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All 850 T5 Engine Issues? 850

Hello,

I'm in the market for a sport sedan and have fallen in love with the 850 T5's & R's. I found used T5's this past weekend and went to inspect & testdrive both.

One was a 95 and the other a 97, the 97 had 50k miles and the 95 had 67k. Both T5's had evidence of water in the oil. When inspecting the dipstick on both I noticed they had a milky sludge buildup on the stick which is usually evidence of water in the oil. After test driving the 97 it was even more eveiden as you could actually see water droplets on the dipstick. The 97 also had very discolored coolant, the 95 did not. From my experience this is usually a sign of a cracked head or blown head gasket. Could anything else have caused this? I am concerned that being 2 for 2 this is a common problem on the Turbo 850s, is that true or did I just strike the lemon pile today? I would really like something similar to the T5 with the performance but Im now leery of the Turbo motors, are there any other models to consider with good performance from a NA engine?

Any thoughts would be appreciated!

Thanx








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    All 850 T5 Engine Issues? 850

    Condensation on the dipstick is something that's been discussed here before and I don't recall it was a big issue. Cooler weather makes it more likely to occur. Get the car up to operating temperature and drive it for 20 minutes or so and I'd expect the moisture would evaporate out of the oil. I don't think this a problem with synthetic oils but I don't have the experience with it yet to say for sure.

    The turbo models have an oil cooler that is internal to the radiator. There was a posting recently about someone finding oil floating in their coolant expansion tank. Had to be an oil cooler/radiator problem.

    Have any 850 you're considering thoroughly checked out by a competent independent Volvo shop or a dealership's service department before buying. Lot's of little things to be alert for but most are inexpensive or moderetly expensive to repair if you do it yourself. The timing belt MUST be replaced at 70,, flush the tranny every 30k, keep an eye on your shock and strut upper mounts, start saving for better headlight lenses.

    Lot's of aftermarket performance stuff for the turbos.

    I love my '95 855t,
    Erwin in Memphis
    --
    Regards, Erwin in Memphis, '95 855t








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    All 850 T5 Engine Issues? 850

    Yes I too have some crap in my dip stick but nothing to worried about.. car run strong and every one on this board have the same problem ... change the oil...

    step on the gas here she go... yes stay with turbo ... none are ok but if you drive them you can the different is day and night....


    I will not worried about head gasket or anything... my is 120,000 1994 850 turbo we bought it used and it still a great car....


    Turbo itself usually not a problem on these car.. turbo failer are rear...

    good luck








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      All 850 T5 Engine Issues? 850

      Mrsha, is your '94 850 a wagon or sedan? I bought my red '94 850 Turbo Sedan(aka: 854T) in '99 it had 55,000k on it then. I now haveover 120,000. I love my car and it runs great. Have you done any performance mods? Like ECU, etc? Im thinking of getting the IPD ecu. Let me know. ~Cody









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    All 850 T5 Engine Issues? 850

    The normally aspirated engines don't offer too much in terms of performance.
    After-market parts for them for improving performance don't really exist.
    If you want performance, you want a turbo model.

    One option is the Light Pressure Turbo offered on GLTs' starting in
    model year 1997. This is a nice engine and offers pretty good performance.

    As far as turbo motor reliability, they are as good as the normally
    aspirated engines. Volvo has engineered these cars very well and
    there are serious engine mods on the high pressure turbo vehicles
    (thicker cylinder walls, forged pistons, sodium filled valves, oil
    spray on underside of pistons, etc.). The Swedes know how to make
    reliable, turbo-charged engines. The automatic transmissions, along
    with the air conditioning, are probably the weak areas. There is no
    reason really to be wary of the turbo motors because of the turbo
    (you still should have a used car checked by a mechanic and you
    will want service records).

    There have been a few posts about moisture on the dip stick. It has
    an o-ring seal that may have failed. Cracked heads or any sort of
    internal engine failure are very rare on the Volvo engines found in
    the 850 and 70 series.

    Coolant problems are mostly limited to thermostats failing at about
    70K and the covers for the expansion tank can crack and leak (there is
    a new cap design for this and some replace thermostats now as part of
    the 70K service).







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