Hi! I have a 2013 X5 (35i) Car has around 60k miles on it and was diagnosed with a pretty well known leak from the oil cooler.
Decided to use holidays to address this issue and finally put everything together today (and i took me a lot of hours). In the process I changed:
2 oil cooler gaskets
belt (didn't touch tensioner)
spark plugs
fitting on the coolant hose (that goes into the head and fell apart in my hands). Replaced with aluminum one
Air and cabin filters
in the process of changing gaskets I had to unscrew intake manifold and move it around a bit to be able to access cooler's bolt. I didn't replace gaskets on it. After I put everything together i can clearly hear clicking noise. it follows RPM, can be heard from the cabin, and disappears after 3k RMP (or engine noise hides it). I feel it is coming from the manifold side of the engine, and wondering whether it can be caused by a bad gasket?
Did anyone have anything like this? If it is a gasket issue - is it safe to drive, or better park and get new one installed ASAP? If not a gasket, what else can it be?
I wonder if the lifers some how bled down or there is air in them from the oil repair that has not bled its self ot yet, pulling the manifold back to acess that one bolt is common
One thing I'd imagine is a no-no. Pulling the intake and not replacing the gaskets.
2007 FJ Cruiser (best vehicle to date)
2012 X6 35i Sport
2013 ML350 BT
2019 4Runner
I know plenty of techs that just pull the manifold a bit and don't take it off. If it did create a problem you would think it would cause amcheck engine light to come on, vacuum leak.
No engine check. I also connected a diagnosing tool and it didn't show anything weird. It was able to read live data form the pressure sensors in the manifold, but I unfortunately don't have baseline numbers (and could't find them online), but assumed that there are in the range as car wasn't complaining.
In the interim, decided to replace gaskets. Can't say it is an easy task (still have no clue how to disconnect computer wires), but was able to get out all the gaskets. Interestingly, I noticed that some hose (that goes from the air intake on the left side through the manifold down to who knows what) was disconnected under the manifold. Not sure if I accidentally pull it now or before. If before, It might explain noise, but will see what happens when I get gaskets and put it together.
And after putting everything back together (with new manifold gaskets) noise is gone.
By the way, I regularly pull intake manifolds and don't change the gaskets. It's a lot more common place than you'd think. Never had any issue, or noise. I bet that hose you found disconnected was the issue.
ASE and BMW Master Certified Technician
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