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Little help please...excessive oil in the intake...

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    Little help please...excessive oil in the intake...

    So I have been beating my head against the wall on this one. I have a 1988 325i Convertible with 194k miles.
    I have searched R3vlimited.com, e30tech.com, and socale30.com, and come up with no real answer/solution to my issue.

    I have a considerable amount of oil in the intake track. I understand it's normal to have a little bit of oil in the intake manifold, but this is causing the spark plugs and O2 sensor to foul in less than 100 miles. There is enough oil that it's running down the whole intake track and ruining the air filter. It appears to be coming from the valve cover vent tube that goes to the throttle body. All of this is causing the DME to throw an O2 sensor code, and it also blows white smoke from the tail pipe that smells completely like oil, not coolant.

    **This only started happening right after the following work was performed.

    Recent work:
    • Timing belt kit
    • Water pump
    • Thermostat housing
    • Radiator
    • Cooling Hoses
    • Belts
    • Head gasket
    • Oil tube and seals from the block to the intake manifold
    • Vacuum lines (including the valve cover to throttle body line)
    • Throttle body gasket
    • Intake manifold gaskets
    • Oil pan gasket
    • Valve cover gasket kit
    • Adjusted the valves.
    • New dipstick O-rings


    I am going to be installing an air/oil separator, that is normally used for forced induction engines, tomorrow in hopes of holding off the destruction of my engine till a definite answer is established, and I have a set goal to work towards.
    • I re-seated the tube from the block to the intake manifold based on multiple posts on the boards, but that was not it. It's seated properly and with new seals.
    • Checked all the torque on the head bolts and they were all were within 3# (+/-) of each other. (If I have already blown the head gasket, then it seems like I would have other issues as well, though anything is probable at this point.)
    • I have vacuum in the engine when I pull the oil cap and put my hand over it.
    • Dipstick is seated properly, though it was never removed from the engine


    So there it is, any useful or positive help would be greatly appreciated.
    "Now hatred is by far the longest pleasure; men love in haste but they detest at leisure." -Lord Byron

    #2
    how many miles and what e30 do you have?
    AWD > RWD

    Comment


      #3
      I have a 1988 (10/87) 325i Convertible with 194k miles
      "Now hatred is by far the longest pleasure; men love in haste but they detest at leisure." -Lord Byron

      Comment


        #4
        Excessive oil in the intake will be due to; excessive blowby from worn rings, worn valve guides/seals, or "intake leaks" into the crank case. A smoke test will tell in the latter is the cause and compression and leak down tests will tell if the wear in the cylinders is the cause. If those checks don't indicate a problem a head rebuild may help.
        The car makes it possible, but the driver makes it happen.
        Jim Levie, Huntsville, AL

        Comment


          #5
          my was at least that bad...my rings were shot, causing excessive pressure in lower block. but all of a sudden...maybe some vacuum lines crossed ? no pcv, but it is done with hoses in some way.

          Comment


            #6
            I have not done a leak down test on it yet. I plan to this week though, just had not gotten to it yet.
            The two previous owners beat the car. I know this as I remember being in the car when they did it. I am not honestly surprised at this situation, so I am not above just swapping the crank and rod bearings, piston rings, and having new valve guide seals installed. I can do everything but the guide seals, so its just down time on the car.
            Not to mention I have been wanting to clean and respray the engine bay and engine. Not to mention clean up all the half ass job of rigging the wiring the previous owners did for all the crap they installed, then took out.
            "Now hatred is by far the longest pleasure; men love in haste but they detest at leisure." -Lord Byron

            Comment


              #7
              The valve guide seals are easy with the head off the car.
              The car makes it possible, but the driver makes it happen.
              Jim Levie, Huntsville, AL

              Comment

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