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FiveOJester
08-28-2005, 12:56 AM
Hello All,

I'm pretty new to BMWs (this is my first and I've had it for 3 months) so I'm not sure if this sound is normal or not. I get a pretty distinct whistle at idle. Not really sure if it remains beyond idle because the rest of the normal BMW engine noises (I think the cam chains that make the whirring/whining noise as you rev) either drown it out or it goes away.

I pulled off the plastic engine cover and rubber insulator and placed my ear in the vicinity of the intake and was able to hear a definite whistle which is not really that loud. The car runs fine and throws no error codes in a stomp test. It idles a little rough, but about what I'd expect from a high-revving, high compression engine. A bit rougher when cold. Is this an indication that the intake gaskets or PCV (diverter) valve might be leaking or am I just being overly paranoid and hearing a normal BMW sound?

P.S. While I was poking around under the hood I noticed some oil below the intake on the front driverside. Looks like I've got some kind of leak so I might be taking off the intake anyways.

Kalevera
08-28-2005, 01:28 AM
Hello All,

I'm pretty new to BMWs (this is my first and I've had it for 3 months) so I'm not sure if this sound is normal or not. I get a pretty distinct whistle at idle. Not really sure if it remains beyond idle because the rest of the normal BMW engine noises (I think the cam chains that make the whirring/whining noise as you rev) either drown it out or it goes away.

I pulled off the plastic engine cover and rubber insulator and placed my ear in the vicinity of the intake and was able to hear a definite whistle which is not really that loud. The car runs fine and throws no error codes in a stomp test. It idles a little rough, but about what I'd expect from a high-revving, high compression engine. A bit rougher when cold. Is this an indication that the intake gaskets or PCV (diverter) valve might be leaking or am I just being overly paranoid and hearing a normal BMW sound?

P.S. While I was poking around under the hood I noticed some oil below the intake on the front driverside. Looks like I've got some kind of leak so I might be taking off the intake anyways.
Read the threads by Been-Jammin' in the past day or so -- there's a lot of info in them to be found on this problem. I'd suspect a vacuum leak somewhere in the air delivery part of the intake on the whistling sound. Oil could be from a timing cover (unlikely) or the oil return line under the intake (again, see the posts by "benjamin" and the various replies -- Bill posted a picture that includes said line, IIRC).


best, whit

Tiger
08-28-2005, 07:26 AM
Sounds like intake manifold gasket leak... at the same time... change out that ICV.

winfred
08-28-2005, 08:45 AM
the intake gaskets on the bottom and front/rear of the manifold are common vacuum leaks, the whistle is probably the pcv plate and a oil leak in the vicinity of the left front could be the breather tube that goes to the pcv plate on the back of the intake. i've had 530s be tough to pinpoint the actual leak due to the leak sealing up when the motor warms up even a little but as the leak gets worse it will start throwing lamda/02 sensor codes with possible weird running as the computer trys to adapt

Bill R.
08-28-2005, 09:16 AM
bulletin which describes the whistle as coming from the rear main seal in the back of the block on some. Apparently when the pcv plate fails on some the crankcase vacum is so great that air gets sucked past the rear main seal causing the whistle. This affects the idle as well and the oil consumption. One way to test this is to remove the dipstick so that the crankcase is vented, if the whistle goes away its the pcv plate rather than intake manifold gaskets. If its the manifold gaskets the whistle will be unchanged. Keep in mind that frequently you hear a whistle at the throttle body anyway if you put your ear down to it. Here's part of a bulletin on it.http://www.bimmernut.com/%7Ebillr/images/m60bulletin.jpg







the intake gaskets on the bottom and front/rear of the manifold are common vacuum leaks, the whistle is probably the pcv plate and a oil leak in the vicinity of the left front could be the breather tube that goes to the pcv plate on the back of the intake. i've had 530s be tough to pinpoint the actual leak due to the leak sealing up when the motor warms up even a little but as the leak gets worse it will start throwing lamda/02 sensor codes with possible weird running as the computer trys to adapt

Kalevera
08-28-2005, 11:51 AM
Bill, explain this to me, because I must be missing something/am a slow learner/whatever.

M60 V8s have the dipstick located below the crank case/main oil level. That's why removing the dipstick to check non-vacuum idle doesn't work as it does on any of the 6 cylinders -- no change in the vacuum because the dipstick doesn't have the ability to alter the pressure in the crank case.

So, the question is: does a non functioning PCV allow enough pressure to build up in the bottom end that the path of least resistance becomes displacing the weight equivalent of 5 or 6 quarts of oil (or however much sits in the pan at idle) versus bleeding out the rear main? Were it the case, I would suspect that it would be an oil geyser versus a little air leak.

best, whit

Bill R.
08-28-2005, 12:08 PM
crankcase, they are talking about the opposite.. they state the correct vacum is 10 to 15mbar when the valve goes bad it lets too much vacum into the crankcase ... so not that i would know anything about water pipes but if your familiar with how they function.. a vacum will pull air in through the hot oil with no problem just like a water pipe or hookah.... and the whistle that they talk about at the rear main seal is air going into the engine not pressure going out... Now if the valve plugs up so there is no vacum at all then you get pressure build up in the crankcase and thats what causes front and rear main seals to start leaking or fail... volvo's with that stupid flame retarder do this all the time. But back to the excessive vacum in the crankcase, this also tends to pull more oil vapor up into the intake manifold as well as causing the whistle. It goes away as you open the throttle because you no longer have the high vacum present. I'm not sure i'm explaining it clearly enough.






Bill, explain this to me, because I must be missing something/am a slow learner/whatever.

M60 V8s have the dipstick located below the crank case/main oil level. That's why removing the dipstick to check non-vacuum idle doesn't work as it does on any of the 6 cylinders -- no change in the vacuum because the dipstick doesn't have the ability to alter the pressure in the crank case.

So, the question is: does a non functioning PCV allow enough pressure to build up in the bottom end that the path of least resistance becomes displacing the weight equivalent of 5 or 6 quarts of oil (or however much sits in the pan at idle) versus bleeding out the rear main? Were it the case, I would suspect that it would be an oil geyser versus a little air leak.

best, whit

Kalevera
08-28-2005, 12:25 PM
Slick. I wasn't clearly thinking through the problem and forgot about PCV operation. Thanks for the explanation -- it makes a lot of sense.

best, whit

632 Regal
08-28-2005, 12:41 PM
pop the oil filler cap should do the same thing PLUS you can see the oild spraying off the timing chains!

Kalevera
08-28-2005, 04:52 PM
pop the oil filler cap should do the same thing PLUS you can see the oild spraying off the timing chains!


haha...and all over your face! Tried that -- what a mess.

best, whit

winfred
08-28-2005, 05:55 PM
what'd ya rev it to 6k then look in?


haha...and all over your face! Tried that -- what a mess.

best, whit

Kalevera
08-28-2005, 06:17 PM
what'd ya rev it to 6k then look in?
nope, the sucker was idling. Threw oil everywhere. Not as bad as taking the valve cover off and starting the thing...but, you know.

Stuck the cap back on rather quickly -- I'd just spent a good deal of time sealing and cleaning the motor and didn't want all of my hard work to go for naught.


best, whit

winfred
08-28-2005, 06:19 PM
not usually a big deal


nope, the sucker was idling. Threw oil everywhere. Not as bad as taking the valve cover off and starting the thing...but, you know.

Stuck the cap back on rather quickly -- I'd just spent a good deal of time sealing and cleaning the motor and didn't want all of my hard work to go for naught.


best, whit

FiveOJester
08-28-2005, 10:05 PM
Well I'm definitely doing the intake gaskets. Fired the car up early this morning before it had a chance to warm up (my garage is getting over 100ºF these days) and was greeted with a VERY loud whistle coming from the intake. Guess it seals up once it gets some heat in it. Anyways, I've got all the necessary part numbers from been-jammin's thread and am ordering as we speak. Thanks for the help!

-Dave

632 Regal
08-28-2005, 10:45 PM
My car ran completely different when I was done, remove the battery cable while doing the job and the computer will reboot for a brand new situation...you wont be dissapointed.