E90Post
 


Coby Wheel
 
BMW 3-Series (E90 E92) Forum > BMW E90/E92/E93 3-series General Forums > Regional Forums > UK > UK Technical Forum > How To Guide 335D Vacuum Hose



Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
      06-06-2014, 06:01 PM   #1
Dan-
Lieutenant
Dan-'s Avatar
27
Rep
511
Posts

Drives: E92 335D, R6
Join Date: Dec 2013
Location: bedfordshire

iTrader: (0)

How To Guide 335D Vacuum Hose

Hi i though as i was searching for awhile on a guide how to go about changing the vacuum lines for the turbos on the 335D i came across nothing but warnings its major hard work and at least 8 hours work, i found it none of the above.

what an absolute stupid design that setup is running pipes over the turbos with nothing but a small heatsheild, i decided to go with silicone just to stop it reoccurring any time soon

1st things first your going to want to remove your air box, i didn't get any pictures of this but its basic very basic, undo the 3 clips that hold the top on then using a 7mm socket to undo the jubilee clip then you want squeeze the connectors to remove the plug for the MAF sensor, lift the top half off being very carful with the MAF sensor dont touch it

Once the top half is off you will see two 10mm bolts undo them and lift the bottom half out by pushing down at the front to release it from the intake hose which i remove next,



You have 3 torx bits to undo and 2 mushroom style clips to pull out to remove the intake snorkel, i used a pair of needle nosed pliers to pull the centre of the clips out

once that it out, i then moved to the back of the bay and removed the cabin filter again no pictures sorry, a few 8mm bolts hold this on then lift it out the way

you will now want to remove the two caps the cover the brake fluid and electric box i think, 2 clips on each

once there out the way you want to remove two 10mm bolts either side of the panel





Remove it you want to pull towards you and up to release it from the seal



That will gain you more than enough space to see the vacuum lines you will be working on, your now going to want to undo the 2 allen bolts holding a foam panel on you won't be able to pull it out without undoing the strut bars, (not necessary)



I then removed the vacuum chamber thats held on with 2 things a 10mm Nut and a 10mm Screw very easy to remove



i then to gain abit more access loosened the bracket that holds the pressure converters three 10mm bolts 2 on the top 1 at the back, quite tricky to not drop but if you have small hands like me you undo the last turns by hand







once all that it done you can start working on the hoses, i started with the black ones thats connect on the 5 way pipe under the inlet manifold quite tricky to get to but easily done, i used a model knife to cut the old hose as to not snap the plastic nipples on the connectors as they melt on





run the pipes through as you remove the old to ensure you take the same route, work at a time as to not get confused what goes where



connect one of the black lines to the front pressure converter and feed the other to where the bladder accumulator will be put back



now move onto the blue hose, if you can see the colour its the 1 that feeds from the big turbo but is unreachable without remove the steering rack but lucky BMW fitted a joint half way down, remove the original hose from both ends by cutting a slot where it joins the nipped as to not damage it, once off hold it up against the new hose and cut to length.



I then did the red hose quite an easy 1 to do this 1 i just pulled off as its a metal nipple its goes onto, getting to the rear pressure converter is abut tricky but just move thing about to gain a bit of space





once you have done the major lines its time to do the small short length, these were the worst for me same process as above applies

i had a major problem with the large actuator hose trying to remove it the hose snapped right on the nipple took me above 30 mins using a screw driver to slowly force it off bit by bit!

access is very tight for this 1 but doable just take your time

you can see me using a screw driver to prise the left over part of hose off



i spent about 30 mins kneeling like this started to hurt very quickly



once that was done it was the end just had to put everything back together in the reverse of the above.

once done stand back and admire you work



all in the total job took me about 2 hour including tidying up

Apologise for the awful how to guide I've never done 1 before, just hope it helps someone somehow

Dan
__________________
My Previous Cars
206 1.4, Sport Ka, 206 Gti, focus 1.8, Vectra 1.9 CDTi, Corsa 1.8 Sri, 206 Gti 180, Impreza Blobeye Sti Widetrack, Clio 172 Cup Track Car, E92 335D, Impreza Hatch STI, Evo IX FQ360MR, E92 M3 Competition
Appreciate 0
      12-30-2019, 08:10 AM   #2
bmwdiesel
Private
14
Rep
84
Posts

Drives: 335d 2007
Join Date: May 2018
Location: old continent

iTrader: (0)

wish there are pictures for this
Appreciate 0
      07-25-2024, 12:54 AM   #3
Max335d
New Member
0
Rep
22
Posts

Drives: 2011 BMW 335d
Join Date: Jun 2024
Location: Rhode Island

iTrader: (0)

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dan- View Post
Hi i though as i was searching for awhile on a guide how to go about changing the vacuum lines for the turbos on the 335D i came across nothing but warnings its major hard work and at least 8 hours work, i found it none of the above.

what an absolute stupid design that setup is running pipes over the turbos with nothing but a small heatsheild, i decided to go with silicone just to stop it reoccurring any time soon

1st things first your going to want to remove your air box, i didn't get any pictures of this but its basic very basic, undo the 3 clips that hold the top on then using a 7mm socket to undo the jubilee clip then you want squeeze the connectors to remove the plug for the MAF sensor, lift the top half off being very carful with the MAF sensor dont touch it

Once the top half is off you will see two 10mm bolts undo them and lift the bottom half out by pushing down at the front to release it from the intake hose which i remove next,



You have 3 torx bits to undo and 2 mushroom style clips to pull out to remove the intake snorkel, i used a pair of needle nosed pliers to pull the centre of the clips out

once that it out, i then moved to the back of the bay and removed the cabin filter again no pictures sorry, a few 8mm bolts hold this on then lift it out the way

you will now want to remove the two caps the cover the brake fluid and electric box i think, 2 clips on each

once there out the way you want to remove two 10mm bolts either side of the panel





Remove it you want to pull towards you and up to release it from the seal



That will gain you more than enough space to see the vacuum lines you will be working on, your now going to want to undo the 2 allen bolts holding a foam panel on you won't be able to pull it out without undoing the strut bars, (not necessary)



I then removed the vacuum chamber thats held on with 2 things a 10mm Nut and a 10mm Screw very easy to remove



i then to gain abit more access loosened the bracket that holds the pressure converters three 10mm bolts 2 on the top 1 at the back, quite tricky to not drop but if you have small hands like me you undo the last turns by hand







once all that it done you can start working on the hoses, i started with the black ones thats connect on the 5 way pipe under the inlet manifold quite tricky to get to but easily done, i used a model knife to cut the old hose as to not snap the plastic nipples on the connectors as they melt on





run the pipes through as you remove the old to ensure you take the same route, work at a time as to not get confused what goes where



connect one of the black lines to the front pressure converter and feed the other to where the bladder accumulator will be put back



now move onto the blue hose, if you can see the colour its the 1 that feeds from the big turbo but is unreachable without remove the steering rack but lucky BMW fitted a joint half way down, remove the original hose from both ends by cutting a slot where it joins the nipped as to not damage it, once off hold it up against the new hose and cut to length.



I then did the red hose quite an easy 1 to do this 1 i just pulled off as its a metal nipple its goes onto, getting to the rear pressure converter is abut tricky but just move thing about to gain a bit of space





once you have done the major lines its time to do the small short length, these were the worst for me same process as above applies

i had a major problem with the large actuator hose trying to remove it the hose snapped right on the nipple took me above 30 mins using a screw driver to slowly force it off bit by bit!

access is very tight for this 1 but doable just take your time

you can see me using a screw driver to prise the left over part of hose off



i spent about 30 mins kneeling like this started to hurt very quickly



once that was done it was the end just had to put everything back together in the reverse of the above.

once done stand back and admire you work



all in the total job took me about 2 hour including tidying up

Apologise for the awful how to guide I've never done 1 before, just hope it helps someone somehow

Dan
Sounds good could you add the pictures?
Appreciate 0
Reply

Bookmarks


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:23 PM.




e90post
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
1Addicts.com, BIMMERPOST.com, E90Post.com, F30Post.com, M3Post.com, ZPost.com, 5Post.com, 6Post.com, 7Post.com, XBimmers.com logo and trademark are properties of BIMMERPOST