Casey Martin
Active Member
I have been working in the car business for Honda for over 25 years but in sales not service. I have seen my share of bad engine mounts. In fact on any v6 appraisal I do I lightly power brake it so I can tell if the engine mounts are bad. Odyssey's are notorious for bad mounts and they are not cheap to replace because some of them are electronically controlled.
Anyway, my initial thought was my issue is a bad engine mount. Since you can't really power brake a Clarity plug in I couldn't duplicate the issue. When I had it on a lift all the mounts looked good. We also tried "driving and braking" while it was up on the lift. There was no signs of excessive drivetrain movement or the loud clunking noise I would sometimes experience. That is one of the reasons it took this long to diagnose. Everything appeared to be normal. If you have ever seen a v6 Honda with a blown engine mount and you power brake it you know what I am talking about. The motor moves dramatically in the engine bay. It is very easy to spot and not something any decent mechanic would miss. That was not the case with my Clarity plug in.
Regardless I am glad they were able to find the issue. Well, hopefully what was the issue. I haven't driven it the last few days because I have been driving dealer cars. I will post again once I get to drive it a few hundred more miles and confirm the problem is fixed. Since I could manipulate the mount so easily by hand I am confident this was my issue. If I can move the rubber portion of the mount with just my fingers there is no way it can hold 200+ horsepower or torque being applied to it. Hopefully this is the only cause of the clunking noise I have been experiencing. Time will tell. With that said did the rubber mount just prematurely fail or did something else cause it fail? That is the million dollar question?
Anyway, my initial thought was my issue is a bad engine mount. Since you can't really power brake a Clarity plug in I couldn't duplicate the issue. When I had it on a lift all the mounts looked good. We also tried "driving and braking" while it was up on the lift. There was no signs of excessive drivetrain movement or the loud clunking noise I would sometimes experience. That is one of the reasons it took this long to diagnose. Everything appeared to be normal. If you have ever seen a v6 Honda with a blown engine mount and you power brake it you know what I am talking about. The motor moves dramatically in the engine bay. It is very easy to spot and not something any decent mechanic would miss. That was not the case with my Clarity plug in.
Regardless I am glad they were able to find the issue. Well, hopefully what was the issue. I haven't driven it the last few days because I have been driving dealer cars. I will post again once I get to drive it a few hundred more miles and confirm the problem is fixed. Since I could manipulate the mount so easily by hand I am confident this was my issue. If I can move the rubber portion of the mount with just my fingers there is no way it can hold 200+ horsepower or torque being applied to it. Hopefully this is the only cause of the clunking noise I have been experiencing. Time will tell. With that said did the rubber mount just prematurely fail or did something else cause it fail? That is the million dollar question?
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