BMW S85 Rod Bearing Replacement DIY Part 2 (2005-2010 BMW M5 & M6 Rod Bearing Replacement)
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- Опубліковано 29 лип 2024
- ►The BMW S85 V10 is one of the gnarliest sounding engines to ever leave the M-Division. They took inspiration from BMW's then F1 team and put together an absolute screamer of a powerplant. With 500 horsepower on tap, the E60 M5 and E63/64 M6 were the kings of the performance luxury sedan and coupes. However, the S85 has a chronic issue that isn't a quick fix. As with so many BMWs since the turn of the millennia, the S85 was built to be high revving and contained smaller bearings than might have been needed. Combined with a soft bearing material, the S85 has a penchant for destroying its rod bearings.
For the uninitiated, the rod bearings sit between the connecting rod and the crankshaft to provide a smooth and friction-free surface during operation. The connecting rods are bolted to a journal on the crankshaft. As the crankshaft rotates, so too does the journal inside the connecting rod. The bearing is there to interact with the oil and keep the crankshaft journal happy as it rotates inside the connecting rod. The original lead-based bearings were too susceptible to damage, as BMW later found out, and could wear out as early as 30,000-miles with a lead-footed driver. New Bi-Metal aluminum bearings were fitted to the engines in 2010 but by that time, five years' worth of models had already hit the roads.
To BMW's credit, they made the operating procedure of any S85 equipped very clear. The engine needed significant warm-up time before any sort of aggression could be applied, and a specific oil weight was required. Many owners ignored the warnings, but even those who did suffer from issues. Replacement is not a small job, as the entire bottom of the engine and many of the front ancillaries have to be removed. Just getting to the engine requires dropping the front subframe and all of the suspension attached to it. A dealership charges 55 hours to complete the job, and with the cost of parts, it can total well into the five-figure range.
Tackling the BMW S85 rod bearing replacement yourself is a very involved and critical job that can end with a destroyed engine if done wrong. However, with our kit and some instruction by Gareth, you'll have all the instructions and parts for the job. Our kit comes with every part you'd need to tackle the job yourself, including the updated Bi-metal bearings.
Watch BMW S85 Rod Bearing Replacement DIY Part 1 Here: • BMW S85 Rod Bearing Re...
Buy this Rod Bearing Kit at FCP Euro here: www.fcpeuro.com/products/bmw-...
00:00 - BMW S85 Rod Bearing Job Start
00:26 - BMW S85 Oil Pumps Removal
06:24 - BMW S85 Rod Bearing Removal
20:38 - BMW S85 Rod Bearing Install
23:37 - BMW S85 Vanos High-Pressure Line Removal
30:35 - BMW S85 Vanos High-Pressure Line Install
32:55 - BMW S85 Accessories Install
34:38 - BMW S85 Oil Pumps Install
36:47 - BMW S85 Setting Oil Pump Backlash
39:48 - BMW S85 Low-Pressure Oil Pump Install
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Watch part three here: ua-cam.com/video/64AwJMEzyws/v-deo.html
It’s great you guys provide these videos for the community. However the process shown here to clearance the Vanos pump back lash is incorrect. The dial indicator style and gauge set up is inadequate for this application. You need a lever type indicator. If you want to wing it with a plunger style that you’ve shown here you really should be coming at the gear teeth on an angle to get a decent reading of the gear lash. Setting up a plunger type indicator perpendicular to the gear (the method shown here) is wildly inaccurate. Couple that with the extremely tight tolerance bmw specs for this application and you asking for an issue down the road. We do a lot of these jobs and have seen many s85s come through the shop with noise and gear wear on the vanos pump drive system due to incorrect setup. Usually from a bearing job. This is tedious and complex work. A good shop will have invested in the proper knowledge and tooling to do this properly and it’s worth the cost of admission if being done properly. Cheers
😁 yes friend
Came here to see if anyone posted this. You are absolutely correct, they are using the incorrect indicator.
Hello sir! Do you by any chance have instagram or any other way for me to contact you? Im looking into buying a V10 M6 and I would love to chat a bit with someone who has expert knowledge!
I wish I a garage and a lift to be able to do jobs like this. This was awesome watching you do this and being very detailed about it, too. Thanks. I can't imagine what the book time is and what the BMW dealership would charge for this.
Overall good information. One minor nitpick; the alignment tang on a bearing shell is that and only that - an alignment tang for ease of assembly. It has nothing to do with retaining the bearing while in use or keeping it from spinning. Each bearing half has slightly more than 180 degrees of arc length when installed in the cap or rod. The act of tightening the rod bolts "crushes" the bearings together and essentially makes them a press-fit in the big end bore of the rod. This interference fit is what keeps the bearing from spinning in normal operation.
Thank you for the note, Alex!
yep, glad you saw this. "Bearing Crush" is what it's all about.
this job is like a final boss in any dark souls game
After hours of labor the final boss goes down and you just sit there staring at it. But wait, what? No credits and the boss music comes back even louder than before. Rod bearing job's bigger brother steps in the ring. OMG it's the complete engine rebuild!
@@edva3533 I'd say "it is the VANOS actuator that needs changing"
Kudos to Gareth for tackling this project. What a nightmare of a job and total engineering failure on BMW. At least the current crop of BMW V8 S-engines don't have this issue. They just burn oil and leak coolant (ROFL).
On an aside I need to stop watching these videos because it just depresses me that I can't DIY on my own BMW because I don't have a lift. It truly makes ones life so much easier.
Great video! Good lord this is a big job. 110 steps in total to set the torque. Blimey.
Awesome camera work and lighting 👏🏻👏🏻
I find it strange to torque and stretch the rod bolts three times.
I could watch this all day :)
Best video about BMW rod bearing on youtube!
Gareth on another level
Great video
Great video, thanks, hope that with the revenues they buy you a nice AC for that garage!
That sucks you guys went with the oem bearings. Imo you should have gone for the extra clearance bearings. It’s what I did on my s65
Where do you get that special allen socket that doesn't strip?
Great video. But the more I see how complex these cars are and how expensive they are to maintain the more electric cars appeal to me…
Electric cars better have self driving features because you'll fall asleep from being bored. E cars are boring 😴.
Is it possible to access the rod bolts for the first 2 cylinders on the crank with the oil pump still in place?
Would this be same process for S63 engine?
I liked to you guys using premium hand too,s on a premium fine German automobile. Next time will you be able to switch to premium precision tools like a Starrett or mititoyo dial indicator , magnetic base, and electronic slide calipers? 😀
do you need to change the top part bearing? or do you need to open the whole engine apart for that?
Im getting confused , BMW oem bearings come with 3 different colors how I know which code should I get , do I need to measure the crankshaft first before ordering or what ?
I am confused, did you reuse the rod bolts?
BMW would give Metric clearances.
How did you place the car in neutral so you can turn the engine or is this a manual car not an SMG?
The E60 M5 was never built with manual trans,he's not telling us everything
@@mariusromania442 E60 M5s in North America got a 6 speed manual transmission. They are only available in North America.
3 oil changes in 60k miles ? lol... I have a A20NFT 2.0 turbo engine and I change the oil every 8000 km !
What the fuck is that torque sequence 😂
I'm glad I didn't buy one of these engines!
this is why you dont buy a bmw, audi, or mercedies after warranty
Or any car after warranty really
@@thezig2078 I have had two lease return yukon xl and they are so easy to work on
Tell that to both my 18 year old BMWs with 156K and 200K miles respectively 🤣🤣
@@javarithms such things usually come from people who only owned corollas and civics and now expect cars with more power to run perfectly while they completely ignore the maintenance on them
No this is why you wrench everyday.
DIY? I THINK IT IS TOO HARD FOR DIY.
The more of these videos that post, the more tow truck companies stay in business and the more jobs we will turn down. Because once it’s apart we won’t touch it. What happens to CarFax and service records? You have none. Amateur rod bearing replacement on an S85. The person that thought this was a good idea to post is an absolute idiot. You are placing consumers in a really bad situation when something goes wrong. If you can’t afford to pay a shop 15-25 hours for this job you shouldn’t be driving a BMW with an S85.
LOL... this is not rocket science. Next you gonna tell us we shouldn't drive our cars and hire a "professional" taxi driver instead 🤣🤣
I did my own rod bearings so I didn't have to go to someplace like Carmens import service and get bent over
What if you want to do it exactly the way you want it? especially if you got the tools space/lift and time? IDGAF about carfax and service records ill keep my M6 forever and I don't trust shops to work on an S85 unless done by someone who ONLY works on these engine like Troy Jeup.
@@e.e9331 I would say then do it yourself.
@@e.e9331 absolute ZERO ‘DIY’ consumers for us. We are a ‘DIFY’ business. But the lack of knowledge on engine repair in general is growing. An S85 isn’t a big deal really. Take apart a gear driven Ferrari V12 and I’ll start paying attention.