Drewd wrote:
I'll check torque and tighten as necessary all of the bolts on the intake manifold this weekend. Should I break torque and retighten them or simply tighten them up. I'm hoping this is a cure or improves things a bit. I can honestly say I will never buy another Jeep product unless Chrysler takes significant steps to improve overall quality. Life pump, fuel filter head, provent CCV etc..etc.. and now this for a 4 year old vehicle is not acceptable in my opinion. Shoot, my VW TDI's were more reliable than our Jeep Liberty CRD. I, of course, say this after i got an 07 GC CRD in the driveway

Why can't Honda or Nissan bring over a diesel SUV?
The leaking oil had softened fuel return lines significantly and I will also be replacing them.
Thanks for all of the advice. If this doesn't fix it, any takers in Colorado on the repair job? Wife went into the dealership this morning and was not impressed by the idiot (her words) she dealt with at the service counter.
I'd have to agree with your assessment of the Chrysler quality, both in vehicles and in attempt-at-service departments. A badly engineered German car is like a visit with the Original Santa Claus - Impossible to find. I flogged my TDI Jetta like a go-kart for 150k miles and it never failed me once.
At the same time, I think Toyota and Nissan won't bring over any oil burners b/c they are falling into the same misconception of the Big Three: Fat Americans want bigger and bigger vehicles. Either that, or they wouldn't be able to make them fast enough to keep up with the demand. Witness Mopar selling every single CRD unit, without ANY advertising at all. Just like the Prius. Have you seen ANY advertising for a Prius in the last 5 years or so?
It does sound like you have a loose intake stud, I would break them loose and then go back in and torque them properly, one by one. Don't loosen them all at once, or the seal really WILL be un-done.