Bought my car with 77,000 miles on it and when i reached 81,000 miles my turbo charger failed. this seems to be common issue with this year vehicle, so common in fact, that there's belief there may be a design flaw in the car. below is a description of the issue. while going coming back from the grocery store (driving normally on a saturday) i noticed that the check engine light appeared. the car continued to drive ok so i went ahead and drove home and parked it. the following monday i took it to the dealer, however while on the way to the dealership, i started hearing a sporadic knocking noise whenever i stepped on the accelerator, as well and engine hesitation. after arriving at the dealership i requested that the check engine light but checked and also the new noise i was hearing that morning. i got a call back from the dealer that the driver side turbo fan was knocking against the inner housing causing the noise. i was told that the turbo was going bad and needed replacing.
Blown turbos resulted in catastrophic engine failure. i had to pay labor of $10,500 and warranty paid for new engine. happened at approximately 72,000 miles. vehicle in gear with foot on brake at a fast food drive through.
Turbos failed at approximately 82,000 miles due to a clogged oil feed screen. turbos were starved of oil causing one compressor shaft to break in half and the other to have excessive shaft play. this caused a no-run issue and resulted in both turbos having to be replaced along with the oil screen. the vehicle began running poorly at highway speed and when it came to a stop, stalled at a busy freeway interchange. after multiple attempts, the car was able to start and limp off the road where it was towed from and diagnosed at a mechanic
Failure of both turbos while driving through a rural section of town. very rough idle and subsequent stall of engine while in traffic. unable to re-start or drive without keeping the gas pedal depressed making it very difficult to regulate speed and negotiate traffic. later found out the turbo failure is due to defective oil feed design from the manufacturer.