der Mumienwagen; E91 330i Touring

der Mumienwagen; E91 330i Touring

Author
Discussion

JakeT

5,508 posts

123 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
I think I took the thermostat off, yeah. It was in 2019 though, so the full procedure has been lost to the winds of time in my head. hehe

Court_S

Original Poster:

13,413 posts

180 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
JakeT said:
I think I took the thermostat off, yeah. It was in 2019 though, so the full procedure has been lost to the winds of time in my head. hehe
Fair enough.

The guy who came out said just remove stuff and make my life easy!

Pablo16v

2,137 posts

200 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Take a leaf out of James May's book when things get hot smile



Sorry, I know what a pain it must be when AC packs in at this time of year so fingers crossed you manage to get it sorted quickly and relatively cheaply.

Court_S

Original Poster:

13,413 posts

180 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Pablo16v said:
Take a leaf out of James May's book when things get hot smile



Sorry, I know what a pain it must be when AC packs in at this time of year so fingers crossed you manage to get it sorted quickly and relatively cheaply.
rofl

Hopefully it shouldn’t be too long until it’s fixed.

Court_S

Original Poster:

13,413 posts

180 months

Friday 28th June
quotequote all
MOT day for the 330i today….and it passed with no advisories again.

There was a very very small bit of okay in the front arms but they’re going in the bin in a few weeks when I finally fit the M3 arms that are cluttering up the garage. The car is booked into Spires on 29th July, so the arms will get changed on that Sunday afternoon.

The new A/C compressor has arrived and I’ve picked up new bolts, coolant, deionised water, rad plug etc so I’ll be tackling that tomorrow. Joy. I did find the pin from the belt tensioner which is good. I knew I’d saved it.

Court_S

Original Poster:

13,413 posts

180 months

Saturday
quotequote all
My wife arrived home last night having nursed the car hike sounding like an absolute bag of spanners (no lights on though). Upon hearing it my heat sank thinking that something was really wrong….

Upon opening the bonnet it was soon apparent that they compressor has properly died…





This part of the clutch had come detached and was flapping around. Crisis averted.

pmorg4

734 posts

119 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Wow! Good thing it didn't take the belt out, we know the horror stories of these ingesting the belt through the crank seal.

Court_S

Original Poster:

13,413 posts

180 months

Saturday
quotequote all
pmorg4 said:
Wow! Good thing it didn't take the belt out, we know the horror stories of these ingesting the belt through the crank seal.
Quite possibly. The rest of the pulley still feels really solid other than it spinning with zero resistance unlike the replacement.

Court_S

Original Poster:

13,413 posts

180 months

Saturday
quotequote all
So today was spent replacing the AC compressor.

Getting ready to start removing stuff.



Rad fan, air box and aux belt removed.



When removing the undertray I found the rest of the compressor clutch as well as an old T20 bit.



Old coolant being drained.



Once a fair amount had been drained, it was time to whip off the expansion tank. Whilst that was out, I cleaned all the stones and other crap that had accumulated around the AC line already - I’m not having a reapet of that rotting through again.



These two A/C lines needed to be removed. Held in with 6mm bolts.



I then was back under the car to remove the front undertray and to undo the sway bar. I disconnected a few hoses from the thermostat and got covered in coolant. Which was nice. The thermostat was then wiggled forward so I could get access to the compress bolts. The bottom front one is completely obscured by hoses.



Three E12 bolts removed and the old compressor could be wiggled out. Old one with the new Nissens jobbie (I was too impatient to wait for a Denso one from autodoc and too right to pay UK prices).



The three bolts that hold the compressor in place are single use ali jobbies, so a new set was ordered from Sytner.



A/C lines connected to the compressor.



It was then time to start to reinstall everything but disaster struck when I was trying to get the locking pin back in the tensioner - the top of the casting broke off.



I the had to ask my wife to pop to ECP to get a replacement which annoyingly cost the same amount as the full Gates kit. New tensioner installed.



Belt installed, expansion tank retired etc. Filled with coolant. I lay under that whilst it was being bled to check for leaks.



The car started first time. I ran it up to temperature which was a bit stinky as it was burning off brake cleaner, coolant and A/C dye that was on the manifold. Lovely. But more importantly, there were no leaks from any coolant lines that had been disconnected.

I definitely need to get the sump sorted; the undertray is caked in oil (this is it after a wipe down!).



It’s looking more and more like I’m going to do it myself, I’ve had one quote so far that is nearly £600. I’m waiting to hear back from another garage and the other one hasn’t returned my calls which I’m taking as a polite was of saying they don’t want to do it. It doesn’t look impossible, just fiddly and a bit messy.

Here’s what was left of the clutch in the compressor pulley.



It’s getting regassed on Monday night.

JakeT

5,508 posts

123 months

Good work. Funnily the bearing failing is why I replaced mine too as it sounded quite bad. I’m sure had I left it this would have happened.

Fun* fact. These compressors aren’t your standard on/off type. They’re a variable displacement one so can range from very little draw to a big draw when they’re working hard. If you dip the clutch on a hot day having recently started the engine, the speed at which the revs drop is way faster than once the system is down to temperature.

The EuroNobHeads bits are costly, but it’s an INA tensioner which is the same as an OE part. 70,000 miles on mine now and all good. I also did it at the same time as the compressor, and a new belt.

Tom4398cc

268 posts

37 months

Well done Sam.

Must have been a serious job because you weren’t wearing your normal safety footwear

d_a_n1979

8,860 posts

75 months

Bkoomin'eck Sam... More serious work there pal.

Least it's sorted now!

But of a bummer both cars are testing... Good you've the patience and skills to get there...

And like above, the safety flippy floppies too biggrin

Court_S

Original Poster:

13,413 posts

180 months

JakeT said:
Good work. Funnily the bearing failing is why I replaced mine too as it sounded quite bad. I’m sure had I left it this would have happened.

Fun* fact. These compressors aren’t your standard on/off type. They’re a variable displacement one so can range from very little draw to a big draw when they’re working hard. If you dip the clutch on a hot day having recently started the engine, the speed at which the revs drop is way faster than once the system is down to temperature.

The EuroNobHeads bits are costly, but it’s an INA tensioner which is the same as an OE part. 70,000 miles on mine now and all good. I also did it at the same time as the compressor, and a new belt.
I didn’t know that re the clutch. The pulley on the old one spins with zero resistance which I’m guessing why there’s no cold air being made. The new one has quite a bit of resistance if you spin it by hand.

I was just annoyed at lying so much for a tensioner when it was replaced last year when I changed the oil filter housing. At least they had one in stock.

Court_S

Original Poster:

13,413 posts

180 months

Tom4398cc said:
Well done Sam.

Must have been a serious job because you weren’t wearing your normal safety footwear
Cheers Tom.

That’s probably because the bloody puppy had stolen them!

Court_S

Original Poster:

13,413 posts

180 months

d_a_n1979 said:
Bkoomin'eck Sam... More serious work there pal.

Least it's sorted now!

But of a bummer both cars are testing... Good you've the patience and skills to get there...

And like above, the safety flippy floppies too biggrin
It wasn’t as bad as it looked really; a bit messy (well really messy because no matter how much coolant you think you’ve drained, there always seems to be more when you disconnect the next pipe).

The A/C in this has been a royal pain in the arse; condenser and high pressure line last summer and now the condenser.

Running two old BMW’s can certainly be challenging.

Court_S

Original Poster:

13,413 posts

180 months

We’ve been out in the car this morning and all seems well (other than the lack of A/C). I’ve checked the thermostat pipes that I unplugged yesterday and I can’t see any coolant weeping.

Mr Tidy

22,993 posts

130 months

Court_S said:
Cheers Tom.

That’s probably because the bloody puppy had stolen them!
laugh

Hopefully you'll have working A/C again tomorrow. I doubt Mrs Court would be keen on the James May solution!

Court_S

Original Poster:

13,413 posts

180 months

Mr Tidy said:
laugh

Hopefully you'll have working A/C again tomorrow. I doubt Mrs Court would be keen on the James May solution!
She’s been more patient than me about it in all fairness. We went to to Birmingham for a friends birthday dinner and I spent the entire trip there and back moaning! laugh

MDifficult

2,102 posts

188 months

As always mate, I'm staggered and enthralled by both your skill and your persistence! Well done.

Court_S

Original Poster:

13,413 posts

180 months

MDifficult said:
As always mate, I'm staggered and enthralled by both your skill and your persistence! Well done.
Cheers. This wasn’t as bad to do as I thought if was (other than the coolant bath). Just need to sort the Z4 out properly.