e46 dual vanos maintenance kits

Hi,

I have done some research on the dual vanos. Based on what I read, it looks like the vanos is in need of a service. I saw service kits online, but nothing locally.

Does anyone know where to get them, and how much they are?
 

DieselFan

Honorary ///Member
Hi,

I have done some research on the dual vanos. Based on what I read, it looks like the vanos is in need of a service. I saw service kits online, but nothing locally.

Does anyone know where to get them, and how much they are?

Moranor on the forum sells them. However depending on what vanos you have you may not be able to do it yourself as you will need special tools. I think it is only the single vanos that you can do yourself. PM him for more infor or perhaps he will see this thread.
 

Solo Man

Well-known member
Both the single and double vanos is diy. Did both in the last 6 months. Double vanos is actually less complicated. The single vanos needs a locking plate (home made one worked for us) and a thin drill bit to lock the cam chain tensioner down was all we needed. Did it in about 4 hours as first time always takes longer. Contact Axis (Moranor i think) on the forum for prices (double vanos was about R800 iirc) Single vanos i bought a few years back in London - cannot remember the price but could be about R400 locally.
 

Peter@AEW

BMWFanatics Advertiser
Official Advertiser
scheetness. is it worth while doing the guides as well since it going to be the same effort

For chain guide rails and tensioner you will need to strip the front of the engine.

The effort becomes ten fold.

The I6 does not typically suffer from guide issues as the chains are relatively short and well supported.
On high K cars there will be chain stretch but nothing so serious that the chain deflection rail cannot accommodate.

Do the seals you will thank yourself as will your car
 

GPGrobler

///Member
moranor@axis said:
what engine/car is it for :rollsmile:

Hi,

m54b22 / e46 320i facelift. Might also be looking at one for my boet's e39 328i

Hehe, seems like everyone with the 320i has the same issue, just a question, what kind of performance "issues" do you have with your VANOS acting up? I seem to be revving the ... out of the engine with no real pulling power, especially on steepish hills.
 

moranor@axis

///Member
Official Advertiser
GPGrobler said:
moranor@axis said:
what engine/car is it for :rollsmile:

Hi,

m54b22 / e46 320i facelift. Might also be looking at one for my boet's e39 328i

Hehe, seems like everyone with the 320i has the same issue, just a question, what kind of performance "issues" do you have with your VANOS acting up? I seem to be revving the ... out of the engine with no real pulling power, especially on steepish hills.

on this engine you will loose low RPM torque if you feel the need to Rev over 3000 all the time just to get it moving then its probably seals causing this :)
 

Philip Foglar

///Member
With my Wife's car, the throttle response was affected and as such so was the low revs. Meaning, you would often bog down on pull off unless you were revving the engine, but if for some reason something delayed you for a millisecond while doing this (car in front hesitating for instance) the engine revs would drop again and you end end up bogging down again! This also affected gear changes and of course this also made the engine prone to stall quite easily, especially when reversing in parking areas etc.

To be honest, I don't think that the seals on this car were even as bad as they could be compared to the extent of the typical symptoms, but with that said, there is a huge improvement. I drive the car very seldom, so for me the issues were always a problem and I would battle with the throttle response and bogging issue - performance was not "bad" even at lower revs, just the instances when you were pulling off or manoeuvring the vehicle in parking areas. But after the new seals were fitted, completely different and a pleasure to drive!

What confirmed this all for me was the fact that I had not told my Wife about what the expected improvements or the finer details of DIY etc, but when she took the car for the test drive (had her drive since she knows the car), I eventually asked her if she notices anything different. Immediately she said that she could feel that the throttle felt much better and that it pulled stronger at low revs. She even said that she has to now "unlearn her bad habits" because of the way the engine used to behave, and even when I drove it I could feel the difference and that how I would previously have driven the car to overcome these issues would then cause problems now. So really, it's like driving a different car! And definitely for the better!
 

GPGrobler

///Member
Thanks Philip,

I cannot wait to get those new seals in, been "bogged down" at work lately, but will make a plan to get to the bank soon ...


About the fuel consumption, has that improved as well since fitting the seals? I suppose it would because the car will have more power at lower revs?
 
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