riksey90
New member
Hi guys,
I've owned my first BMW for 3 months now and am more than happy with it apart from a niggling problem I'm experiencing.
I have a 1994 E36 318is with an M50B25 non VANOS swap, the vehicle still has the 318is diff. I did not do the swap myself however I have just rebuilt the engine top to toe after a valve drop by the previous owner. I obviously have not driven the vehicle before the rebuild and have nothing to compare current fuel consumption figures to. On average through town I get between 15 and 17l/100km with about 12l/100km on the freeway. Along with hesitations, a few pops and farts from the exhaust and terrible hunting at idle.
Now, to the list of things I've done to remedy this problem;
Took my car through to a mechanic friend and hooked it up to his diagnostics. Diagnostics showed a dead MAF (My car utilizes the six pin hot wire type) so I managed to source a second hand Bosch unit in good working order, diagnostics test assured it was indeed in good working order. My car did not hunt at idle and accelerated smoothly without hesitation the moment I plugged the new MAF in. During the second diagnostics test the real time graphing showed an intermittent flat line from the TPS, a few jiggles of the plug and a stern talking to remedied this issue. After we were satisfied that the TPS was in good working order (tested resistance with multimeter) and wiring was in good shape I was more than excited to travel at least a little further on my hard earned cash that seemed to be disappearing into the petrol tank.
To my surprise my car was still consuming fuel at the same rate it was with a dead MAF and intermittent TPS fault which leads me to believe there is someone else hiding in the wood pile. Yesterday morning I pulled my MAF, throttle body, TPS and intake boot off. I inspected the boot for cracks, cleaned out the throttle body, tested the TPS again and cleaned out my MAF using a little paraffin, electrical spray and a lot of patience. I put it all back together and took my car for a spin. I could not believe how smoothly and hard it pulled all the way up the rev range, it honestly felt like a different car, not its usual gas guzzling, lethargic self. The fuel consumption indicator sat considerably lower down the scale while traveling my usual route (I tend to study it a lot so as to compare current fuel consumption while driving other vehicles along the same route) It really was a treat to drive and continued to reward me until I put it to bed last night.
This morning was an entirely different story. Started it up and tried to reverse out the carport and found I had to rev the nuts off of it to get it to attempt even the slightest incline across my garden. I know you have to be a little more understanding before the old girl reaches operating temp. but I've never experienced anything with this little enthusiasm to move, not even my hateful, carb'd Golf was this bad. The drive to Pick n' Pay was a confirmation of how terrible the power delivery actually was. Once back home I dried my eyes and set about this issue again. I replaced the main DME relay, studied all the ground straps, unplugged MAF and TPS sensors separately to listen for the dip in idle and got the multimeter out to confirm I hadn't damaged anything and yet my car is still a dog.
I have been fed many stories about it being the shorter ratio diff or even my freeflow exhaust system. No one can really answer me and when they do I get the usual, "Oh but backpressure" nonsense. Just for interest's sake I have the standard headers, two 50mm pipes all the way to the rear with two '2 in 2 out' resonators built by Powerflow as far as I know.
All sensors showed to be in good working condition when last on diagnostics (about a month ago) and the drivability of my car seems to be getting worse and worse and heavier on fuel. The car has covered about 2000km since full rebuild and oil changes have been done. I know a fresh engine would be slightly less efficient due to increased friction on new bearings and blow by until rings bed in properly but 17l/100km is ridiculous. Tight engines, diff ratios and exhausts can't explain the car driving beautifully yesterday and like a dog today.
I realize this is quite a lengthily post but I would really appreciate if it was read through and if anyone could help me.
Thanks in advance.
I've owned my first BMW for 3 months now and am more than happy with it apart from a niggling problem I'm experiencing.
I have a 1994 E36 318is with an M50B25 non VANOS swap, the vehicle still has the 318is diff. I did not do the swap myself however I have just rebuilt the engine top to toe after a valve drop by the previous owner. I obviously have not driven the vehicle before the rebuild and have nothing to compare current fuel consumption figures to. On average through town I get between 15 and 17l/100km with about 12l/100km on the freeway. Along with hesitations, a few pops and farts from the exhaust and terrible hunting at idle.
Now, to the list of things I've done to remedy this problem;
Took my car through to a mechanic friend and hooked it up to his diagnostics. Diagnostics showed a dead MAF (My car utilizes the six pin hot wire type) so I managed to source a second hand Bosch unit in good working order, diagnostics test assured it was indeed in good working order. My car did not hunt at idle and accelerated smoothly without hesitation the moment I plugged the new MAF in. During the second diagnostics test the real time graphing showed an intermittent flat line from the TPS, a few jiggles of the plug and a stern talking to remedied this issue. After we were satisfied that the TPS was in good working order (tested resistance with multimeter) and wiring was in good shape I was more than excited to travel at least a little further on my hard earned cash that seemed to be disappearing into the petrol tank.
To my surprise my car was still consuming fuel at the same rate it was with a dead MAF and intermittent TPS fault which leads me to believe there is someone else hiding in the wood pile. Yesterday morning I pulled my MAF, throttle body, TPS and intake boot off. I inspected the boot for cracks, cleaned out the throttle body, tested the TPS again and cleaned out my MAF using a little paraffin, electrical spray and a lot of patience. I put it all back together and took my car for a spin. I could not believe how smoothly and hard it pulled all the way up the rev range, it honestly felt like a different car, not its usual gas guzzling, lethargic self. The fuel consumption indicator sat considerably lower down the scale while traveling my usual route (I tend to study it a lot so as to compare current fuel consumption while driving other vehicles along the same route) It really was a treat to drive and continued to reward me until I put it to bed last night.
This morning was an entirely different story. Started it up and tried to reverse out the carport and found I had to rev the nuts off of it to get it to attempt even the slightest incline across my garden. I know you have to be a little more understanding before the old girl reaches operating temp. but I've never experienced anything with this little enthusiasm to move, not even my hateful, carb'd Golf was this bad. The drive to Pick n' Pay was a confirmation of how terrible the power delivery actually was. Once back home I dried my eyes and set about this issue again. I replaced the main DME relay, studied all the ground straps, unplugged MAF and TPS sensors separately to listen for the dip in idle and got the multimeter out to confirm I hadn't damaged anything and yet my car is still a dog.
I have been fed many stories about it being the shorter ratio diff or even my freeflow exhaust system. No one can really answer me and when they do I get the usual, "Oh but backpressure" nonsense. Just for interest's sake I have the standard headers, two 50mm pipes all the way to the rear with two '2 in 2 out' resonators built by Powerflow as far as I know.
All sensors showed to be in good working condition when last on diagnostics (about a month ago) and the drivability of my car seems to be getting worse and worse and heavier on fuel. The car has covered about 2000km since full rebuild and oil changes have been done. I know a fresh engine would be slightly less efficient due to increased friction on new bearings and blow by until rings bed in properly but 17l/100km is ridiculous. Tight engines, diff ratios and exhausts can't explain the car driving beautifully yesterday and like a dog today.
I realize this is quite a lengthily post but I would really appreciate if it was read through and if anyone could help me.
Thanks in advance.