stephenjansen
New member
Hi ya'll BMWfanatics!
I've joined the club on this one, hehe. My baby is in the shop for a turbo service, and 'other' repairs. As fate would have it my wife's car's turbo also decided to give it up (VW 1.9 Tdi). The VW is far worse than my car's; the VW's turbo shaft came appart and sent the exhaust impeller down the exhaust pipe smack in to the catalytic converter.
Anyhow, the guy at the repair shop removed the BMW's turbo (he is working on both our cars), and says that he cant find fault with the turbo, visually that is. He says the shaft play is well within tollerance and moving parts appear in good condition.
My question is; would you advise that he disassembles the turbo to check the oil seals too, and whatever else can be checked when appart?
Further more, the actual cause of the white plume of smoke may not be due to turbo failure, but far worse, exhaust manifolds 1 and 2 are soaked with oil, an initial compression test revealed that both these cylinders have slightly lower compression than their neighbors 3 and 4.
This problem was only discovered once the turbo, together with exhaust manifold were removed from the engine. Now the repair shop guy wants to know if I will approve removing the cylinder head to have a peak inside the combustion part of the enigne. I would imagine this is a no-brainer and he should open it up. What do you suggest? Could it be that the oil seal on the turbo gave in and sent oil the wrong way up the exhaust manifold when I tried several times to restart the engine, although laws of physics reject this idea whole heartedly
Your thoughts on this will be highly appreciated.
I've joined the club on this one, hehe. My baby is in the shop for a turbo service, and 'other' repairs. As fate would have it my wife's car's turbo also decided to give it up (VW 1.9 Tdi). The VW is far worse than my car's; the VW's turbo shaft came appart and sent the exhaust impeller down the exhaust pipe smack in to the catalytic converter.
Anyhow, the guy at the repair shop removed the BMW's turbo (he is working on both our cars), and says that he cant find fault with the turbo, visually that is. He says the shaft play is well within tollerance and moving parts appear in good condition.
My question is; would you advise that he disassembles the turbo to check the oil seals too, and whatever else can be checked when appart?
Further more, the actual cause of the white plume of smoke may not be due to turbo failure, but far worse, exhaust manifolds 1 and 2 are soaked with oil, an initial compression test revealed that both these cylinders have slightly lower compression than their neighbors 3 and 4.
This problem was only discovered once the turbo, together with exhaust manifold were removed from the engine. Now the repair shop guy wants to know if I will approve removing the cylinder head to have a peak inside the combustion part of the enigne. I would imagine this is a no-brainer and he should open it up. What do you suggest? Could it be that the oil seal on the turbo gave in and sent oil the wrong way up the exhaust manifold when I tried several times to restart the engine, although laws of physics reject this idea whole heartedly
Your thoughts on this will be highly appreciated.