Good Day All,
So, I am an idiot. I really really wanted an X164. I wanted diesel to be cheaper on fuel because now it is like a 30 cent difference, not to mention that diesel gets you further. I read a LOT of forum posts bashing OM642 on GLs and MLs, and that gassers are in the end cheaper to maintain, so yes I get it. But I still really wanted a GL350. I figured that if I baby it and change oil frequently, delete EGR and Adblue (if I get 2012) then it will all be fine. 3 weeks ago I fulfilled my dream. The car was pretty cheap due to EGR having failed. Score! not like I was keeping the EGR anyway.
I got duped obviously, I knew I was lying to myself. In that there was a lot more wrong than just EGR. But I am still happy so far. I have been following this thread since before I bought it (have been searching for the perfect one since Dec last year). Now I feel like I can contribute and I want to ask for advice as well. So I joined this forum =)
I am at a point where the heads are off, the block is still in the engine bay. I will explain how this came to be below if anyone cares for a read. First off though to address the OP and FKUA:
FKUA, I am pretty sure that is the air filter box sensor. your wire harness looks a bit different than mine. The connector that looks like yours is not bundled under that plastic cover for me, and i labelled it as air box connector. Only one side has it on my car, I think driver side.
WAE, I have been in touch with a programmer in states by name of Vladimir. He has been very responsive to me. I found him through youtube. He can delete EGR, DPF, Adblue, disable swirl flap motor and provide a stage 1 tune in form of OBDII module. Best part is that all the changes are reversible. I bought the module to delete adblue, swirl flaps and EGR (he said it is no problem that EGR is currently non functional). The module came in quick, but I have not had a chance to test it myself due to HEADS OFF... I did research his work prior and have found many people on MB and Sprinter forums that commended his work. If you want I can get you his e-mail. For adblue delete, your tank has to be full as per his instructions, fyi, and for dpf, after deleting it programmatically, you will obviously have to physically remove the actual can.
As short of a summary as I can make it of my own venture into this. I am not a mechanic, my wrenching experience is capped at changing steering pump (twice, dont get cheap chinese steering pumps people), oil cooler and filter housing gaskets on w164 ML350, and cleaning carbs on a 2002 Honda Shadow.
1. Buy dream car.
2. know its pitfalls, need to clean air intakes prior to use, delete EGR...
3. Prior to starting the wrenching, show off car to my 3 year old the day after purchase. Car sat for a night. Kiddo wants to try starting it. Of course, little buddy, press the button!
4. Car sounds like T34 rolling off the factory in Leningrad for a few seconds. I have done enough research to recognize this noise. Add timing chain to things to fix before driving.
5. Pulling things apart to get to intake manifolds, come across a few things that are not alright:
a. bolt that holds charge air pipe from turbo (doubles up as plastic cover support) stripped
b. batwing to turbo and PCV to batwing gaskets not gasketing, oil dropping all over the valley.
c. charge air pipe to turbo gasket (green) torn, also not gasketing. Can see oil sprayed back from it.
6. Got to intake manifolds. WAE, you think yours were bad? HA! one of my ports was maybe half of the opening it should be. Driver side especially. Don't remember where I read it (maybe even here), but the driver side is biased, I guess because the pipe coming out of the cooler is pointed in that direction. But to make you feel better, I was picking up some parts at dealer, and showed them pictures... They said to me what I just said to you... "You think that is bad? HA!" Apparently they have seen even worse than mine, and not just on a couple occasions. I spent 2 days cleaning both sides. I filled the driver side with purple power, scraped inside with some dentist scraper tools and let it sit over night with the intake closed off. In the morning, when I went to dump the mixture out of the intake port (out of the side), the liquid would not flow out, it was so clogged!
7. Manifolds are as clean as can be. While I wait for my mate to help me do the chain, i decide to clean the air intake ports in the heads, because they are just as clogged as the manifold. This is where problem starts (because I am not mechanic and was ignorant). I just went to town cleaning.
8. Remove injectors and valve cover on right (passenger) side in preparation for timing chain job. Also remove injectors on driver side to avoid compression release as we feed the chain. 1 injector (#2) a little seized, another (#5) black death - so another issue found now. Slide hammer makes it work.
9. Buddy arrives. break old chain, attach new chain, start feeding. Chain jumps. Figure a tooth is not too big a deal, and will take off other cover to time when all is said and done (buddy had to leave soon). continue on. Run into resistance cranking engine, get through it, chain skips again.
10. White flag. Buddy, thanks for the help good night, I will reset, stack up. Second cover comes off. Sprockets off. Pull the chain through. align all marks. While pulling through, notice resistance at TDC... No injectors, no camshafts, should be no resistance right? It is late, don't even think about it while I am doing it. Realize it at night when I am drinking tea.
11. Think I bent a valve in passenger head (determined by pushing on the valves in a stupid way, can explain if you want a laugh). Pull head off. All valves intact and fine.
12. 2 guesses at this point. problem with bearing, orrrr remember step #7? When I cleaned the intakes I did not pay attention to valve position. quite possible some of that garbage fell into cylinders, and synched between piston and head when #5 reaches TDC (corresponds to tdc on flywheel). Fingers crossed for #2
13. Head off, everything spins! Yay!
14. While this far, i decide to have heads washed, then guides checked for wear. Never done this before. Take heads to one shop. Heads come back scratched ARRRRR. Second shop rectifies issue, tells me that guides are good. Trust this shop much more. Shop is clean and neat, pers friendly and eager to discuss issues.
15. Some valve springs are worn (rubbed) on one side. Try to source new springs... NO ONE HAS SPRINGS. I found everything else in valvetrain on idparts, fcpeur and germanparts, but not simple springs. Machine shop cannot source them. Dealer is my last resort. None in Canada, waiting for SPRINGS to be shipped from Germany at this point
16. Clean mating surface of the block, the cylinders and piston heads. Mine were as gross as yours, with quite a bit of gunk built up. Seems like someone "cleaned" valves my stupid way and got away with it before, but all the stuff that fell in got compacted and stuck to the pistons.
Here is where I am at. I have also polished the injector mating surface, and will be polishing up the injector seat and lapping the valves.
My 2 questions to you guys.
1. Since I am this far, I want to check that bearings are okay. Perhaps catch a problem early on and get away with it. Someone mentioned a method. I want to clarify to make sure I am understanding the process. I press on the piston as it starts going down? If the bearing is worn, then I will feel the piston move down slightly. Is that correct?
2. I am prepping all the bolt holes for the heads to go back on when I get valve springs. A few of these have a lot of oil in them. Can someone confirm if some bolts go all the way through into oil pan? I will get my camera out otherwise.
best of luck WAE and FKUA, I will keep following this thread, and hope that I do not need to pull engine out, at least not yet.
If anyone is interested I do have a couple pics of the gross intake manifolds and what my pistons looked like. I do not want to lengthen the thread unnecessarily otherwise!