Dennis MacGyver wrote:
Anytime ANY person owns a limited production vehicle, you are pretty much left "on your own" to learn and keep it running yourself. If you are the type that requires someone else to maintain your vehicle then you are a person who needs to own a vehicle that there are a million copies made thereof.
The CRD is an "odd duck" and as such (and when your dealer stated, "didn't know we made a diesel"), you should have turned on your heal & left !!
My suggestion is that YOU dig into this forum, figure out what personal course of action to do, yourself, and fix the mess your "dealer" created for you.
Read, read, read, buy the tools necessary for this engine (as you need them), get some gloves, and do the work yourself.
First off, I never said the "dealer stated" that. The dealer said "We work on these CRD's all the time, I know exactly how to fix it." It was the other mechanics I went to after losing faith in the dealer. I asked very specific and pointed questions before letting the dealer work on it, including asking them about the timing belt procedure before letting them do it. They knew the procedure and had the right tools. I should be able to assume that the dealer for any vehicle should know how to work on that vehicle.
Second, what was the point of posting this? Just to show how narcissistic and condescending you can be? To sum up your post you're saying I'm now allowed to own a CRD because I don't have a fully stocked diesel repair shop capable of tearing down and fully rebuilding the engine? That's the most asinine thing I've ever heard. And "ANYONE" with a "limited production vehicle"? You realize that they produced over 10,000 CRDs for the US market in 2005 right? That's more than the Porsche Boxster and about the same as the Porsche 911 in 2005. So I'm not allowed to own one of those either unless I can do a full engine rebuild myself in my garage? There are countless other vehicles that were produced in fewer numbers and not every owner of one of those vehicles does every bit of repair work themselves. And to expect every CRD owner to own the $800 timing belt pulley holder? Come on...
"If you are the type that requires someone else to maintain your vehicle then you are a person who needs to own a vehicle that there are a million copies made thereof"
A million copies? I'd like to see evidence that there are a "million copies" of any particular Jeep model in the US. There were roughly 166,000 KJ's sold in 2005. Of those about 10,000 were CRD's. Which means one out of 16 are diesel. That's not exactly impossibly hard to find.
And not to mention this isn't a "limited production" vehicle anywhere else in the world. It's just not common here which makes it a bit more difficult to find someone to work on them. But as you've seen, it's not impossible. I came here, I asked, and I got help. So why do you have a problem with that?