Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hey guys,

So i made up a boost leak tester as per another thread I came across. Pod filter adapter, pvc end cap and air compressor tyre valve.

Worked great! I had 5 leaks I identified. At the beginning it wouldn't hold pressure for more than 1 second. Now raising it to 5 psi, it will hold for at least 15-20 seconds, slowly dropping off.

I can still hear 1 air leak. It's coming from down near the exhaust/back of the engine. I've checked all the hoses at the top and they seem to be ok, soapy water shows no bubbles.

My question is, is it normal for it to taper off boost within that time? Could the noise i'm hearing be the air coming from engine out into the dump pipe? Doesn't sound muffled, but it's the only thing I can think of.

Cheers

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/431595-boost-leakpressure-tester/
Share on other sites

I noticed I have air seeping up through the oil filler cap. I can hear the air hissing out from there. Its a nismo cap. Anyone know where I can buy the stock one? Also is that normal?

How do you get all th valves to be shut? Whats the most pressure you test with? Some people online say no more than 8psi but thats retarded since my turbo applies up to 20psi to the walls.

Ok i'll try that, i figured it might have been something like that.

I'm testing with 5-6psi, really no need to go anymore as you'll hear air hissing at that pressure. 5 psi is a lot of pressure.

My thinking was also, using this type of testing, your applying positive pressure to the "intake" side of the turbo, which normally is sucking. So that means the MAF and all that is seeing positive pressure. Which isn't a normal thing for it. I'd be weary about applying 20psi to it.

Edited by Shoujiki

Yeah that is true. When i'm pumping it up with 5psi, the intake hose is expanding! Quite funny to watch. Interestingly i had to reseal the MAF top with silicon as it was leaking too!

So i tried the gear/push thing, doesn't seem to change it. Same exact hiss, same area. How fast should the pressure drop off once it's at 5-6 psi?

Well this wont hold anything for more than say, 20-30 seconds now. It's a lot better now that i've gone through and found the other leaks. But this one is certainly letting air out.

The engine has a Greddy Profec 2 Spec B controller, i checked the solenoid connections and all seems good in that area. This hiss is coming from near the back of the motor, sort of where the boost pressure sensor is, but it doesn't seem to be that.

Bong testing costs coin, why would he need it now all the leaks are taken care of?

The small leak you have is no issue, if it is holding 5 psi for 20-30 seconds it is fine. Don't be scared to pump a little more in, I run 40psi in mine when testing, but I don't have the dodgy stock intake pipe like yours does Shoujiki.

I agree with Scott, I'd say it's probably not an issue. What you could try though, is pumping some more pressure in there. I found that at 5psi things were generally ok, but at about 12-13psi I found a couple of vacuum hoses that were leaking from t-pieces etc. Now I generally try to get my system to its target boost pressure, which is 20psi. Just watch your pvc end cap doesn't come shooting out and crack you in the hand, mine often does :P

Thanks guys for your help. Yeah smoke test seems a bit much at this stage, i don't really want to spend as such (hence me making up this great idea, thanks Hanaldo for your thread btw!).

I'll try a bit more pressure and go from there. If i really can' find it today then i'll just leave it and see how it goes. I'm curious to see how it will drive now with all these little leaks fixed. My target boost pressure is 11psi so i may try to get to that.

Yeah Scotty i think that dodgy stock pipe would explode at that pressure! It will be great to get that changed out to an alloy one. And yes i'll watch the end cap, it was that hard to get in there in the first place, and i used a hose clamp too, so hopefully it's nice and tight!

Again, thanks guys. :)

I spun up a proper alloy plug with a step so the hose clamp doesn't pop off, the hose runs to a gauge and trigger setup. I can tell you, at 40psi there is not much chance of sealing all the leaks, unless you glued them perhaps. Most would say it's overkill to pump that much in, but I run nearly 3 bar at gearchange.

If you are worried about the AFM, take it out of the equation, why would you run it in the system anyway? Just remove the afm/airbox, stick the bung in, and pressurize.

Yeah Scotty i think that dodgy stock pipe would explode at that pressure! :)

You would be surprised, I have shoved over 20psi into one without issue. They expand quite a bit. If it fails just hit me up for an 80mm alloy intake. :P

Ok so i found the "air leak". It seems to be coming from the valve cover? I have an oil weep back there somewhere, so perhaps it's coming out of that area? If I take the oil cap off, all the pressure releases straight away. Would having a weep like that really affect the car? I guess the pressure has to go somewhere.

Took it for a quick drive and boy what a difference. It actually boosts to 0.92bar now, never done that before. And the boost ramp is so strong, really kicks you back. Also no misfire at idle with an open filter like I had before.

Now that I think of it, because i'm pressuring part of the intake that never sees boost (ie pre turbo inlet side), i wonder if theres a hose/line connection somewhere there that's going off to the intake/valve cover area, like crankcase breather. So in normal boosting/driving conditions, there would be no boost in the valve cover area.

Edit:

Just had a look. That is indeed what the noise is. On the stock intake rubber pipe, there's 2 ports coming off it. One goes to the crankcase breather on the valve cover. The other goes to the turbo recirculation valve. So normally that pipe would never see boost pressure like that, as both ports are pre turbo, just after the MAF. I bet if i took off the hose on the breather and blocked it off, it would hold pressure.

Edited by Shoujiki

In fact, pushing air in through the BOV connection (one of the ports) should do nothing and pushing it in through the cam breathers should overcome leakage past the rings - now that I think about it.

You could try taking the turbo inlet off completely and use a dedicated bit of 3" (or whatever size to suit your turbo) hose to connect up with. That will cut those two connections out of the loop, but will cause you other hassles (disassembly being a big one, and possibly having to block off the BOV being another).

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • So, I started this repair and got as far as "fixing" the holes with some fibreglass. God all those years working on boats came back quickly. I decided I'd reach out to some rust guys just to see what they would say about it. I came across a guy about 40 mins away and went to see him. He said the windscreen needs to come out, that there might be some more bits around the windscreen and he'd quote them at the time. But his quote was $300 to remove and replace windscreen and $3k for the damage he can see. He said he could respray the roof for $1200 and the bonnet for another $800 (somebody has previously rattle canned it, its horrendous). This is $5300 + any small additional bits. It's a lot, I get that and the name of one of my fave youtube channels 'Not Economically Viable' comes to mind.  I'm not being financially rational, but I've taken him up on the quote. He's opening a new shop in November with more room, so we're waiting for that. I'll leave the currently missing headliner out until then. I'm looking forward to it being fixed and having the paint looking nice again (lots of clear coat issues on the roof too). / flame suit on.
    • Oh and some up-and-comings; New rear drivers wheel bearing. I'll do that this weekend while the diff is out. The car is already up and the d/c axles and missing exhaust will help with space. This is the last bearing for me to do and I've been dragging my feet on it. I also have some new EBC blue stuff pads for the car and some new brake fluid. I haven't ever flushed the fluid in this car and looking forward to it. I have 600 degree fluid to put in. Not exactly "race fluid" but better than the typical stuff I have been using.
    • A proper clutch/plate type mechanical diff with quite a lot of pre-load and high locking % is better for drifting. Much more consistent in its behaviour. A helical can be annoyingly vague and inconsistent in how it responds under the sorts of abuse found in drifting.
    • Some updates here. I pulled the entire interior out, minus some trim to respray the seats with Colourlock dye. It turned out really nice though I accidentally let the dog in the car after and she scratched up the front seat.  This is what it looked like before, the colour was just washing out everywhere but thankfully the leather was in good nic. Then after the respray   And after the bloody dog jumped in The headliner is out waiting to be retrimmed, but it will stay out now until Nov - see why below. I replaced the stereo/headunit with a period-styled Android headunit. I have no after pics, but I'll get some. This is because of the missing pixels. I tried to fix this twice with replacement ribbon cables but couldn't. Also the bluetooth interface I'd bought for this was crap. Then there's the rusty roof. Pics and info in this other thread. I have decided to get this repaired professionally, but I'll update that thread. This is why the headliner will stay out for now. I'll be getting the roof and bonnet resprayed at the same time the rust is fixed. I also had an interesting issue with my drivers door lock.  For a small period I was having issues getting any 12v power to the car - I mean *any*. It would have no dash lights, nothing. It happened while I was at the shops and I couldn't get in the car. So, we had 2 problems. The most pressing here is that I was locked out. I have only a single physical key hole on the car, the drivers door and no amount of turning would unlock the car. Surely it doesn't need power for this? The second issue is why am I losing all power periodically, The battery isn't dead, its almost like the battery isn't even there. Two issues that were surprisingly easy to fix. You fellow BMW over-engineering lovers will appreciate this. The lock in the door has 5 states; mechanical lock, electric lock, neutral, electric unlock, mechanical unlock achieved at -90 degrees, -45 degrees, 0 degrees, 45 degrees and 90 degrees. Although, the unlock is towards the front of the car, so opposite for LHD countries. Sticking the key in and turning 45 left or right is what is used 99% of the time. It activates the central locking etc. 90 degrees is for dead battery access and, obvs, only un/locks the one door. But because the mechanical lock is never used and is 27 years old, it seizes up. I was totally unable to turn the key far enough to get to the mechanical unlock (At the time of locking myself out, I didn't even know this was a thing). I eventually did it with some vicegrips and teflon spray.  I made a quick vid for other E39 peeps.   The battery issue is totally new to me also - It wasn't making sufficient contact between the post and the terminal. The terminal was bolted on tight, but the car wouldn't have power. After checking the battery with my multimeter I accidentally contacted the terminal and the battery post and the car got power. The battery was only a few years old and in good condition. I cleaned the post and the terminal with a wire brush, bolted it back on tight and never had the issue again. I'm still surprised that despite having solid contact it didn't work. Also, the car was getting Warragamba sized pools of water in the back when it rained. My initial concern was another rust problem. But when I went out on Weds while it was raining and while I had no headliner in I could see a steady stream of water coming through the roof mounted aerial. As this aerial is for the (now removed) car phone I pulled it out and whacked a blanking grommet in the hole. It seems fine now. I'm thinking I might get the hole permanently filled when the rust is fixed. Moving forward and things in progress; The tailgate needs some attention. I have taken all the trim off to clean it all and address some small rust spots. I have partially done all of this but I'll finish it up hopefully this weekend. As all the trim are now entirely devoid of trim clips I have bought a heap of strong velcro and I'm hoping it does a good enough job as any of this trim in good condition is super expensive and usually in Europe as we dont have many of the wagons here. Suspension and brakes!!! This is exciting. In the front; New control arms New sway bar links New lower Eibach springs (the only modification I'm planning on this car) M Sport shocks (these came with the car and will replace the longer shocks in the car) New top mounts Used 540i calipers (stock brakes suck!) New 540i disks and pads (22x296 mm for 528 and 30x334 mm for 540i) New front wheel bearings (thank all that is holy for bolt on bearings!) Annnnd in the back; New control arms New sway bar links Adjustable air suspension arms (fool the car into what the current height is so the self levelling suspension can match the new front ride height) New ball joints I'll also be doing a brake fluid flush while I'm in there. I'm planning on switching the car over to the 16's that came with it so I can clean up and respray the M Sport 17's. They've lost a lot of colour over the years and have some gutter rash. None of this will start until the E90 is back.
    • You mean you will regret it for drifting duties? I don't quite follow.
×
×
  • Create New...