"96 850 GLT CV Boots?

boot is cracked and grease is escaping and dealer want's about $800 for part and I'm having trouble locating the part at any source in Kansas City besides volvo dealer, who is crook I don't trust.

Local garage says every other car it does this repair on is about $100 for part.

Anyone know any other sources for CV boot,

Also, should this have been caught when I had the volvo into dealer for

100,000 checkup 2 weeks ago? local garage guy says boot has been cracked for a while.

reply to group please

-- aloha GaryK

Reply to
sparky
Loading thread data ...

WHoa! I just put ALL 4 new CV boots on my Volvo 850. The entire job cost me $500 but I also replaced both front control arms. That's BOTH front control arms and all 4 bellows (cv boots, Volvo refers to them as bellows)

I would call another Dealer and ask for parts and just ask if they have the bellows in stock. Then, ask "What is your price on them?"

Now your dealer might be qouting the CV joint itself + installation, if so you have a misunderstanding. You might/ might not need a new CV joint. I replaced mine (boots) as preventative maint at 100k, and they were not cracked. CV joints were fine of course. With a leaking boot who knows. FYI

"Also, should this have been caught when I had the volvo into dealer for 100,000 checkup 2 weeks ago?"

Hell yes, but then again you desire GOOD service and it sounds like your Dealer sucks. In truth the 100k service might *not* have required the car to go on a rack but any on the ball tech with a 100k service on his hands should do a cursory inspection of all common wear items like that. It's good for business and keeps the customer happy and rolling down the road. Plus it'd take all of 5 minutes. Good service can be HARD to get!

Reminds me of when my friend went to the Doctor. The Doctor gave him 6 months. My friend said "Six months! I can't even pay your fee in 6 months!" So the Doctor gave him another 6 months....

Reply to
Steve J.

For parts, check out

formatting link
You might want to install complete rebuilt half-shafts if that is an option. If the boots have been gone for long then there is a good chance dirt and water got into the CV joint and are grinding away at it.

John

Reply to
John Horner

What exactly is he replacing? Just new inner and outer boots, or the entire axle? If the boots have been cracked for a long while, dirt could have gone in and messed up the joint or the axle.

$800 is what I would expect for parts and labor if he was installing new right and left axles. The axle shafts are about $200 - $300 each. Boot-kits themselves are pretty cheap ($30 - $40) each side, and you should be charged about 1 - 2 hours of labor.

Check

formatting link
bev

Reply to
Bev A. Kupf

Left axle, outside boot separated from the axle, leaving about a 1/2" opening all around the axle.

I purchased a repair kit from the dealer, which consisted of two boots, two kids of grease (The black grease goes in the outside joint.)

Despite driving with the broken boot for over a month, in the wettest spring ever here, I saw no signs of damage to the CV hoint at all once it was disassembled and cleaned. The grease probably trapped all the grit and didn't let it migrate into the moving parts.

Hardest part: Opening the retaining ring while hammering the very-tight center "spider" off the axle's splined end to disassemble the CV joint to get the boots off. (why couldn't they have used bolt-together joints.). The kit cost about $140.00.

To reply, please remove one letter from each side of "@" Spammers are vermin. Please kill them.

Reply to
Doug Warner

MotorsForum website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.