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#1
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Curiuos about difference between EGR or Oil catch canbypass
Well, as the title says, my curiosity is raised over the viability of the EGR bypass over the benefit of using an oil catch can. This is on the M57N single turbo in the E53.
My EGR has caused many of the previous engine issues I have had and it is only now that I am learning what a mongrel idea it is. To put perspective on why mention catch can, my younger brother who has had many diesel off road vehicles and his son as well, have had some similar issues. The EGR was the root cause of the problem, even on my nephews brand new Isuzu IMax. They have fitted oil catch cans on all diesels after having an issue and then they no longer have EGR problems. The other point he mentioned was the amount of condensation that was also trapped and not fed through the motor. Whilst not a large amount, moisture is not something you want running in with your lubrication. Has anybody here on the Forums who own diesel X5's fitted one of these to their vehicle? What are your response and views on the subject? Something else I have given thought to, is a turbo boost gauge...Has anyone ever fitted one and if so how is it hooked up? Looking forward to hearing from you all, especially the M57 powered owners. Jeff
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I own a BMW E53...Always questions, unfortunately I can rarely supply solutions. I will try to give results to my problems if they are fixed and how it was done.
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#2
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I'm not quite following the correlation of CCV and EGR. On M47/57 engines the CCV is quite trouble free. On early versions the oil separation loo roll should be renewed regularly but the vortex separator on M57N is virtually maintenance free.
I've disabled EGR on all M57 engines mainly to prevent the soot mess in the intake system. This can easily be done by just unplugging the vacuum hose on EGR valve. On early versions that's just it (It will show a code with diagnostics, but doesn't cause a warning light or limp mode.). On later models this will cause a fail safe mode and has to be mapped out.
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E39 530dA -02 M-Sport Messing metallic E53 X5 3.0dA -06 Sport Stratus grey E70 X5 40d -12 M-Sport Space grey |
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#3
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Thank you for the reply.
My car is stamped as a 11th month 2006 build. I have heard of the issue of remapping if I fit a EGR bypass, but to be honest I cannot see any way that it would cause any engine light warnings. There is only a vacuum line attached. As to the oil catch can, I have seen that the hoses and intercooler have an amount of oil in them and when the car is tilted to one side with the inter cooler hose off it drains out. All joints are saturated in oil dribble an the only assumption I can come up with is this is coming through the turbo system from the engine. I therefore thought that after being advised an EGR bypass was not advisable, maybe a Catch Can would help reduce the amount of oil passing into the inter-cooler and back through the EGR. This is why I asked, as I have been gradually been replacing hoses and vacuum lines. I thank you for your reply, I hope you can expand upon it or my reply. Yet as my follow up post implied, it may be more to this than just the engine. Cheers, Jeff
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I own a BMW E53...Always questions, unfortunately I can rarely supply solutions. I will try to give results to my problems if they are fixed and how it was done.
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#4
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Quote:
From the TIS: - The quantity of recirculated exhaust gas influences the mass of the fresh air drawn in: The more exhaust gas is recirculated, the less fresh air is drawn in. Since the mass of fresh air drawn in is known for all operating points with the EGR switched off, the reduction in the mass of fresh air caused by exhaust gas recirculation can be used as a measure for the quantity of recirculated exhaust gas. For the purpose of exhaust gas recirculation control, a set fresh air mass is defined in a characteristic map with following variables for all operating conditions: - Engine speed - Injection volume - Coolant temperature - Atmospheric pressure The current setting for exhaust gas recirculation matching (service functions) is an additional influencing variable. During operation, the quantity of recirculated exhaust gas is controlled by the duty factor at the pressure converter such that the set mass of fresh air defined for the specific operating point is drawn in. Fault code 6 "exhaust gas recirculation (control deviation)" is stored if the control unit detects impermissible deviation between the set and actual fresh air mass. Quote:
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Wayne 2005 BMW X5 3.0d (b 02/05) 2001 BMW F650GS Dakar (b 06/01) |
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#5
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Quote:
Is this the weird thing that is on the left as you look at the engine and towards the rear. It is under the inlet manifold or is that something different? It has been modified now as well from the original build. I hope I am explaining it correctly ![]() Jeff
__________________
I own a BMW E53...Always questions, unfortunately I can rarely supply solutions. I will try to give results to my problems if they are fixed and how it was done.
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#6
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Quote:
![]() Old vs new... ![]() Have a watch of this... https://youtu.be/-LXBlUlgTjo
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Wayne 2005 BMW X5 3.0d (b 02/05) 2001 BMW F650GS Dakar (b 06/01) |
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#7
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Like said some oil on intake side (from CCV and turbo) is totally normal. If there is no abnormal oil consumption everything is likely as it should. The older loo roll type oil separator is a bit more efficient compared to newer vortex but the difference is not huge and it would need regular renewing.
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E39 530dA -02 M-Sport Messing metallic E53 X5 3.0dA -06 Sport Stratus grey E70 X5 40d -12 M-Sport Space grey |
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