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2011 BMW 335Xi Oil burn Smell from Vents
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12-11-2018, 09:36 AM | #1 |
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2011 BMW 335Xi Oil burn Smell from Vents
Hello Guys
Newbie here need some expert opinion. my 2011 BMW 335xi has this burning oil smell coming off from vents so i rushed to a mechanic and immediately he told me a leak but couldn't tell from where and would cost me couple of thousand dollars. There is no oil dripping on the ground but there is a significant smell from the vents sometimes when i turn on the heater especially. My question is realistically how much would it cost me to fix this and how safe is to drive with the Smell? Again no dripping on the ground and i just got my oil change done back in September, do you guys think the mechanic messed up while changing the Gasket? Any help is appreciated. Car has 64K miles Thanks |
12-11-2018, 01:34 PM | #2 |
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If he can't tell you from where as at least an educated guess, I'd find a new mechanic (unless you just asked a general ball-park). Of course you're going to pay him for work done, but "a couple thousand" without specifics is a license to book hours.
From your post, you seem to indicate that one of the gaskets was changed: Valve cover; Oil Filter housing? Those would be the two that would generally lead to "oil smell." It won't generally drip because the drips are hitting your exhaust manifold heatshield and then burning (hence the smell). It doesn't take a lot to create the smell. Check by your exhaust manifold and see right under the valve cover vanity shield/cover if there is oil caked up. If it is, it's your VCG or your valvetronic gasket. Then check by your oil filter and if the housing below looks oiled up or "wet" then it could be that. That said, this is the weaker smelling of the two if something is actually wrong. Many people don't even notice this one. Of course you have a 335...so there are a few other places to check. Hell, your intake manifold gets oiled up hehe (ok you won't smell that). Anyway, start with those two basics and then work your way around the engine bay. |
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12-11-2018, 03:53 PM | #3 |
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Check to see if the PCV hose is cracked/broken, it is most likely the cause. If you open the hood, take off the engine cover, it will be on the left side. It is a hose connecting the valve cover to the inlet pipe.
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