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E30 325 Hints- loose elbow, worn sensor wire, & 'black hole'
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Subject: E30 325 Hints- loose elbow, worn sensor wire, & 'black hole'
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From: "M Barry Ritchey" <[email protected]>
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Date: 10 Sep 1996 14:34:18 -0700
Three items to watch out for in your E30 325:
1. Press-fit elbow coming loose at the thermostat housing area.
Just recently, I serviced the cooling system (new hoses, thermostat,
and coolant) in my '90 325iX. As I was pulling off the small hose that
runs from the thermostat housing to the throttle body, I noticed that
this hose was moving the elbow (about 1/4" ID) that is a press fit
into the thermostat housing on the cylinder head. The original owner
had mentioned a problem in this area, when I asked about the bailing
wire tied around the thermostat cover area. This elbow had popped-out
a few years ago and was 'permatex'd' back-in by the original owner
(his wording). The wire was in place as a backup. The BMW dealer where
I purchased my used '90 325iX, said that there was 'no coolant system
problem' in that area (they just snipped off the wire and looked for
leaks). The whole area was fairly encrusted with green dried
antifreeze.
The fix - I cleaned-up the original 'goop' fix from both the elbow
and bore in the head with solvent and emery paper. I was lucky that
there was no corrosion. I roughened up both surfaces (to give 'tooth'
for the epoxy to come) with very corse sandpaper. To make a slightly
tighter fit (you could seat the elbow with just finger pressure), a
center punch was used to put dimples on the male surface of the elbow.
This made for more of an interference fit. And finally, a medium time
curing epoxy was used to totally seal and bond the elbow in place. An
aluminum filled epoxy would have been better (definetly avoid
'5-minute' class epoxies for any repair involving water contact).
The next time you E30 owners are working around the thermostat
area, give that elbow a yank to see if it's tight. If it comes out or
rotates, you have potential quarter-inch hole in your cooling system.
The result could be more serious than lost coolant...
2. Rubbing Engine Reference Sensor
During the above mentioned coolant system maintenance, I also replaced
the engine reference sensor (the combination engine speed & TDC
pick-up that reads off the toothed ring on the front of the engine).
Mine had worn thru the outer insulation (no big deal) and about 80%
thru one of the two conductors (timebomb). It seems the last person to
change out the timing belt, failed to route the sensor thru the two
little clips (and/or broke them) that keep the sensor wiring harness
from rubbing on the waterpump pulley.
There are two little plastic clips that fasten to the front of the
timing cover. The clips are a little on the lame side. The clips also
hold another cable (engine oil level I believe?) away from the pulley.
And incorrectly in my instance, the spark-plug tach lead. The correct
route for the tach wire (senses off the sparkplug lead) is over the
distributor, instead of under.
I rerouted my sensor cable to not even go thru the little plastic
clips. I routed it along the metal radiator hose pipe and used cable
ties to fasten.
Check those plastic clips. They're cheap (under $2). Your engine
won't run if the engine reference cable gets sawed thru. Actually, the
motor will run (according to a trained BMW mechanic), but it won't
restart if the sensor wires gets cut.
3. Missing timing belt cover.
The same 'mechanic' that caused the above sensor wire problem,
probably caused this one too. There is a rubber cover that just snaps
over the front of the cast aluminum timing belt housing. This cover is
on the left side of the engine (intake side) and protects the timing
belt from the elements. Mine was missing. The $12 (US) part is fairly
easy to install. Just make sure it snaps over the front portion of the
cover housing. With the cover missing, you're probably taking more of
a chance in creating a potential 'black hole' for dropped nuts and
bolts (None of the fasteners that I ever drop in the engine bay ever
hit the ground. Where do they go?) than a problem with keeping out
dust and water.
Barry Ritchey
CCA#-134069
'90 325iX