truck. It cost me 2200. 00 new and was less than a year old. You don't see me going to California to drive a bulldozer through Turbonetics with all their employees inside, do you? I instead, tightened my belt a notch and ordered another turbo. I know that things break when you are hard on them, and in that understanding am my own warranty station.
Thank you for your time.