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THE M3 IS GETTING THE ANRI BUILD TREATMENT - Blown headgasket to build thread

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    #91
    Diving in:

    Few things to note the Concept applied from whoever performed the service
    for this engine perviously.

    I always say their isn't a wrong concept by one choosing what to do, but
    their is not an optimum set up!

    - The exhaust side hub design is very goofy...the biggest downside
    of this design is that the hub is TiG welded!!! TIG welding parts is great
    because the heat penetrates very deep resulting the parts to warp
    for sure. Delicate area/s like the helical gear may/will be affected, one never
    wants to have welded parts which are warped. I mean we are talking very
    little just few thou and that is all you need to have wobbly part/s..In areas like
    let say suspension, roll cage, 1-2-3-4thou it won't make absolutely any difference..

    I am sure they will argue till the cows come back from the grass field which
    may be months that its not a problem but in my engine I will prefer to have
    the OEM or Beisan hub machined from 1 solid piece

    - The oil pump disc remained with oem size holes. The welded drive pins are
    lose in the hole which is resulting rattle at around 2000-2200rpm range from
    both camshaft back/torque operation.


    - Next, one spent all of of that bloody labor and did not replace the 8.8 cam
    flange bolts ?

    Moving forward.


    Regards,
    Anri











    Last edited by Anri; 01-04-2024, 08:31 AM.
    https://www.instagram.com/euroclassicmotors/.

    www.euroclassicmotors.com

    Comment


      #92
      I am always intrigued why some engines have such a dark brown staining inside, while others look very clean like bare metal.

      Comment


        #93
        Originally posted by cobra View Post
        I am always intrigued why some engines have such a dark brown staining inside, while others look very clean like bare metal.
        Cobra,

        Thanks for your comment.

        It's very easy.

        Cars which started life in freezing temperatures
        do not do well with that. That means the oil from
        freezing temps will heat up to 210F and back again
        to freezing for min 6 months of the year for the passed
        15-20 years let say.

        Every single engine I have worked on from cold
        States they have that without exception unless
        the car is driven only in summer time.

        Even if you change the oil every 2000k miles one
        will always have that black oil burn deposit.

        Say California cars never ever have that heavy black
        oil burned deposit.

        Regards,
        Anri
        Last edited by Anri; 01-06-2024, 04:32 AM.
        https://www.instagram.com/euroclassicmotors/.

        www.euroclassicmotors.com

        Comment


          #94
          Originally posted by Anri View Post
          The oil pump disc remained with oem size holes. The welded drive pins are
          lose in the hole which is resulting rattle at around 2000-2200rpm range from
          both camshaft back/torque operation.​
          I thought the driving pins on these non-OEM hubs are larger than the stock hub pins to minimize the plays.
          Maybe the Tig weld is to prevent the stress-riser at the sharp 90* angle at the base of the pins compared to machined hub?

          Comment


            #95
            Originally posted by sapote View Post

            I thought the driving pins on these non-OEM hubs are larger than the stock hub pins to minimize the plays
            By what 1%...the slack is absolute unacceptable in my book. I even think that the Beisan can be
            little tighter, but okay its fine as is.


            Originally posted by sapote View Post
            Maybe the Tig weld is to prevent the stress-riser at the sharp 90* angle at the base of the pins compared to machined hub?
            Sapote, when you weld particular spot you have stressed the surrounded
            area and that is never good when you have such a precise design.
            It has nothing to do with the sharp 90 as you point. As long as the
            parts are tight not hammering it back and forth as on the oem its all
            good.

            Do you want your hub to see glowing red melted material in the
            helical gears drive area ?


            Regards
            Anri
            https://www.instagram.com/euroclassicmotors/.

            www.euroclassicmotors.com

            Comment


              #96
              Originally posted by Anri View Post

              1. By what 1%...the slack is absolute unacceptable in my book. I even think that the Beisan can be
              little tighter, but okay its fine as is.

              2.Do you want your hub to see glowing red melted material in the
              helical gears drive area ?


              Regards
              Anri
              Anri,

              I don't like like the 90* sharp corners on the the OEM hub with the machined tabs, which is a source for stress riser leading to cracking; they should be chamfered at these corner (the crank shaft has the chamfered corners at every con-rod throws for the same reason -- prevents the cracking). Obviously it's cheaper to make parts with no chamfered corners and BMW opted for this way.

              1. I didn't know that Beisan disk new holes are still having too much plays -- how much is the plays if you have the data? 0.004"? When I had my disk drilled, it was about 0.002" plays and I have to be very careful when bolting down the vanos to the head to make sure the hub pins and the disk are not binding due to lack of perfect concentricity by tolerance stacked up from camshaft to pump disk.

              2. Of course we don't want to have distorted splines hub from hot welding, but I just wanted to point out that whoever chose to Tig weld the pins for the reason of stress risers by the 90* corner if they were machined. Maybe the splines are with more clearance and so they are not binding up after the Tig welding process and this can be easily verified with the parts in hand.
              Last edited by sapote; 01-05-2024, 01:05 PM.

              Comment


                #97
                Anri - Thank you for the update - Just to mention it the Vanos replacement work was done by a friend of mine and this is the parts list that he got from Dr. Vanos and what occurred during that service:
                • Dr. Vanos Exhaust hub
                • Anti-Rattle Gears
                • Cam bolt Kit
                • Cam Sprockets
                • New Chain Guides
                • Checked All Valve Clearances (3 needed one size up) - valves shimmed
                • Timing Chain Guide
                • VVT Housing Seal
                • Oil Pump relief valve​
                Needless to say this is all surprising to me but hey, I’m glad that we’re finding out about this now during this service. I’m looking forward to having a bulletproof engine with a 2 year warranty that will not rattle one bit, might as well find it all now while it’s opened up.
                - Jonathan


                2004 M3 6MT Carbon Black OEM+ | Vortex Days

                Comment


                  #98
                  Originally posted by sapote View Post
                  I don't like like the 90* sharp corners on the the OEM hub with the machined tabs, which is a source for stress riser leading to cracking; they should be chamfered at these corner (the crank shaft has the chamfered corners at every con-rod throws for the same reason -- prevents the cracking). Obviously it's cheaper to make parts with no chamfered corners and BMW opted for this way
                  I hear you. Sapote the idea is not to "Patch" the problem by making the drive pins
                  solid and full round to increase the strength. This hub with its given slack it still
                  rattles from the lumpy cam operation personal I am not fan of.

                  The original design is good enough. I was making a point the Beisan is tigher
                  than the one on Johnathan's car. (I will measure it tomorrow and compare them)
                  and I was also making a point that the Beisan can go little tighter, I even thought
                  of making my own custom reamer to spec them to my own.


                  Originally posted by sapote View Post
                  I didn't know that Beisan disk new holes are still having too much plays
                  It does not have too much play, but I am saying it can go little tighter and that is my opinion.

                  Originally posted by sapote View Post
                  Tig weld the pins for the reason
                  The pins are not TIG welded. I will take picture tomorrow for you.

                  Regards,
                  Anri
                  Last edited by Anri; 01-06-2024, 08:47 AM.
                  https://www.instagram.com/euroclassicmotors/.

                  www.euroclassicmotors.com

                  Comment


                    #99
                    Originally posted by ChapterM3 View Post
                    Anri - Thank you for the update - Just to mention it the Vanos replacement work was done by a friend of mine and this is the parts list that he got from Dr. Vanos and what occurred during that service:
                    • Dr. Vanos Exhaust hub
                    • Anti-Rattle Gears
                    • Cam bolt Kit
                    • Cam Sprockets
                    • New Chain Guides
                    • Checked All Valve Clearances (3 needed one size up) - valves shimmed
                    • Timing Chain Guide
                    • VVT Housing Seal
                    • Oil Pump relief valve​
                    Needless to say this is all surprising to me but hey, I’m glad that we’re finding out about this now during this service. I’m looking forward to having a bulletproof engine with a 2 year warranty that will not rattle one bit, might as well find it all now while it’s opened up.
                    Not sure what's going on there. This is the Dr. VANOS hub which is $700-800 - https://drvanos.com/products/s54-cryo-exhaust-hub. That TurboToy hub was such a questionable design from day one https://www.bimmerforums.com/forum/s...M3Forum-com%29. A stock exhaust hub + redrilled disc is more than enough.

                    I'm more curious about the headgasket issue and whether it damaged the block or head since it got to the misfire stage.
                    Last edited by Slideways; 01-05-2024, 06:09 PM.

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by Slideways View Post

                      Not sure what's going on there. This is the Dr. VANOS hub which is $700-800 - https://drvanos.com/products/s54-cryo-exhaust-hub. That TurboToy hub was such a questionable design from day one https://www.bimmerforums.com/forum/s...M3Forum-com%29. A stock exhaust hub + redrilled disc is more than enough.

                      I'm more curious about the headgasket issue and whether it damaged the block or head since it got to the misfire stage.
                      First time seeing that TurboToy failure thread. Quite the failure mode. I see that the original post is from 2013. Didn't the company come out with multiple iterations of the design? IIRC, there were at least 3.

                      I ended up installing a stock exhaust hub and Besian redrilled disc back in 2013. No issues over 10 years later.
                      Last edited by bimmerfan08; 01-06-2024, 07:55 AM.

                      Comment


                        Originally posted by Slideways View Post

                        Not sure what's going on there. This is the Dr. VANOS hub which is $700-800 - https://drvanos.com/products/s54-cryo-exhaust-hub. That TurboToy hub was such a questionable design from day one https://www.bimmerforums.com/forum/s...M3Forum-com%29. A stock exhaust hub + redrilled disc is more than enough.

                        I'm more curious about the headgasket issue and whether it damaged the block or head since it got to the misfire stage.
                        Wait, are you saying that I have a TurboToy Hub installed? I've never heard of that hub

                        Here were the parts that were ordered from Dr. Vanos and installed on my car -
                        - Dr. Vanos D300 Exhaust hub - This was ordered directly from Dr.Vanos but it's not on their website anymore, this is the one that was ordered: https://www.moreheadspeedworks.com/p...0_exhaust_hub/
                        - S54 Cam Bolt Kit - https://drvanos.com/collections/s54-...4-cam-bolt-kit
                        - S54 Noise Reduction kit - https://drvanos.com/collections/s54-...-reduction-kit
                        - S54 Modified intake gear - https://drvanos.com/collections/s54-...ed-intake-gear
                        - Jonathan


                        2004 M3 6MT Carbon Black OEM+ | Vortex Days

                        Comment


                          Originally posted by ChapterM3 View Post

                          Wait, are you saying that I have a TurboToy Hub installed? I've never heard of that hub

                          Here were the parts that were ordered from Dr. Vanos and installed on my car -
                          - Dr. Vanos D300 Exhaust hub - This was ordered directly from Dr.Vanos but it's not on their website anymore, this is the one that was ordered: https://www.moreheadspeedworks.com/p...0_exhaust_hub/
                          - S54 Cam Bolt Kit - https://drvanos.com/collections/s54-...4-cam-bolt-kit
                          - S54 Noise Reduction kit - https://drvanos.com/collections/s54-...-reduction-kit
                          - S54 Modified intake gear - https://drvanos.com/collections/s54-...ed-intake-gear
                          My guess is Dr. VANOS was getting them from an old M3F forum member - TurboToy. TT used to buy broken stock hubs and make the modified hubs from those. TT stopped buying the hubs at one point and it looks like they are discontinued now. As the stock or Beisan hub + redrilled disc became the go-to solution, the modified hubs were phased out.

                          Comment


                            OH got it. Yes this was bought and installed in 2020 so that would make sense then. Damn.
                            - Jonathan


                            2004 M3 6MT Carbon Black OEM+ | Vortex Days

                            Comment


                              Head is off.

                              As expected the head gasket failure is between 5 and 6.

                              Frankly Jonathan did not put many miles from the time
                              when the engine started to misfire.

                              Some of you remember on https://nam3forum.com/forums/forum/m...om-parting-out
                              had massive damage and had to deck the block around ~0.6mm...

                              In this instance the block has zero damage/s and it does not
                              require decking. The condition of the head gasket is very tired.

                              At some point coolant had gone inside. One can see the
                              small immediate corrosion on the cyl wall but it is noting to worry
                              because it will clean up.

                              The deck surface is nasty and required hours of cleaning. I have my own
                              custom blocks made to only clean the surface from the old gasket and some
                              mild surface corrosion.This is not taking any material away, don't worry.
                              It also glazes the surface in order to work with the multi layer gasket Ra.

                              The bore measured absolute perfect at 86.978mm on the trust side and
                              87mm on the none trust side.

                              Regards,
                              Anri
























                              Last edited by Anri; 01-09-2024, 07:09 PM.
                              https://www.instagram.com/euroclassicmotors/.

                              www.euroclassicmotors.com

                              Comment


                                Luckily this seems like a pretty easy fix. Clean it up, new head gasket, good to go?

                                Do you use any sort of copper sealant or special process on the new gasket, or install it as it comes?

                                Comment

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