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Car Forum / BMW Cars / November 2005

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525 TDS difficult to start

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Nick - 07 Oct 2005 19:51 GMT
I have a 525TDS which has done approx 130,000 miles and is approx 10 years
old.
  (I believe this engine is also used in the 2.5 ltr diesel Range Rover )

It has become increasingly difficult to start on occasions, which seems
time-related to when it was last run.
About 3 months ago it was difficult to start in the mornings - more recently
it was difficult to start at the end of the day and this week it is
difficult to start after an hour of leaving it, when the engine is still
warm.

I have fitted a new "lift pump" (on the tank) and fitted new glow plugs (old
ones were OK though) - the pump runs for about 45 seconds on ignition
switch-on and the glow plugs draw current for their time period when the
engine is cold enough to demand glow-plug heating.
The engine, once started, runs perfectly when cold or hot at idle and normal
running speeds at all revs - fuel consumption is normal - the fuel filter on
the bulkhead has been replaced recently.

I do see a large air bubble (about a foot long) appear very readily in the
plastic tube from the filter to the injection pump. This is initially pushed
towards the injector pump when the ignition is switched on and when the
engine eventually starts, quite a bit more air is initially seen rushing
along this pipe towards the injector pump, although after a few seconds this
disappears as, I presume, diesel takes its place. Once the engine has
started, it runs well immediately, cold or hot engine, cold or warm weather.

I feel sure that this air bubble is key to this problem but the main BMW
dealer says "they all do that"....  I really don't want to go too near the
injector pump until I have exhausted every other possibility, but not sure
what else I can check.
There is no diesel leaking out of anywhere I can find ( no puddles under the
car / smells) but somehow air seems to be leaking in.

Can anyone suggest any other areas for me to investigate or is this a
classic symptom of something ?

Thanks,

Nick
Dodgy - 07 Oct 2005 21:36 GMT
>I have a 525TDS which has done approx 130,000 miles and is approx 10 years
>old.
>   (I believe this engine is also used in the 2.5 ltr diesel Range Rover )

And the BMW 325 TD/TDS. It's known as the M51 engine.

<snip>

>I feel sure that this air bubble is key to this problem but the main BMW
>dealer says "they all do that"....  I really don't want to go too near the
>injector pump until I have exhausted every other possibility, but not sure
>what else I can check.
>There is no diesel leaking out of anywhere I can find ( no puddles under the
>car / smells) but somehow air seems to be leaking in.

Diesel isn't leaking out (well not much, see below), air's leaking in
and the diesel is running back down from the filer housing under
gravity as air is sucked in.

>Can anyone suggest any other areas for me to investigate or is this a
>classic symptom of something ?

This is exactly what happened to my 325TD a couple of months ago.

You are quite correct, the air bubble is your problem, you're having
to crank the engine, pumping the air through the injector pump until
eventually some fuel gets there and it fires up.

The BMW dealer is talking out of his backside. I'd go find another one
if he can't see that as a fault. Not only should diesel fuel systems
not have air in them, but this is a classic sympton of a well known
BMW fault.

Things to check...

1) Bleed back pipes. At that age the bleedback pipes will have long
since given up being rubber, and will now be as flexible as concrete.
The split, they let air back into the system. Easy DIY fix, buy 4 feet
of 2mm bore cloth braided fuel pipe from your local car parts store,
and get to work with a stanley knife.

Take the plastic trim off the top of the engine and you'll see the
little back pipes linking everything together.

You won't be able to just pull them off as they'll snap and leave
their ends on the enjectors. Best technique is the run a stanley along
the side on the last inch, which will get it to release, then pull
them off... But have a pair of needle end pliers to hand to fish off
the ends just in case!

Job done for a couple of quid...

2) Unfortunately that wasn't the cause in my case, but it's always a
good idea to change those pipes for the couple of quid it'll cost.

Here's the well know, cause...

Once you've got the plastic trim off the top of the engine, have a
look round the 4th Injector back, I bet you it will be moist with
diesel, and all the others dry.
Now look more cosely round that injector, and you'll see it actually
has a wire coming out of it, unlike the other 5.
Say hello the the master injector.
Also say hello to a design flaw. The sealant used where the wire comes
from the inside of the injector, breaks down over time and leaks. Air
gets back down the injector pipe as the car sits there.

Another job that can be done at home, but you will need a special long
reach socket with a hole in the side to feed the wire through, to get
the injector out. A good accessory shop will have one, it's not a BMW
only thing.
You'll also need a bit of luck and a long screw driver to release the
plug from the socket slightly lower down the side of the block.

Now the bad news.
All the injecors cost about £30-40 each... except one... One costs
£140. I'll let you guess which one.

Good luck,

Dodgy.
Nick - 07 Oct 2005 21:55 GMT
Hi,

Thanks a lot for the reply - I did change the glow plugs about 3 weeks ago,
had the manifold off to do it and noticed these pipes were a bit manky /
perished, but didn't know what they did so I left them pretty much alone...

However I had to move them out of the way to assist in the removal /
replacing the glow plugs so I am sure I would not have helped their
"sealing"... I am wondering why the garage I have the car at has not jumped
on this one .... they are specialists in older BMWs and do seem to know
their stuff.....

I hope to hear from the garage tomorrow and if they are still "floundering"
I will try to retrieve the car and do it myself, if they haven't got the
diesel injector pump off (eeeek) or the car in bits...

Thanks again for the info - if nothing else I will replace those little
"loop through" hoses you mentioned first.....

............. and I'll let you know how I get on.

Nick
Dodgy - 07 Oct 2005 23:06 GMT
>Hi,
>
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
>on this one .... they are specialists in older BMWs and do seem to know
>their stuff.....

Oh they'll be sealed onto the injector alright, they bake on! That's
why removing them is so much fun, but they become brittle and crack,
especially when someone's pushing them about to get the manifold nuts.
:-)
As for the garage being a BMW specialist, that they might be, but I
expect 95% of their customers have petrol BMW's. Diesel is a
completely different beast and has it's own set of tricks/problems.
You'd be better off talking to a diesel specialist when it comes to
engine problems.

Air in the fuel line isn't a problem on petrol injection or the very
modern common rail diesel, as the fuel pumps round and the air bubble
just gets pushed past and back to the tank down the fuel return pipe.

However a mechanical injector pump diesel engine like yours, mine and
a million London taxis, doesn't have a fuel pump with a return pipe to
shift the air, it has an injector pump that can only take it and pump
it through the injectors as you crank the engine over. Any air in
there is a bad sign and certainly not normal.

>I hope to hear from the garage tomorrow and if they are still "floundering"
>I will try to retrieve the car and do it myself, if they haven't got the
>diesel injector pump off (eeeek) or the car in bits...

Nooooo!
Step away from the injector pump!
If I were you I'd phone them first thing or you'll end up with labour
costs more than the cars worth at this rate!

>Thanks again for the info - if nothing else I will replace those little
>"loop through" hoses you mentioned first.....
>
>............. and I'll let you know how I get on.

Best of luck, but I do have a nasty feeling it's going to be that
injector.

When mine started doing this in July I took it to a diesel injector
specialist I know, and asked one of the engineers if I could pick his
brain for a second. He came outside and told me what it was before
he'd even turned his torch on. He said I was the second 2.5 diesel BMW
that week and that they're really well known for it.

Hopefully you will be really lucky, and it will be the bleed back
pipes complaining following the distrubance of the manifold coming
off.

Isn't glow plug changing such fun, did it myself 2 weeks ago... Did
you end up spending most of your time trying to remove the baked on
remains of the gasket from the head?

Good luck.

Dodgy.
Nick - 07 Oct 2005 23:24 GMT
>>Hi,
>>
[quoted text clipped - 21 lines]
> modern common rail diesel, as the fuel pumps round and the air bubble
> just gets pushed past and back to the tank down the fuel return pipe.
So what do these bleed pipes do - there does seem to be a return to the tank pipe...

> However a mechanical injector pump diesel engine like yours, mine and
> a million London taxis, doesn't have a fuel pump with a return pipe to
[quoted text clipped - 32 lines]
> you end up spending most of your time trying to remove the baked on
> remains of the gasket from the head? Actually, I got six new Inlet manifold gaskets "just in case"
and only had to use two or three as they came away quite easily - I did have to persuade the remnants of two
off though with a sharp edged piece of hardwood but not too bad - I guess a bad joint would only bleed away a bit of pressurised air, unlike on a normally aspirated petrol engine where mixture would be messed up as well, potentially

> Good luck.
>
> Dodgy.

Thanks again.

Nick
Dodgy - 08 Oct 2005 01:17 GMT
>> Air in the fuel line isn't a problem on petrol injection or the very
>> modern common rail diesel, as the fuel pumps round and the air bubble
>> just gets pushed past and back to the tank down the fuel return pipe.
>
> So what do these bleed pipes do - there does seem to be a return to the tank pipe...

It is a return pipe, but unlike a petrol car they are after the
injector, they're kind of like an overflow.
On a petrol or common rail diesel injection, the fuel is electrically
pumped round past the back of the injectors on a big loop.

A petrol injection car's fuel pump pumps more fuel than it needs, and
pumps even without the engine running, a mechanic diesel injector pump
only pumps what it needs, and only with the engine turning. The
injector pump is driven by the engine.
The only way to clear the air is to crank the engine and pump it
through the injectors, squirt by squirt.

I wish I could draw a picture, then it might make sense!

>> Isn't glow plug changing such fun, did it myself 2 weeks ago... Did
>> you end up spending most of your time trying to remove the baked on
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>and only had to use two or three as they came away quite easily - I did have to persuade the remnants of two
>off though with a sharp edged piece of hardwood but not too bad - I guess a bad joint would only bleed away a bit of pressurised air, unlike on a normally aspirated petrol engine where mixture would be messed up as well, potentially

You lucky lucky man.

I forgot to stock up on gaskets, so every single one of them welded
itself on and got torn apart when I pulled off the manifold. I spent a
good 30 mins clearing them all off with a scraper... Then another half
hour cutting more gaskets. I knew I had that sheet of gasket material
sitting in my garage for a reason :-)

But as you rightly say, all it would do is hiss air and loose boost
and not break anything.

And now, having just gone out to my car for something, I find the
drivers door central locking isn't working any more, the alarm opens
and shuts all the doors except the drivers... Guess I know what I'm
doing tomorrow! (Next week Dodgy will be an authority on removing door
panels!)

Dodgy.
Nick - 08 Oct 2005 17:20 GMT
>>> Air in the fuel line isn't a problem on petrol injection or the very
>>> modern common rail diesel, as the fuel pumps round and the air bubble
[quoted text clipped - 47 lines]
>
> Dodgy.

Well, I phoned them at 08-00 hrs today and they had already been checking it
out - they applied vacuum to as couple of pipes and sucked until all the air
was purged out of the system yesterday - it started immediately after
re-assembling everything and again this morning - they are quite sure this
"did something" as they were unable to see any air in the system again and
it always started first time - so I collected the car mid-morning and it
seems to be fine - I think they were feeling a little guilty - they didn't
charge me anything and must have spent some 5 to 10 hours on it this
week.... so either that or they did re-instate something that perhaps they
didn't previously ! I will probably never know. - Anyway I am just going to
look at the plastic pipe whilst I start it after a 5 hour sit on the drive
and see what happens.... and if I see a bubble...  If it is there, I will
firstly do the injector loops (although they said they had done that a month
back) and if all OK there it will possibly be the " no. 4 injector job "
you suggested at some point...
Just started whilst looking at that plastic pipe - there was a tiny
airbubble in it at the highest point (size of a pin head) and it hardly
moved as I turned on the ignition - it started immediately....  however as
it was idling and I was just looking around, the injector pump end of this
transparent pipe from the fuel filter was definitely weeping - about a drip
every 10 seconds ! On moving the pipe slightly the leak became worse... so
it seems this pipe is cracked ! I can't think it is more than a few pounds
so I will replace that on Monday ! Coincidence perhaps but its right in the
area of the problem !
I don't think its quite over yet but hopefully nearly and not too expensive
!
Nick
Dodgy - 10 Oct 2005 00:35 GMT
>>>> Air in the fuel line isn't a problem on petrol injection or the very
>>>> modern common rail diesel, as the fuel pumps round and the air bubble
[quoted text clipped - 75 lines]
>!
>Nick

You lucky lucky lucky s*d!

If that feed pipe from injector pump to filter is leaking it could be
the source of all your troubles.
Don't think much of your garage for not spotting that!

Dodgy.
Nick - 11 Oct 2005 22:32 GMT
Hello again..

Yesterday I stumbled upon a significant-to-the-problem discovery whilst
pondering things with the bonnet up and engine running..... Whilst prodding
and poking around the fuel system generally, I was wiggling the pipe from
the fuel filter to the
injector pump, the translucent plastic one about 12 inches long and I saw a
wetness develop at the union to the injector pump. Further detailed
investigation revealed that the plastic pipe had split nearly all round the
union at almost the very top end of the metal that it was "heatshrunk"
over - I immediately ordered a new pipe and left the car at home today.
I returned after work with the new pipe and replaced it - the old pipe was
hanging on by a thread to the union - it must have been leaking under
pressure and I am sure it would have been leaking air back in under vacuum
or engine off state.....

I am confident that this was a significant factor to my problem - the crack
was not "new - it had some considerable time's worth of accumulated muck in
it and was probably leaking more or less depending on the weather etc....

I am disappointed that the garage's tests and investigations did not find
this, albeit obscure, problem - I wonder if the fuel pump was indeed
necessary....  but glad / hopeful it was not the injector pump / injectors
at fault...

Nick
Dodgy - 12 Oct 2005 17:37 GMT
>Hello again..
>
[quoted text clipped - 20 lines]
>necessary....  but glad / hopeful it was not the injector pump / injectors
>at fault...

You lucky b*gger!

Glad to hear it though... Nice to have a cheap and happy ending once
in a while!

Dodgy.
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Matthew Maddock - 24 Nov 2005 22:41 GMT
Had a very similar problem with my 525TDS - garage changed lift pump
and no joy.  Not sure if yours is the same, but mine was more difficult
to start if it was pointing up-hill!

Anyway, in the end garage found it was a leaking injector and I had to
crank it for ages (like yours - time dependent with how long it had
been last used) until enough fuel pressure built up to start the
engine.

Changed appropriate injector and it was absolutely fine.  Independent
BMW specialist found the real fault in the end, main dealer was useless,
and no clue at all.

Matt.

> I have a 525TDS which has done approx 130,000 miles and is approx 10 years
> old.
[quoted text clipped - 36 lines]
>
> Nick
 
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