As the title says. Extra points if you can tell me why it's corroded and what that would effect :D
Pop quiz! Name this M20 part...
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No idea, but i'll take a guess. Is that a coolant line going to the tb area?Mtech1 v8 build thread - https://www.r3vlimited.com/board/sho...d.php?t=413205
OEM v8 manual chip or dme - https://www.r3vlimited.com/board/sho....php?p=4938827 -
That's the throttle heater.
There are two coolant lines that attach to the throttle body (one to, and one from). It is there so that if you live in Antarctica, your throttle won't freeze. It is corroded because some of the coolant leaked out and dried up.
Since I live in Cali, there is absolutely no reason for my car to have that, so I just bypassed it. No more hot air intake:)
-Erik
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id keep it if it gets to 20 degrees. id also flush your system and be sure youre running the correct anti freezeComment
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You are probably getting corrostion becasue the cork gasket is old and leaky. Change it ASAP as it has a tendency to leak coolant into a major connector for the main wiring harness for your motor and cause that to corrode. It is about a $.20 part and will take you a max of 30min to replace. Definately worth the $$ as the wiring harness is much more expensive and time consuiming to repair/replace.sigpicComment
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It's for proper warm up times. It heats the intake during winter for proper emissions during cold starts. So the engine does not continue to dump fuel to warm up the engine.
Did one of these yesterday, 1.26 at local parts house.Comment
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It is easier to remove the TB to change the gasket due to the placement of the screws on the plate, so make sure you get a new TB gasket aswell.'88 M3.2 S54 Lachssilber/Black
'07 335i Alpine/Black Sedan
'12 X5 3.5i Alpine/Black
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I had to replace the gasket on mine not too long ago.. surpisingly it was only a couple of bucks at the BMW dealership. The gasket blew only because I had a bad thermostat so once you replace your gasket change out the thermostat too.. I had a hard time getting those Torx bolts out because I tried using an Allen/Hex key. Moral of the story? Always use the proper tool.
I ended up having to drill out the bolts because I stripped the heads. Once I was able to separate both halves of the piece, there was enough "nub" left to get it out with a pair of pliers.Comment
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Get new bolts when you do it. They cost pennies and the originals typically won't survive.Adam Fogg- '88 M3
Common sense- It's the new 'gifted'Comment



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