Thanks for the additional pointers. I've added more images to my original post.I missed one important aspect as your images were not sequential and complete, I missed that the 15 degree deviation was on the leak test, not timing checks.
15 degree deviation is massive and can be several things
Low pressure
Worn seals
Worn solenoid block seats
Clogged solenoid block avoiding proper oil chaneling
These units are very basic and clever in principle and the oil can only flow in few pathways.
If you couple your slowish adjustments times with your leakage failure, I would look at the things above.
Cleaning the solenoid block is easy and you do not need to take the cam cover apart, so start there.
If after clean you still have the issue then seals maybe worn, what is the mileage on the car, and how clean was you head? If I showed how mine looks you would dare to think is a new engine, original owners followed BMW recommendations for oil change and that leads to sludge build up that can bloc oil passages.
As very well said above, DO NOT, use S62 springs nor exchange your oil disc with some other unit.
Lastly, do a pressure test before any serious mechanical work.
Low pressure and leakage can result in noise as the VANOS cannot hold cam position. So it makes sense that a leaky unit can make more noise as the cams timing shift back and forth as pressure leaks and vanos solenoids compensate for that, if this happens, the oil disc rocks back and forth on the tabs making noise.
Thanks Andy. It has been driving me mad tbh. Very grateful for your inputAll this thread has proved is that there's lot's of different opinions, and no-one knows *for sure* exactly what is going on.
I've read all the replies on this thread and some of it doesn't add up with my own experience, some does and some I've not tested like pressure for example (still no explanation as to why pressure would cause an issue with the exhaust side and not the inlet side and vice versa so I'm doubting that personally).
Worth noting that not everyone has the tools / space / expertise to do all this testing / VANOS work so it's all money spent at a garage messing about.
Good luck with whatever you decide to do Steve, don't drive yourself mad over it instead of enjoying the car, it drives well so I'd leave alone if your happy the big failure points are sorted. Bet you wish you'd never asked!
Quick one Steve out of interest, is your VANOS unit the original unit as in never been replaced / exchanged?
Thanks Andy. It has been driving me mad tbh. Very grateful for your input![]()
I believe it to be original and there is nothing in the history file to suggest otherwise. Its also only covered 24K miles.All this thread has proved is that there's lot's of different opinions, and no-one knows *for sure* exactly what is going on.
I've read all the replies on this thread and some of it doesn't add up with my own experience, some does and some I've not tested like pressure for example (still no explanation as to why pressure would cause an issue with the exhaust side and not the inlet side and vice versa so I'm doubting that personally).
Worth noting that not everyone has the tools / space / expertise to do all this testing / VANOS work so it's all money spent at a garage messing about.
Good luck with whatever you decide to do Steve, don't drive yourself mad over it instead of enjoying the car, it drives well so I'd leave alone if your happy the big failure points are sorted. Bet you wish you'd never asked!
Quick one Steve out of interest, is your VANOS unit the original unit as in never been replaced / exchanged?
I believe it to be original and there is nothing in the history file to suggest otherwise. Its also only covered 24K miles.
Sounds like normal VANOS noise when cold IMO. Pretty sure mine sounds a bit like that, tends to make a bit of noise when cold due to the thick oil. If it goes away when it's warmed up a bit I wouldn't be worrying about it. I would go out to mine and start it up and show you but it's having a rest after a, busy summer let's say! Edit: I've listened again and almost certain mine sounds exactly the same.
You can do anti rattle kits but I really wouldn't bother, my advice for a while now has been don't touch the VANOS if you don't need to, can go down an unnecessary and expensive rabbit hole with it.
If the bolts have been upgraded with the newer versions and the tabs aren't broken then that's the main parts that can cause issues. If you were doing that work then changing out the seals isn't a bad idea either but the VANOS test you've done can give you good idea of health. (Most of the pics you've posted by the way are just the bits before the actual test result, may as well delete those as it makes it a bit of a chore scrolling through them!).
Interestingly the leak test is out of spec on the intake side on yours, mine's out of spec on the exhaust sideThat's got nothing to do with the noise by the way, mine's not always been out of spec and has always had a bit of a noise from cold, just interesting to note! Rest of the VANOS tests all good?
Noise > I wouldn't worry. Leak test I wouldn't worry either. You've got no error codes, car runs and pulls fine, tabs aren't broken and bolts aren't loose / backing out. Drive and enjoy. It's not going to grenade itself if the bits mentioned are fine.
Source for this info, VANOS refurb, VANOS replaced with a refurb unit, lots of money spent and lots of specialist advice along the way (Redish, Everything M3's, Spartan Auto). And a lot of money wasted
Attached my VANOS test results from last year for reference if it helps:
View attachment 291493View attachment 291494View attachment 291495View attachment 291496View attachment 291497View attachment 291498View attachment 291499View attachment 291500
I admit there is some comfort in knowing you are not alone but its like an itch that I can't leave.Yup almost certainly original then, interesting. I’ve never actually seen another car be out of tolerance on the leak test like mine, yours is the first so at least I’m not the only one!
Hi Craig, I hear you mate, but as said earlier, its like an itch that I can't leave alone!Steve,I would completely agree with Andy....the noise sounded fairly normal to me.
Thanks, checking the Vanos pressure is my first/next step. Hopefully, this weekend!Is 115 bar at operating temp. To adjust the valve you do it at lower oil temps to set it at 115, that said, when hot, if you have lower pressure, adjusting the valve changes nothing as you are not reaching its setpoint. If you want to make sure is working or set correctly, connect the gauge and start the engine, very sure u will see 115, the key is, does it keep 115 when hot?
....its like an itch that I can't leave alone!
Well, the bottom line is that if you can't pass a VANOS test, your unit has a problem. Every healthy unit will pass. Mine was in rough shape and still passed all the tests before I rebuilt it.All this thread has proved is that there's lot's of different opinions, and no-one knows *for sure* exactly what is going on.
I've read all the replies on this thread and some of it doesn't add up with my own experience, some does and some I've not tested like pressure for example (still no explanation as to why pressure would cause an issue with the exhaust side and not the inlet side and vice versa so I'm doubting that personally).
Worth noting that not everyone has the tools / space / expertise to do all this testing / VANOS work so it's all money spent at a garage messing about.
Good luck with whatever you decide to do Steve, don't drive yourself mad over it instead of enjoying the car, it drives well so I'd leave alone if your happy the big failure points are sorted. Bet you wish you'd never asked!
Quick one Steve out of interest, is your VANOS unit the original unit as in never been replaced / exchanged?
Well yeah, obviously, when did I say it didn't have a 'problem'? If you read the whole thread my point is what issue is it causing (none I can tell) and how much more time and money do I put in to a problem that has no noticeable effect?Well, the bottom line is that if you can't pass a VANOS test, your unit has a problem. Every healthy unit will pass. Mine was in rough shape and still passed all the tests before I rebuilt it.
beisansystems.com
I think the perspective of giving a blind eye to an issue just because it drives normal is not best, it can be right for you, but that does not make it right from an engineering point of view.
Yes, I have to agree it is quiet, especially since I adjusted the valve clearances but it wasn't that noisy before to be honest.I do have a z4m but this story is not from that but from the m52tu I had in my z3. After adding cat cams we had a similar sounding rattle we could not find. Vanos rattle kit applied. No change. New factory vanos applied. No change. New m52tu chain tensioner applied. No change. S54 chain tensioner used. Noise gone.
Perhaps a cheap and easy change is a new chain tensioner. It's a simple job. The only thing against this advice is that you say your noise goes away when the oil thins out. If the tensioner is suspect it usually gets worse with thin oil as the spring is assisted by hydraulic pressure.
And by the way I think your engine is quiet for an s54. They are busy sounding engines. Yours sounds just like mine. Although if you'd are failing vanos tests that can't be good. Unusual at such low miles. Did the car stand for ages?
Thanks Sajk.When I fitted the s54 tensioner to the m52tu it was quite difficult to compress the new one. It was a mission to compress it enough for the threads to take when fitting it. That's all I can offer by way of comparison.