Sir Sam wrote:
I think a little side to side shaft play is normal for a turbo, and I mean a little, since there isn't any oil being pumped through the turbo when its not running that oil is not there to fill the gap that you create when you wiggle it side to side.
That being said, if the side to side shaft play is more than about 1mm then that may be bad, its the in and out shaft play that is generally a better indicator of turbo condition.
Plus obviously if it wiggles so much you can make it touch the turbo housing - then thats bad.
That's interesting, I still think it is the other way though. The side-to-side motion is directly pressing against the rolling portions of the bearings, which is the part that is supporting the shaft and doing all the "heavy lifting" in terms of friction heating and needing that cooling. Front-to-back you are pressing the shaft seals against the SIDE of the bearings, which do not normally hold any load, and that would be the space filled by oil when under pressure. The shaft seals front-to-back are also not directly pressing against the bearings (that would add friction and heat), which is why you can get some small motion in that direction. The side-to-side loading is constant - The bearing is mounted in its cradle, the shaft is inside it held firmly. If it moves, then the bearings aren't holding it firmly anymore, and wobble = eventual death and oil leaks through the spaces. You can also rotate the compressor wheel with your fingers and see if it wants to "spin freely" or stops within a very short distance from you releasing your fingers. (This will be hard to see) The turbo shaft is only an almost-frictionless device when oil pressure is present. With the engine off... It will spin easily, but stop before you can get your hand out to see it. This is normal. If it spins VERY easily or keeps spinning so you can see it with your hand out... Check for wobble, you don't have enough bearing pressure to hold that shaft stable.
The thing to remember is this: That shaft is spinning at up to 100,000 RPM. ~25,000 RPM is probably its constant speed. The tiniest amount of side to side wobble can equal violent vibrations at those speeds.
The turbo I am driving on right now was BRAND-NEW from Chrysler. I checked it against the one that came with my replacement engine with 60k miles on it. The new turbo was "like a rock" and had only the tiniest amount of front-to-back along the axis of the shaft. NOTHING side to side, it might as well have been part of the casing. The replacement engine turbo seemed the same way.
Don't forget the reason I was getting a new engine at 60k miles... Was a turbo failure. I wanted to be *certain* that it would never happen again. After putting a total of 110k miles on that replacement engine turbo... Shaft play and failure. Luckily I caught that one the same way that Naturist caught his - Checking the oil level and topping it off before it got critical, but we were both at the almost-out level of hazard when we caught it. Jinstall wasn't so lucky. My first failure was catastrophic shaft seizure, not a bearing failure like these, but the signs are all the same.
Paineman... I would be RELIGIOUS in checking your oil level anytime you move the CRD for a while. If you hear anything squeaky... Check it again right then, and plan on a turbo in your near future. This the same advice for Naturist, but I think he is already at the point of bearing failure and leaking, and doesn't have much option about this next suggestion: Depending on your financial position, you have three sources for a replacement turbo. Used from someone here (I will have my stock turbos for sale soon, both of them once I get the wobbly one fixed)... Brand New from a dealership OR from a Garrett dealer (it is possible, and the prices were better) or (the best option) Go with the Green Diesel Engineering Turbo Kit.
When my Replacement Engine Turbo failed a few weeks ago, I put the Brand New turbo back in. That one has a minor sticking issue with the vanes that I will let Garrett deal repair before I sell it. I took the failed unit to a Garrett dealer, and they informed me that there were NO center cartridges available to rebuild these. They said I could get another brand new unit for $1080, it would be coming from Brazil where the closest unit was. Last time I checked, I think the dealers here wanted $1700 for the turbo.
The choices suck, but there are all the options and information I can think of about this. Naturist... I do think you will need a replacement turbo to continue your trip, sorry for that. I hope there is one in the area for you. Car-Part.com has ZILCH listed right now for the entire USA. I did not buy that one in Brazil, so if you can contact a local Garrett dealer, they should be able to bring it in for you if you go that route.