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It is to me worth it, but car is grounded for two reason . 1) Winter, but 2) I have a defective front differential. It's been with the dealer since the beginning of the month while I wait for a new one to come in from England.
hmmm So I ordered in November for March Delivery, told it would be built in Feb, does that mean i'll get the new spec released today? hard to imagine they would still build pre facelift after the announcement?
hmmm So I ordered in November for March Delivery, told it would be built in Feb, does that mean i'll get the new spec released today? hard to imagine they would still build pre facelift after the announcement?
You'll have to ask the dealer. Is it a '17 build or an '18 build? Most changes previously announced in November of a given year didn't go into effect until Mar the next year. This cycle, they are a bit late in making the announcements.
It is to me worth it, but car is grounded for two reason . 1) Winter, but 2) I have a defective front differential. It's been with the dealer since the beginning of the month while I wait for a new one to come in from England.
Those SVR parts take while, what happened to the diff if you don't mind me asking?
Curious can anyone with an SVR confirm whether the outer fender on your car is also aluminum. Talking about this piece, received a replacement piece today and its not aluminum and it does not fit properly.
The piece I received has a totally different upper section where it attaches to the inner fender.
Curious can anyone with an SVR confirm whether the outer fender on your car is also aluminum. Talking about this piece, received a replacement piece today and its not aluminum and it does not fit properly.
The piece I received has a totally different upper section where it attaches to the inner fender.
I just checked and it feels aluminum to me. It's certainly metal. Makes a 'clink' sound when tapped.
Curious can anyone with an SVR confirm whether the outer fender on your car is also aluminum. Talking about this piece, received a replacement piece today and its not aluminum and it does not fit properly.
The piece I received has a totally different upper section where it attaches to the inner fender.
That piece looks like it's from a sedan rather than the F-Type
That piece looks like it's from a sedan rather than the F-Type
The piece is definitely an SVR piece in terms of shape, I test fitted it against the car today and it fit nicely; however, what is weird is that its not aluminum. At least the piece I received and I ordered it from Jaguar but it didn't have the typical Jaguar labels usually on all their parts. It looked aftermarket. Also the screw holes didn't lineup with the inner fender. Something seems off here. I need to do some investigation. I am a bit confused why they would make only this piece non-aluminum.
Also it appears Jaguar changed the outer fender piece for the SVR mid-production. If you look at the attached photo you can see the outer fender in the photo and the piece I receive are a match in terms of shape, but one of the screw holes on my piece is in the wrong location. Super confusing.
I am a bit confused why they would make only this piece non-aluminum.
What has brought you to the conclusion that it's not aluminum? I assume it's made of metal? If so, they typically coat the metal materials to prevent oxidation and prepare them for paint. So it could very well be aluminum under there.
If it's not metal, and rather a plastic based component, it's for a cost reason. Which would make sense because this part isn't structural so why make it strong and expensive.
What has brought you to the conclusion that it's not aluminum? I assume it's made of metal? If so, they typically coat the metal materials to prevent oxidation and prepare them for paint. So it could very well be aluminum under there.
If it's not metal, and rather a plastic based component, it's for a cost reason. Which would make sense because this part isn't structural so why make it strong and expensive.
But there's more to it than that. One, if it's not aluminum and it's supposed to be, that's odd. Secondly, the part looks different than the drawing and the drilled holes don't line up. I would be concerned if it were me.
People make mistakes ALL the time in customer service. It's more plausible than Jaguar deciding to change the material used to make a basic body part IMO
I'm not sure it's supposed to be aluminum. It could very well be aluminum but I doubt it. I agree it's sort of an extra piece over the real fender so it needs not be aluminum. I just figured they would want to maje the car as light as possible, this piece definitely feels heavier than the inner fender which is clearly aluminum.
The pieces are now with the body shop I guess I'll wait and see how it comes out. One of the top screw holes does not align, which worries me, but everything else aligns perfectly. There are even three guide notches on the rear of the outer fender which align perfectly with the guide inserts on the front of the inner fender.. That one off screw hole has me perplexed. I don't know what to make of it. The body shop said they can align in.
But there's more to it than that. One, if it's not aluminum and it's supposed to be, that's odd. Secondly, the part looks different than the drawing and the drilled holes don't line up. I would be concerned if it were me.
People make mistakes ALL the time in customer service. It's more plausible than Jaguar deciding to change the material used to make a basic body part IMO
A customer service person couldn't possibly make a mistake ordering a plastic part vs. an aluminum part unless both existed first. Car companies change part designs in the middle of production all the time. If a specific design had a problem they could fix, the fix would be done on the fly. This could explain the difference in hole layout/attachment which just means someone in customer service ordered wrong one.
Originally Posted by zmoothg
I'm not sure it's supposed to be aluminum. It could very well be aluminum but I doubt it. I agree it's sort of an extra piece over the real fender so it needs not be aluminum. I just figured they would want to maje the car as light as possible, this piece definitely feels heavier than the inner fender which is clearly aluminum.
The pieces are now with the body shop I guess I'll wait and see how it comes out. One of the top screw holes does not align, which worries me, but everything else aligns perfectly. There are even three guide notches on the rear of the outer fender which align perfectly with the guide inserts on the front of the inner fender.. That one off screw hole has me perplexed. I don't know what to make of it. The body shop said they can align in.
Keep in mind jaguar has never been about making this car light... Yes they used aluminum, but its always been a bit of a pig, weight wise. We're talking hundreds of pounds heavier than the similarly sized corvette.
Jaguar doesn't sell enough of these to afford using the lightest materials possible. They can't invest the same amount of money as something that sells 50000+ units a year. So I could absolutely see how a non-structural part could be made cheaply out of something heavier than you'd expect. That being said, i'm still betting that's aluminum and just coated.
Also, I would have taken that part back to Jaguar and asked why the holes were in the wrong location. Its possible they just ordered you the wrong part.
Interesting. I remember the old Z-rating. I guess they realized they needed to be more specific, probably with the slew of high-powered cars in the past 20 years.
I'm suspicious of the size you quoted. For all the tires that Tire Rack recommends, the fronts (265) have a load rating of 99, and the rears (305) have a load rating of 103. And they're all Y-rated, with parenthesis, for >186MPH. i.e. (99Y)
But I'll get out of the way and let someone with an SVR respond.
as far as I understand it, the load rating is to do with the weight of the car not speed, and every website you can buy tyres from here, the max they quote is Y rated, i'm wondering if thats just the default rating for all high end tyres now because there are not an insignificant number of production cars out there that can do more than 186 but apparently no tyres on sale for that. just thinking about this sort of scenario on the occasional trip to Germany
that sure wasn't sustained highspeed driving, different car and no idea on the tyres and condition of them, but it does seem a little odd that the rating doesn't appear to match the car on an SVR