Turbocharger Repair in Midland, TX

Diesel turbocharger repair, rebuild, and replacement for pickups, work trucks, and semis in Midland and across the Permian Basin. As part of our full-service diesel repair in Midland, TX, our turbo repair shop tests before condemning, because half the turbos that come in are actually boost leaks, sensor faults, or oil supply problems. Diesel turbo service done right means the failure cause is fixed in the same job so the new unit survives.

Testfirst
Before We Condemn a Turbo
Causefound
Why It Failed, Not Just That It Did
Zero
Comebacks in 2025

Not Every Boost Problem Is the Turbo.

A turbocharger is the most-blamed and least-tested part on a diesel. These are the complaints we hear most from Midland, Odessa, and across West Texas, and what the testing usually finds.

Whistle or whine that changed pitch
Likely Path Some turbo whistle is normal. A new or changing pitch points to shaft play, a wheel contacting the housing, or a boost leak hissing under load. We measure shaft play and pressure-test the charge circuit before anything is condemned.
Down on power, slow to build boost
Likely Path Boost leaks in the charge pipes or intercooler, a stuck VGT actuator, a restricted air filter, or a tired turbo. Live boost data under load separates a leak from a worn turbo in one road test, and the two repairs cost very different money.
Blue smoke or oil consumption
Likely Path Oil passing turbo seals into the intake or exhaust, or a crankcase ventilation problem pushing oil where it does not belong. We check the drain line and crankcase pressure first, because a blocked drain kills new seals as fast as old ones.
Surging or overboost codes
Likely Path Sticking VGT vanes from soot buildup, a failing actuator, or wastegate control faults. Vane sticking can sometimes be cleaned and recalibrated rather than replaced. We test actuator sweep with live data before quoting a turbocharger replacement.
Metal noise then total power loss
Likely Path Wheel or bearing failure. The repair is a turbo, but the job is not done until we know why: oil starvation, debris ingestion, or overspeed. We also inspect the charge air cooler and intake for debris so the new turbo does not eat the old one’s shrapnel.
Oil in the intercooler or charge pipes
Likely Path Some oil film is normal from crankcase ventilation. Pooled oil points to turbo seals or excessive blowby. We measure rather than assume, because replacing a turbo for normal CCV film is money you did not need to spend.

We Test Before We Fix. We Fix Before It Leaves.

That sentence is the whole policy for every diesel turbocharger repair service we provide. Here is what it looks like in practice.

  1. 01

    Test the Whole Circuit

    Boost leak test on the charge pipes and intercooler, shaft play measured, actuator sweep checked with live data, oil supply and drain verified. The turbo is condemned by evidence or cleared by it.

  2. 02

    Repair, Rebuild, or Replace

    Sticking vanes cleaned and recalibrated where possible. Turbocharger rebuild service when the platform supports it and the condition warrants it. OEM turbocharger replacement when it does not. The failure cause gets fixed in the same job so the new unit survives.

  3. 03

    Verify Under Load

    Boost targets confirmed with live data on a loaded road test, oil lines checked hot, and no leaks at full pressure. Test-driven by Chris before the truck is released.

The Turbo Is Easy. The Why Is the Job.

Bolting on a new turbocharger takes an afternoon. Figuring out why the old one died is what keeps the new one alive. Oil starvation, debris, and overspeed all kill replacement turbos in weeks if nobody asks the question.

  • Failure Cause Required No turbo goes in until we know why the last one came out. Oil supply, drain, crankcase pressure, and intake path all inspected before diesel turbocharger replacement is quoted.
  • VGT Expertise Variable geometry turbos on modern diesels fail by sticking before they fail by breaking. Cleaning and recalibration is quoted when it is the honest fix.
  • OEM Standard OEM turbochargers and actuators when they exist, best available standard when they do not. No bargain-bin turbos at 120,000 rpm.
  • All Platforms Power Stroke, Duramax, Cummins, medium-duty, and heavy diesel including semis. Twin and compound setups in scope.

Common Questions

How do I know if my turbo actually needs replacing?
You usually cannot tell from symptoms alone, and neither can a code reader. Power loss, whistle, smoke, and boost codes are all shared by boost leaks, actuator faults, and oil supply problems. We measure shaft play, pressure-test the charge circuit, and watch live boost data under load. The turbo is condemned by evidence, not by symptom.
Can a turbo be rebuilt instead of replaced?
Sometimes. Sticking VGT vanes can often be cleaned and recalibrated, and some platforms support a proper turbocharger rebuild with new bearings and seals. Turbocharger rebuild cost is typically lower than full replacement when the housing and wheel are in good condition. When the wheel or housing is damaged, replacement is the honest answer. We quote the option that fits the actual condition, not the biggest ticket.
Why did my replacement turbo fail so quickly?
Almost always because the original failure cause was never fixed: a blocked oil drain, restricted oil supply, debris left in the charge air cooler, or excessive crankcase pressure. That is why we require a failure cause before installing anything. The new turbo only lives if the killer is gone. If the issue has progressed to engine damage, our diesel engine repair team handles that in the same shop.
Is it safe to drive with a failing turbo?
Briefly and gently, sometimes. A turbo shedding bearing material can send debris through the charge circuit and metal into the oil, and a seal failure can feed oil to the engine until it runs away. If you hear metal noise or see heavy smoke, stop driving it and call us first.
What does turbocharger repair cost in Midland, TX?
A boost leak repair, a vane cleaning, a turbocharger rebuild, and a full OEM turbocharger replacement are all very different numbers, which is exactly why we test first. You get an itemized written quote after diagnosis and before any work begins. Call (432) 557-6500 and tell us what the truck is doing.
Do you service turbochargers across the Permian Basin?
Yes. We serve Midland, Odessa, and the wider West Texas and Permian Basin region. For a full overview of our diesel services, see our diesel truck repair and engine rebuilds page.

Boost Down? Whistle Changed?

Get it tested before you buy a turbo it might not need. Evidence-based diagnosis, the failure cause fixed, and boost verified under load before release.