In article <MpfVh.5545$Qa.1755@trndny08>, "Mike" <1234.DeleteThis@yahoo.com>
wrote:
> Hi, my buddy has a 2001 Chrysler Sebring, auto transmission, six cylinder 3
> liter engine w/ 58,000 miles.
> It is well maintained and always serviced according to schedule.
> YHesterday, 58,000 miles, the auto transmission
> fails (car stops moving) and it is towed to a Chrysler dealer who tells him
> the transmission needs to be replaced at a cost of $7,000.00. This a well
> maintained car w/ 58k miles. The car was never abused or driven hard. What
> can explain a transmission failure a 58K miles?
>
> Anything the guy can do to save a few bucks on the repair? Is there a
> transmission recall for this car?
That $7K for a transmission seems a bit ridiculous. Definitely not the
route I'd take. I would expect no more that $2k for a rebuilt one.
You could scrap it and buy a used 2006 10K-15K leased one for about $12k,
assuming you want another Sebring.
Or take a chance on a used transmission from the wreckers and
immediately trade the Sebring for a properly designed car.
We are well maintaining my wife's same model & yr Sebring; here's hoping
this isn't typical. She's only at 30K miles.
Oh my between that engine wrecking itself because of sludge and the
transmission failures I'll definitely avoid buying another similar
design.
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