How big of a vacuum leak would this be?

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  • I6V8
    Member
    • Jan 2024
    • 60

    #1

    How big of a vacuum leak would this be?

    My smoke tester surfaced a vacuum leak from my throttle plate shaft needle bearings. It doesn't look big but for the M20 owners here who fixed this in the past, how much of an improvement did replacing the shaft bearings make to your idle quality?

    Car is an '89 325is. Rest of the engine has 30K miles on a deck to pan rebuild with a refreshed head, recently adjusted valves to .08" and .09" and all other remaining vacuum leaks were fixed (oil filler cap, half moons, elbows etc)


    Last edited by I6V8; 11-28-2024, 12:45 PM.
  • 88Sedan
    Wrencher
    • Apr 2023
    • 217

    #2
    I fully rebuilt my throttle body solely because those bearings were a massive leak on my car. It was like blowing through a straw. Extracting the old ones meant buying a blind bearing puller with 8mm attachment.

    I carefully laid out parts as I disassembled and took pictures just in case. I ended up having success by carefully heating around the bearing bore and let many repeated attempts with the slide hammer.

    I recommend leaving yourself the time and mental capacity to be patient with pulling the bearings as it wasnt a quick thing for myself. I kept reheating carefully as to not crack the aluminu. Once everything was out and thoroughly cleaned I inserted the new double seal bearings using a light amount of black rtv to seal any potential crevices.

    Because my car had many vacuum leaks repaired at the same time I cannot comment on the direct effect this had. I too adjusted my valves to .009" to help quiet the valvetrain down, but supposedly . 010" is better for idle quality .
    Last edited by 88Sedan; 11-29-2024, 03:35 AM.

    Comment

    • I6V8
      Member
      • Jan 2024
      • 60

      #3
      Originally posted by 88Sedan
      I fully rebuilt my throttle body solely because those bearings were a massive leak on my car. It was like blowing through a straw. Extracting the old ones meant buying a blind bearing puller with 8mm attachment.

      I carefully laid out parts as I disassembled and took pictures just in case. I ended up having success by carefully heating around the bearing bore and let many repeated attempts with the slide hammer.

      I recommend leaving yourself the time and mental capacity to be patient with pulling the bearings as it wasnt a quick thing for myself. I kept reheating carefully as to not crack the aluminu. Once everything was out and thoroughly cleaned I inserted the new double seal bearings using a light amount of black rtv to seal any potential crevices.

      Because my car had many vacuum leaks repaired at the same time I cannot comment on the direct effect this had. I too adjusted my valves to .009" to help quiet the valvetrain down, but supposedly . 010" is better for idle quality .
      Thanks. Is your idle completely smooth now?

      I just slightly retightened the intake manifold nuts after getting a small noise when pushing down on the plenum. That noise is gone.

      I didn't get any visible leaks before but the vibration from the engine might have created pulsing mini-leaks that weren't detectable with the engine off.

      Smoked tested her again after and can still see the leak at the taller pivot point shaft on the TB, so the one closer to you when you stand on the driver side. Trying to decide if this is worth the trouble.

      My 2 symptoms are: a short stumble or hesitation off-idle when you open the throttle plate quickly when the engine is hot and the exhaust fumes smell rich at idle. The other is, during engine warmup, the motor noticeably vibrates more in neural and parked, especially around 2K RPM. Once the thermostat opens, the vibration smooths out.

      I already replaced the blue temp sensor, car is running OEM green tops with a SSSquid chip for that setup on 91 gas.



      Comment

      • 88Sedan
        Wrencher
        • Apr 2023
        • 217

        #4
        My idle has greatly improved but I wouldn't say it's perfect. Mine has this periodic lumpiness I haven't figured out yet but I would say it's minor. It's cyclical so I checked the valves 3X to feel confident about it.

        When I replaced the plugs I think I got irridium or platinum plugs and that might be throwing the ignition off a little. I just did an entire reseal of my engine sans HG. New crank sensor, cap/rotor, and I multimeter-checked all the dme wiring.

        I have 2 good afms, neither made any difference. Recently realized the icv hose that previously was good now looked bad suddenly, so I replaced it and that helped the idle more. Car starts immediately and otherwise sounds good. After an engine rev it finds idle quickly and smoothly, no hunting idle at all for me. I'll admit I still have to smoke test, check plug wires, and lastly if it's not perfect fuel injectors. These motors are finicky when it comes to vacuum.

        Comment

        • I6V8
          Member
          • Jan 2024
          • 60

          #5
          Sounds similar to my idle quality. During cold operation (in SoCal at 60F+ ambient temps), I did get a weird 200rpm up and down movement when holding the throttle steady at 1800rpm along with the weird vibration that felt like it wasn't firing fully on all cylinders. In another thread, someone said that was indicative of a rich mixture during open loop operation which matches the exhaust gas smell I'm getting.

          So after completing the work this morning, I decided to reset my ECU and that did smooth out the hot idle a bit more on the drive after. I turned my afm bypass screw 2 extra turns out over the factory setting to lean things out a bit at idle before the O2 sensor takes over. Not sure if the SSSquid chip richens the sub 140F A/F mixture so I'll just drive like this for a bit now and see what happens.

          Maybe try the recommended Bosch replacement NGK plugs and make sure to gap them correctly. I also hear the ignition wires are quite finicky and like to short out. Years ago, this old school mechanic would touch each wire and if he got shocked, replaced just that one, lol. I don't necessarily recommend that method but he said he found bad wires on M40s and M20s pretty often.

          Comment

          • 88Sedan
            Wrencher
            • Apr 2023
            • 217

            #6
            Hmm the 200rpm fluctuation is interesting, I never had that with my car. I have read that playing with the AFM screw is risky so I never have/would play with it until I really felt I needed to.

            To clarify, you set your clearances to .009"and .010" correct? I think you put the decimal in the wrong place in the OP.

            The throttle body rebuild is easy conceptually if you are diligent at taking pictures etc (note the position of the butterfly valve as it only fits 1 way/1 orientation). Like mentioned you have to exercise patience with the bearings if you don't want to damage anything.

            If you remove your TB and wipe/clean the area around that shaft, and make sure no ones looking haha, put your mouth on it and blow and it'll give you an idea of how bad it is. Mine was really bad! I also think this was responsible for how filthy my intake runners were, the PO put thousands of miles with this and other leaking vacuum sources. If you have any e30 buddies I'd be tempted to ask them to swap AFMs for a few hours to see what/if anything changes.

            Comment

            • I6V8
              Member
              • Jan 2024
              • 60

              #7
              Blowing on shafts and listen for noises? At that point, what are we NOT prepared to do to get these motors to idle smoothly, lol?

              Based on your findings, these needle bearing leaks could be pretty significant and are probably fairly common.

              I wonder if it's at least possible to seal up the bottom needle bearing with marine grease where the shaft plugs into the TPS?

              Another question: when you had the TB off and apart, how was the first shaft and spring near the inlet mounted to the TB? Is there a 3rd bearing and possible entry point for unmeasured air?

              Regarding the valves, I definitely had the decimal points wrong but the lash is set to 0.008 and 0.009.

              I don't believe dirt in the intake has anything to do with the vacuum leaks. Some oil getting sucked through the rocker cover vent hose is normal and that can build up and get caked on over the years. If it's excessive, however, it could be an indication that there's too much crank case pressure from blowby gasses due to piston ring wear. When you change the spark plugs to the better NGK ones, maybe put a borescope camera in there to see if the cylinder walls all look healthy.

              Comment

              • 88Sedan
                Wrencher
                • Apr 2023
                • 217

                #8
                There are only 2 bearings in the TB, but the brake booster nipples can become loose. I tapped threads and changed the check valve setup and hoses. What used to be 2 press in nipples is now one threaded one and one plug. One TB stud is stationary if I recall correctly. The third large nipple for the icv I held in place with loctite retaining compound.

                Comment

                • packratbimmer
                  E30 Fanatic
                  • Dec 2009
                  • 1330

                  #9
                  Great thread! Where are you getting new bearings? Thanks

                  Comment

                  • 88Sedan
                    Wrencher
                    • Apr 2023
                    • 217

                    #10
                    These are dual sealed vs the OE single sealed.
                    INA HK0812 -2RS-FPM-DK-B-L271

                    Cheapest place I found was fleebay.

                    Comment

                    • packratbimmer
                      E30 Fanatic
                      • Dec 2009
                      • 1330

                      #11
                      Great info on the bearings/seals! Concerning idle, I have also found that the throttle plate clearance AND its relationship to the throttle switch are critical. The Bentley manual has the specs and procedure. One thing to avoid is adjusting the throttle plate AFTER the throttle switch because there is a chance that the switch will open at the wrong time or not at all upon the return of the throttle to rest.

                      Comment

                      • I6V8
                        Member
                        • Jan 2024
                        • 60

                        #12
                        Originally posted by 88Sedan
                        There are only 2 bearings in the TB, but the brake booster nipples can become loose. I tapped threads and changed the check valve setup and hoses. What used to be 2 press in nipples is now one threaded one and one plug. One TB stud is stationary if I recall correctly. The third large nipple for the icv I held in place with loctite retaining compound.
                        I'd sealed the elbows months ago and smoke isn't coming up but read somewhere that when the check valve is closed with the engine off, you can't see leaks behind the valve in the brake booster or lines with a smoke test. Same with the evap canister check valve.

                        I ordered a new brake booster check valve and will test the evap circuit one but it's noteworthy that my idle improved a lot after lightly tightening the intake manifold nuts and resetting the ECU.

                        Comment

                        • I6V8
                          Member
                          • Jan 2024
                          • 60

                          #13
                          Originally posted by packratbimmer
                          Great info on the bearings/seals! Concerning idle, I have also found that the throttle plate clearance AND its relationship to the throttle switch are critical. The Bentley manual has the specs and procedure. One thing to avoid is adjusting the throttle plate AFTER the throttle switch because there is a chance that the switch will open at the wrong time or not at all upon the return of the throttle to rest.
                          Yes. JLevie shared instructions somewhere on here for calibrating the idle after the throttle plate screw has been tempered with. One of his posts said that relying on just the click isn't a reliable way to determine that the ECU gets the idle signal from the TPS. I found out after to turning the screw out a bit to raise the idle (600 is low). Hooked up a speaker wire with connectors for spades that fit right on the TPS terminals and checked for continuity with a MM and sure enough, didn't get a beep despite hearing the click. What I can't say for certain is if JLevies instructions work for late model TB boots with the extra connection into the brake booster vacuum lines before the throttle platw so I just left it and decided to focus on getting it to idle smoothly at 600.

                          Comment

                          • packratbimmer
                            E30 Fanatic
                            • Dec 2009
                            • 1330

                            #14
                            The 1st step is to set up the throttle plate clearance ( distance between the throttle plate and the throttle opening), then set the "gap" so that the switch closes shortly before the plate lever hits the stop.

                            Comment

                            • noid
                              E30 Mastermind
                              • Feb 2008
                              • 1529

                              #15
                              Throttle body bearings:

                              With all other vacuum leaks sorted, you can generally forgo the bearings. There is a good chance the plastic under the spring will break during disassembly/reassembly, and at that point the TB becomes trash.

                              This is a o2 controlled fuel injected system, so unmetered air gets compensated for; as long as its relatively consistent and minor; which in this case it is. With a healthy TPS oring, it really is only the top bearing that usually has a minor leak.

                              In the vast majority of cases, vacuum leaks are to blame for poor or inconsistent idle issues on M20 engines found in E30's. Vacuum leaks basically mean air that is entering the engine where the air flow meter has not had a chance to meter it. Unmetered air, is unexpected air, and as such causes



                              Idle control:

                              Again, what we are talking about here is a Motronics fuel injection system, idle is controlled by the ECU and subsequently the ICV, not mechanically. Trying to adjust idle by way of the AFM idle screw or by way of the TB screw is not the correct way of going about this.

                              There is a factory depth stamp on every AFM that indicates the depth that the idle screw should be; set it back to that factory depth.

                              If the AFM has been messed with in any other way, continue to set it back to these perimeters:

                              There is only one correct way to test an E30 AFM, and that's by using an oscilloscope. The most common mode of failure is the wearing of the carbon strip within the AFM. In simple terms, the AFM is one big variable resistor. It takes a +5V supply, and the carbon strip provides variable resistance


                              ICV:

                              Ensure a proper functioning ICV by way of these tests:

                              This is an excerpt from the factory E30 repair manual instructing how to mechanically and electrically test the ICV (idle control valve) for an M20 engine.


                              Throttle plate and TPS adjustment:

                              The throttle plate should be in a completely closed position when at rest; again, do not attempt to adjust idle by making the throttle plate stay slightly open.

                              Test and adjust the TPS as indicated here:

                              Per the BMW E30 Factory Manual: Per Bentley manual: To set between 0.20mm and 0.60mm: Failure Methods: It is commonly stated online that E30 TPS failures are caused by oil saturation. Crankcase oil can migrate down the throttle body shaft bearings and into the TPS, leading some to recommend drilling a hole in


                              The E30 TPS is very prone to intermittent faults at this age due to cracks in the solder joints internally.

                              Your resource to do-it-yourself and interesting bmw and e30 stuff: www.rtsauto.com

                              Your resource to tools and tips: www.rtstools.com

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