It's been cropping up from time to time in the 'M market watch' thread, but does anyone know the facts about the running in service?
Presumably these are factory filled oils that aid the bedding in process, be that gears/cogs/bearing/rings.
BMW will know that owners will be bringing their cars in for this first service sometime around 1200 miles but are likely to be a little early or late so is their a written amount of tolerance? Is this partly a money making exercise for BMW or a means to check that the car is sound before people start thrashing them (avoiding negative publicity)? If not then what (if any) damage is actually caused by leaving the fluids in too long? Now the cars are ten years and tens of thousands of miles older are we actually seeing any problems from cars with running in service abnormalities? Presumably the fluids used are lubricants after all (not sand!)? Should this be a genuine concern for buyers of an M in otherwise good condition except for a late/early running in service or would you not worry?
:?
The definitive answer appeared on about page 4 or 5 and is repeated here for ease of searching:
I've had a definitive answer back from BMW and they have given me permission to quote this publicly. It confirms what Babw said and hopefully clears this up for ever more....
Dear Mr Smitheram
Thank you for your patience whilst we have been waiting to hear back from our contacts at the factory. We are pleased to confirm that the oil for rear axle differential, gearbox and engine are all the same as the oils used for replacement servicing.
LD39658 E85 M Roadster
Production date: 24-Aug-2006
Engine - S54
- SAE 10W-60
Gearbox - GS6-37BZ
- MTF-LT-2
Rear axle
BMW MSP/A Synthetic
No running-in lubricants are used in these components between build and 1,200 miles service.
Building upon this information, we are mindful that your initial concern was regarding the long-term impact of cars missing or having late 1,200 mile services. Our ‘best-practice’ recommendation would always be for prospective owners to look for vehicles with a service history that rigorously applies to the recommended schedules.
The 1,200 mile service for M-Product is designed in order to remove any deposits within engine / gearbox / differential that occur naturally with the bedding in of new components. Given M vehicles can and do operate at higher loads, temperatures and speeds compared to ‘normal’ Series BMW’s, effects of missing the 1200 mile service could have a detrimental effect on component longevity. It is perhaps worth highlighting that although BMW recommends service completion at 1,200 miles, a grace period for warranty purposes can be applied mindful of the fact that customers may wish to complete running-in during a vacation or similar. That grace period is +500 miles (1,700 for a maximum permissible). No grace for warranty is provided beyond that mileage.
Kind regards,
(Name Supplied)
BMW
United Kingdom
BMW Genius
My thoughts, for what they are worth:
An early or late running in service could indicate an uncaring first owner, but at least we have reassurance from BMW that their are no specific bedding in oils in our/my S54 (as confirmed by Babw and suspected by myself and many others). There could be metallic particles in the oils during the first 1200 miles, but I would have thought an oil filter would catch these from the engine oil, leaving just the gearbox and diff with bits potentially floating about. Most cars now are probably not warrantied by BMW anymore, so unless you were thinking of having a BMW warranty or p/x with a main dealer I don't think the grace period will be an issue for many.
Only the first owner will know how they drove the car in that first 1200 miles, they may have been too gentle, too harsh, thrashed from cold, who knows?
An early or late running in service wouldn't put me buying off a car providing other factors such as servicing and wear were as expected, 5+ owners and 10 years later a late first service is probably of minor consequence now.
Cheers, Dave
Presumably these are factory filled oils that aid the bedding in process, be that gears/cogs/bearing/rings.
BMW will know that owners will be bringing their cars in for this first service sometime around 1200 miles but are likely to be a little early or late so is their a written amount of tolerance? Is this partly a money making exercise for BMW or a means to check that the car is sound before people start thrashing them (avoiding negative publicity)? If not then what (if any) damage is actually caused by leaving the fluids in too long? Now the cars are ten years and tens of thousands of miles older are we actually seeing any problems from cars with running in service abnormalities? Presumably the fluids used are lubricants after all (not sand!)? Should this be a genuine concern for buyers of an M in otherwise good condition except for a late/early running in service or would you not worry?
:?
The definitive answer appeared on about page 4 or 5 and is repeated here for ease of searching:
I've had a definitive answer back from BMW and they have given me permission to quote this publicly. It confirms what Babw said and hopefully clears this up for ever more....
Dear Mr Smitheram
Thank you for your patience whilst we have been waiting to hear back from our contacts at the factory. We are pleased to confirm that the oil for rear axle differential, gearbox and engine are all the same as the oils used for replacement servicing.
LD39658 E85 M Roadster
Production date: 24-Aug-2006
Engine - S54
- SAE 10W-60
Gearbox - GS6-37BZ
- MTF-LT-2
Rear axle
BMW MSP/A Synthetic
No running-in lubricants are used in these components between build and 1,200 miles service.
Building upon this information, we are mindful that your initial concern was regarding the long-term impact of cars missing or having late 1,200 mile services. Our ‘best-practice’ recommendation would always be for prospective owners to look for vehicles with a service history that rigorously applies to the recommended schedules.
The 1,200 mile service for M-Product is designed in order to remove any deposits within engine / gearbox / differential that occur naturally with the bedding in of new components. Given M vehicles can and do operate at higher loads, temperatures and speeds compared to ‘normal’ Series BMW’s, effects of missing the 1200 mile service could have a detrimental effect on component longevity. It is perhaps worth highlighting that although BMW recommends service completion at 1,200 miles, a grace period for warranty purposes can be applied mindful of the fact that customers may wish to complete running-in during a vacation or similar. That grace period is +500 miles (1,700 for a maximum permissible). No grace for warranty is provided beyond that mileage.
Kind regards,
(Name Supplied)
BMW
United Kingdom
BMW Genius
My thoughts, for what they are worth:
An early or late running in service could indicate an uncaring first owner, but at least we have reassurance from BMW that their are no specific bedding in oils in our/my S54 (as confirmed by Babw and suspected by myself and many others). There could be metallic particles in the oils during the first 1200 miles, but I would have thought an oil filter would catch these from the engine oil, leaving just the gearbox and diff with bits potentially floating about. Most cars now are probably not warrantied by BMW anymore, so unless you were thinking of having a BMW warranty or p/x with a main dealer I don't think the grace period will be an issue for many.
Only the first owner will know how they drove the car in that first 1200 miles, they may have been too gentle, too harsh, thrashed from cold, who knows?
An early or late running in service wouldn't put me buying off a car providing other factors such as servicing and wear were as expected, 5+ owners and 10 years later a late first service is probably of minor consequence now.
Cheers, Dave