N20 4 cylinder turbo

Nereidi

New member
 New Jersey
After recently purchasing a 2013 Z4 with the 4 cylinder turbo engine, I came across an article about problems with early plastic failure on chain timing belt tensioner. The car has 56,000 miles and has consistent service records performed on schedule at a BMW dealer over the years. The car has a six speed manual and runs great. How common is this problem and how concerned should I be? The cost to remedy the issue is very high.
 
Don't have any experience with the N20 but was looking into the issue when deciding pre-lci (N20) vs lci (B48) for my f3x and the forums made it seem like it is a legitimate issue for N20s. At 56,000 I don't think its something to do asap but I'd keep an eye on it.
 
I’ve also got a 2013 4 banger, the timing chain rail was changed late into 2013, around October if memory serves me correctly.. so if you have one of these made after that date, it’s a non issue. Mines from before that date, so I guess it’s an issue.. am I worried about it, nope. I think that if bmw serviced your car, they would have probably done it already, esp as yours is a new car in 2013. If you’ve got an earlier one, and your out of warranty when the notam came up, than it’s possible not been done previously..

Sounds like all these bimmer engines have some kind of Achilles heel … lol.. how about rod bearings? No one talks about that with n54/n20 engines?
 
After recently purchasing a 2013 Z4 with the 4 cylinder turbo engine, I came across an article about problems with early plastic failure on chain timing belt tensioner. The car has 56,000 miles and has consistent service records performed on schedule at a BMW dealer over the years. The car has a six speed manual and runs great. How common is this problem and how concerned should I be? The cost to remedy the issue is very high.
I also don’t have any experience of the n20 engine but from what I’ve read the BMW recommended oil change intervals are too long and should ideally be changed every 6000 miles, as yours has only done 53000 in 13 years then the oil change intervals could be relatively low, you can also check if the tensioner guide has been changed by removing the oil filler cap and looking at the colour of the guide, I believe the old guide was orange/brown and the new one is white.
 
oh! that's interesting , ill do that. I gotta say, punchy little things for a 4 banger. I had an absolute hoot today.. the interior is rather crappy plastics though..
 
Had a few N20 powered E89's (2012, 2013 & 2015 MY's) and always enjoyed them but I was always concerned the plastic chain guides were going to fail and was constantly checking the chain tension.

The more time I spent on the forums the more concerned I became and it doesn't take long to find examples that have failed once you start looking.


From what I read only cars produced after March 2015 had the revised guides and stories abound about sudden failures across all levels of mileage. In addition to the point mentioned above regarding oil change intervals I've been told the stop / start functionality also puts undue stress on the engine.

The other thing to note is that there are several iterations of the timing chain bolt - on at least one of the cars I owned I had this changed to the latest iteration as a preventative step.
 
As GWest44 stated eloquently…yes it’s a problem that will be increasingly probable..the problem is you just don’t know what the past history and FBMWSH in this case is piss poor…one guy in the US went over 500k miles with no issues but he was changing his oil every 6k with no stop start..

So I’d add £1.5k to put a fresh 2015+ cam subsystem in if I was buying one and it was a keeper..
 
BMW seem to have lost the plot with making reliable cam-chains around 2006.

Mrs Tidy bought an R56 Mini Cooper just in time for Christmas 2006 and a couple of years ago it needed a new cam-chain at less than 75K miles. Last month I had a later Cooper SD Countryman from my Indy that he bought cheap after a cam-chain failure at 93K miles on the N47 engine. That was one of the reasons I unloaded my 2007 123d with the N47 on 81K miles. Still it wasn't all bad as that's when I bought my first Z4!

Sadly I suspect it's more a case of "when" than "if".
 
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