964 Turbo - Odd Noise When Closing Door.

964 Turbo - Odd Noise When Closing Door.

Author
Discussion

benny.c

Original Poster:

3,562 posts

222 months

Thursday 17th December 2009
quotequote all
In the last few days my 964 has developed an odd problem. Well, not a problem as such, but an annoying noise. When I shut either door, there is a loud metallic "click" from the right hand rear corner of the engine bay. It is definitely not coming from the cabin but I suppose it could be the bulkhead area. The car has no sound deadening so I think I'd know if it was in the cabin.

The weird thing is though, with one door still open, or either window wound down an inch, there is no noise. Rocking the car doesn't reproduce the sound and coupled with the above, I guess the pressure building up in the cabin when you shut the door, is causing the noise, but I've no idea what it could be.

Any ideas? The rear and quarter windows are perspex although I can't see what difference that would make. The sound is a mechanical click, like two pieces of metal hitting each other, rather than anything electrical. Central locking etc has been stripped out in any case.

Edited by benny.c on Thursday 17th December 23:04

graeme36s

7,149 posts

232 months

Thursday 17th December 2009
quotequote all
Hi Ben. I have no idea what the cause of that noise is but they all do it. It's like a little metal pendulum that tinkles when you shut the door. My 964 3.6 turbo did it, my mates 964 3.6 turbo also did it. Would be nice to find out what it actually is.

benny.c

Original Poster:

3,562 posts

222 months

Thursday 17th December 2009
quotequote all
Not the old..."they all do that sir" biggrin

Your description "..a little metal pendulum that tinkles.." is exactly the sound. Shut the door and then wait for a split second before it makes the noise. Very odd but at least I know I'm not alone. I've had the car for a couple of months and not noticed before but maybe it's always been there.

I may get Tech9 to take a (very) quick look when it's having the tappets done after Christmas, just out of curiosity.

marky911

4,427 posts

234 months

Thursday 17th December 2009
quotequote all
Mine too! benny.
Let us know if it's something that can be eliminated.

benny.c

Original Poster:

3,562 posts

222 months

Thursday 17th December 2009
quotequote all
marky911 said:
Let us know if it's something that can be eliminated.
I'll split Tech9's hourly rate with you for the solution wink

boxsey

3,578 posts

225 months

Thursday 17th December 2009
quotequote all
It's the sound of the flapper valves that direct the heat from the heat exchangers to the cabin or to the wheel well. Perfectly normal. The time to worry is when you don't hear it which means that they have corroded and stuck in one position.

graeme36s

7,149 posts

232 months

Thursday 17th December 2009
quotequote all
nice one boxsey smile

benny.c

Original Poster:

3,562 posts

222 months

Friday 18th December 2009
quotequote all
Cheers. That's that then smile

A bit of heat is good with the weather at the moment. Mine's had the heater stripped out though, which makes it kind of frosty in the cabin.....and the buckets are too small to wear a thick coat.

Worse thing is, I may be forced to buy some driving gloves to keep my hands warm. Never thought I'd see the day eek

Edited by benny.c on Friday 18th December 00:05

sal 965

586 posts

226 months

Friday 18th December 2009
quotequote all
boxsey said:
It's the sound of the flapper valves that direct the heat from the heat exchangers to the cabin or to the wheel well. Perfectly normal. The time to worry is when you don't hear it which means that they have corroded and stuck in one position.
+1

PindiXpress

631 posts

215 months

Friday 18th December 2009
quotequote all
benny.c said:
Cheers. That's that then smile

A bit of heat is good with the weather at the moment. Mine's had the heater stripped out though, which makes it kind of frosty in the cabin.....and the buckets are too small to wear a thick coat.

Worse thing is, I may be forced to buy some driving gloves to keep my hands warm. Never thought I'd see the day eek

Edited by benny.c on Friday 18th December 00:05
Respect for taking that beast out in this weatherbiglaugh

boxsey

3,578 posts

225 months

Friday 18th December 2009
quotequote all
PindiXpress said:
benny.c said:
Cheers. That's that then smile

A bit of heat is good with the weather at the moment. Mine's had the heater stripped out though, which makes it kind of frosty in the cabin.....and the buckets are too small to wear a thick coat.

Worse thing is, I may be forced to buy some driving gloves to keep my hands warm. Never thought I'd see the day eek

Edited by benny.c on Friday 18th December 00:05
Respect for taking that beast out in this weatherbiglaugh
+1 bow

I recently had to drive mine when the HVAC wasn't working. That was enough to persuade me that a rear blower bypass is one weight reduction item that I won't be doing!

robmug

1,047 posts

278 months

Friday 18th December 2009
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I seem to remember on my 964 that if you closed the interior air vents this noise went away...

benny.c

Original Poster:

3,562 posts

222 months

Friday 18th December 2009
quotequote all
boxsey said:
PindiXpress said:
Respect for taking that beast out in this weatherbiglaugh
+1 bow

I recently had to drive mine when the HVAC wasn't working. That was enough to persuade me that a rear blower bypass is one weight reduction item that I won't be doing!
Everyone says Porsches don't like being sat around and should be driven, so I do my best smile When it's a nice day there's no way I'm going to leave it sat in the garage, even it is bloody cold.

I did notice one other problem today too. There's no sun visors and at this time of year, that is really quite annoying. Time to get a sun strip put on the windscreen I think.

robmug said:
I seem to remember on my 964 that if you closed the interior air vents this noise went away...
Can't do this on mine unfortunately as fitting the cage meant removing the outer two vents. Just got hoses now with no way to close them off, other than stuffing a rag in them.

michael sundler

5 posts

28 months

Yesterday (11:52)
quotequote all
boxsey said:
It's the sound of the flapper valves that direct the heat from the heat exchangers to the cabin or to the wheel well. Perfectly normal. The time to worry is when you don't hear it which means that they have corroded and stuck in one position.
I now have a cabin heating issue and just noted the absence of this door closing clunk on my 964 turbo so suspect the flapper valve(s). How where can I access it/them. Really grateful for any input.

Slippydiff

15,462 posts

238 months

Yesterday (12:19)
quotequote all
Here's your starter for 10.
No doubt the exhaust manifold design on the Turbo will be different to the NA C2/4 cars, but the location of the flapper valves should be broadly similar. This should help :

https://rennlist.com/forums/964-forum/235817-964-h...