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#21
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e53 Fuel Supply Detailed (fuel pump / siphon pump diagnostic help)
It probably takes a year or two of driving for the fuel pump to slowly wear out and lose the ability to siphon properly. That means at some point your DTE capability will be say 5-10 miles. You may not be able to tell the system it working by simply running down to empty. You also need to check the test six right tank value which should not change from about 32L down to 0L. If the right value drops from 1.4 to 1.1L as the gauge goes from 1/4 tank to empty you can be sure the fuel pump has worn out. Replace it. Also: do a "reality check" using your average mph to get a rough lifespan estimate. Example wife's car I used 22mph and 6000 hours to get 132,000. Amazing since the pump was a few thousand miles into soft failure when replaced at 131400. Use 4000 hours if you use pure gas 6000 if 10% ethanol gas. My car has higher odometer but it has a higher average mph. I will report back when I can record what my cars baseline right tank value is and if it's starting to dip when low dte.
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2011 E70 • N55 (me) 2012 E70 • N63 (wife) Last edited by andrewwynn; 02-14-2017 at 03:52 PM. |
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#22
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andrewwynn,
Excellent thread! I read this thread 3 times to get a better understanding of your observation of the E53 tank design and fuel delivery system. This gives me a better understanding of why we ran out of fuel when the DTE on the display read ~40 miles. I was like, WTF, had the X5 towed to the nearest gas station and she fired right up with a fill-up. I was dumbfounded that could happen at 40 miles DTE. Based on your analysis and the mileage on the X5 at the time (about 150K miles) this all makes sense. We haven't gone past 1/4 tank since this event to be on the safe side, but from what I understand, over time, this may not be good enough as well?
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2002 X5 3.0i, Sport Premium, Titanium Silver, Grey Dakota, Cold Weather Package, Privacy Glass, Xenons, DICE, LED Tails, just a winter vehicle... 2007 550i, Sport Premium, Silver Grey Metallic, Grey Dakota, Navigation, Cold Weather Package, Comfort Access, Heated Rear Seats, HD Radio, Xenon 2007 X3 3.0si, ///M Sport Premium, Monaco Blue, Grey Dakota, Navigation, Cold Weather Package, Privacy Glass, Xenon |
#23
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Fire up test six and observe the right tank value. At about 32L left it should stabilize at about 1-2L 320014 for example. In my case at about 25L left the right dropped to 0.9L (250009) and made me very nervous so I would refill. Once the pump motor is weak enough that it won't siphon its at high risk for hard failure and I would replace sooner than later. It's about 4/10 level of difficulty and the topsource copy of the pump from amazon is excellent and has a 1 year warranty.
It is not likely that the siphon pump failed so I would replace the electric pump and verify the baseline right stays constant. That will verify the siphon pump is working.
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2011 E70 • N55 (me) 2012 E70 • N63 (wife) |
#24
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When you put in gas at a gas station, where exactly does it go?
In the first photo, I see a hose that could be this port on the top surface, to the left of center, that would seem to need to fill the left side before anything gets to the right side. Could this be true? If so, would it mean that if you run the right tank dry, then you'd need to put in many many gallons before getting any gas over to the right side where it is needed. And without any on the right side, nothing will pump from the electric pump, so the venturi siphon pump will not come into play. ???
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2001 X5 3.0i, 203k miles, AT, owned since 2014 |
#25
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Actually no, the hoses you see are for venting and don't come into play.
The fuel neck attaches at the bottom of the surge tank exactly where the fuel pump draws suction. That being said: if the siphon is completely out of whack the system will empty the surge tank into the left side and the car will need just like you describe enough gas to completely fill the left side and overflow into the right meaning you would need to have 32L (plus 5L) of gas from bone dry to be "at zero" in the case of total siphon failure. The car will still operate fine if the pump is working down to about 40L but below 40 will be effectively empty tank
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2011 E70 • N55 (me) 2012 E70 • N63 (wife) |
#26
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Since this is fuel pump related and I can't find it elsewhere, what is the flow rate of the stock pump at standard rail pressure?
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2001 E53 3.0 5pd |
#27
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Like all other things fuel system related there is very little helpful information out there.
I have found a couple references to the e53 fuel pump that say the volume should be just about half a gallon a minute but that will be at no back pressure. I've seen charts of aftermarket pumps but not the oem one for the e53. I also have no idea exactly how you'd measure the flow rate at pressure. Maybe tapped off the pressure tap on the fuel rail? Maybe somebody that has done a live test can chime in. I think that a pressure test on the return line would be the best way to ensure proper flow rate. The theoretical flow @ 3.5bar doesn't mean much but if the return line to the siphon jets maintains 1.0 to 1.3bar than the flow rate is within spec. Excess flow past the pressure regulator drives the pressure on the return line. Loss of volume is what happens when the pump wears out (soft fail). I think I may add a permanent "T" on my return line and leave a pressure gauge on that I can get to as simple as pulling up the back seat (I'm thinking add a glass window so I can see the gauge that would be right above the left tank access) When the pressure drops below 1bar time to replace the main pump almost as simple as that. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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2011 E70 • N55 (me) 2012 E70 • N63 (wife) |
#28
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the missing seal seat
Thanks to andrewwynn for excellent guide.
I'd like to return the favor, so I'm adding my engineering results. After replacing the O-ring I got stuck at " Quote:
Quote:
![]() I thought there must be another way. After half an our of starring at the seam with no seal, it suddenly hit me, if there is no space for a seal, let's make some space for a seal. And this is how I removed this planned obsolescence using a rasper, I used the same fuel resistant O-ring size 22x2 as the one listed for the other seam: ![]() I have only two hands so taking a pic while rasping wasn't possible, the rasper used was a triange shaped iron thing on the right side. It was eating the plastic quite easily, be carefull not to rasp a hole into the plastic. ![]() ![]() The outer plastic started cracking a bit. As I have no intention of disassembling this $hit again, I made sure it doesn't get spewed out using a hose-clamp: ![]() I have no leaks after assembly, however the sucking jet still doesn't work, so I've ordered new pump as the old one seems to be already damaged as I get longer crank times randomly. Its the second pump gone now, hopefully the last one. Last edited by BlackMW; 12-05-2017 at 11:19 AM. |
#29
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What a wonderful thread I hadn't found when searching for a slightly (maybe) different issue :
I can't fill my tank fully... The pump stops and won't put anymore in when test 6 shows 78L Last time I filled up, I was a bit below a quarter, it showed : 8.3/ 9.3/ 17.6L After filling up about : 51.1/ 27.0/ 78.1L (its coherent with the 60 liters I put in). 124km (about 80 miiles) later : 36.8/ 19.8/ 56.7L The fuel gauge doesn't go to the top of course. and I haven't pushed it to the bottom (lack of faith). When I bought the car a few months back, it had a fuel gauge that wouldn't work and I replaced the fuel sender (the one without the pump) and found the old one had a broken plate where the floater bar contacts. Do you have an Idea what I should explore or what I should poke at? |
#30
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@scourtaud23: It seems like passenger(pump) side sender, I used a pencil eraser tip
to remove dirt settled on the resistor plate. Once it is out, don't forget to measure the resistance of the sender in full and empty position to compare to expected values and check for mechanical issues if is not bent and moves freely when reassembling. Last edited by BlackMW; 12-05-2017 at 05:55 PM. |
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