George Hill yeah, that's an other idea I might do if an additional hour of struggle doesn't get that pin out. I'm worried about the need to bleed the hydraulic system and having trouble, I never bled this thing and INPA is unreliable... dreaded windows chimes and error messages in german about communication failing in the middle of a procedure got me cursing in the past lol.. something tells me we can all relate
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Transmission trouble
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by E46m3zcp View PostGeorge Hill yeah, that's an other idea I might do if an additional hour of struggle doesn't get that pin out. I'm worried about the need to bleed the hydraulic system and having trouble, I never bled this thing and INPA is unreliable... dreaded windows chimes and error messages in german about communication failing in the middle of a procedure got me cursing in the past lol.. something tells me we can all relate
Comment
-
I think the noise in the video was due to the fork hitting the pressure plate, because the nylon fork pin broke and let the fork move. Here are my findings.
Wear marks on the fork:
About 2 inches distance between wear on the pressure plate corresponds to the distance between marks on the fork.
The pin was found broken.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by E46m3zcp View PostWhat are fellow SMG owners doing for the slave cylinder? Bite the bullet and get a new Genuine BMW slave for around $400?3.91 | CMP Subframe & RTAB Bushings | SMG (Relocated & Rebuilt) | ESS Gen 3 Supercharger | Redish | Beisan | GC Coilovers & ARCAs | Imola Interior | RE Rasp | RE Diablo | Storm Motorwerks Paddles | Will ZCPM3 Shift Knob | Apex ARC-8 19x9, 19x9.5 | Sony XAV-AX5000 | BAVSOUND | CSL & 255 SMG Upgrades | Tiag | Vert w/Hardtop
Comment
-
Originally posted by E46m3zcp View PostThe noise is the same when the gear selection is neutral.
The plastic pin broke. Is this the root cause leading to the noise? I don't think so.
The pic shows the PP/clutch disk were worn too far -- the self adjust 3 spring/arm expanded to their max position. This caused the slave to push the fork further to in order to disengage the clutch, far enough that it started touching the PP outside the fingers/TOB, which generated the torque to rotate the fork. When the fork wanted to rotate, it must break the plastic pin or jump off the pin.
As soon as the first sign of the rubbing noise appear during clutch disengaging, and if stop driving the car further, the pin wouldn't be sheared off.
I see 2 reasons for the pin to be broken this way: the TBO is seizing and allowing the PP to rotate the fork, or in this case of a worn too far clutch/PP
Comment
-
Originally posted by E46m3zcp View PostI was never able to remove the pin. I ended up disconnecting the SMG lines and removing the transmission with the actuator still attached...
Comment
-
Originally posted by sapote View Post
with the knowledge today, I can say that the above statement is not quite correct that the noise was there when tranny in neutral.
Originally posted by sapote View Post
The plastic pin broke. Is this the root cause leading to the noise? I don't think so.
The pic shows the PP/clutch disk were worn too far -- the self adjust 3 spring/arm expanded to their max position.
Comment
-
Originally posted by sapote View Post
You didn't try to remove the pin with the tranny outside the car? I would remove it and clean/lube the pin for easier to remove in future when tranny is on the car. You don't want to remove the tranny again for this small task.
Comment
-
sapote I'm doing some research to see if I can find out if it's possible that the clutch would be disengaged (open, slave cyl. pressurized), when the car is in neutral. While I agree that logic and common sense suggest that it would not, this information from the technical manual is still not clear to me but seems to mean that it could.
First screen shot for the definition of "Idle-speed" as the neutral position:
Second screen shot describes a "safety feature" in which it seems it is described that the clutch would disengage in "Idle-speed" position. My interpretation is that in certain conditions, if the engine speed falls below a threshold they disengage the clutch even if in neutral to remove a maximum of load and prevent stalling. It is unlikely that I got in these conditions but it is possible.
REFERENCE: SMG_technical_manual.pdf
Last edited by E46m3zcp; 05-31-2024, 08:19 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by E46m3zcp View Postsapote if it's possible that the clutch would be disengaged (open, slave cyl. pressurized), when the car is in neutral. While I agree that logic and common sense suggest that it would not, this information from the technical manual is still not clear to me but seems to mean that it could.
I believe the idle-speed(0) (Neutral) is the postion of the shifter in between the R gate and the Forward-sequencial position as I try to draw below:
R.............. -
|___N____|
................. |
.................+
when shifter at N position, the gear is in neutral with clutch engaged (except during engine starting).
When shifter at the forward-sequencial mode postion (between + and - plane), the tranny is in gear most of the time except when stopping at idle for long enough then it will be shifted to 0 neutral with clutch engaged.
so the "Safety Functions" feature only happens during when the shifter is in the forward-sequencial mode at low idle speed, and not when it's at the N position.
Last edited by sapote; 06-09-2024, 12:35 AM.
Comment
-
Well the bread trick isn’t working for me. Pilot bearing’s blue “cap” broke and the bread is coming out through the bearing. I tried for about 1h and it won’t budge. What do people use for this?
Thinking of using J-B weld to glue a washer to the front, blocking the bread from coming out. Is this a bad idea? (taking care not to glue the sides of the bearing in)Last edited by E46m3zcp; 06-08-2024, 07:28 PM.
Comment
Comment