So having now replaced the turbo (for those that have seen the other thread it was the clips on the oil return that was holding it in place!!) & not having found a likely cause yet I've started stripping back parts to check their state. Quickly found that the EGR valve was gunked up & also the inlet manifold (the big plenum box thingy). I've soaked the EGR in petrol and its come up nice and clean (and fortunately still works) but I'm struggling to get the inlet manifold clean. I've basically got it soaking in unleaded at the moment but there is still lots of crud inside.
It's a 2002 Freelander 1 TD4 with 150k miles on the clock.
Soo...any ideas how I can clean the inlet manifold/ plenum?
And is it likely that the clogged up EGR valve caused the turbo failure (I've read lots of conflicting things about this)? I know the most likely cause is oil supply but when I removed the old turbo LOTS of oil came out of it so I'm guessing it was getting oil ok.
If I wanted to check the oil supply how would I do that? I did blow through the supply line (from the banjo bolt) and that wasn't clogged. I also blew through the return pipe and it was kind of tough to get air through BUT it was attached to the new turbo at the time (felt a little like blowing a balloon up - not the bit when you first start but once its already partly inflated).
Might I be overthinking this & its just age and wear that caused the turbo to fail?
Fritz
P.S. One other thing. I checked the crankcase filter as I had most of the bits out the way and discovered that there was no filter in there. Not the original LR part or the BMW version but as far as I can see its a sealed section so the oil simply drains back into the crank case. Could that missing filter be contributory though?
It's a 2002 Freelander 1 TD4 with 150k miles on the clock.
Soo...any ideas how I can clean the inlet manifold/ plenum?
And is it likely that the clogged up EGR valve caused the turbo failure (I've read lots of conflicting things about this)? I know the most likely cause is oil supply but when I removed the old turbo LOTS of oil came out of it so I'm guessing it was getting oil ok.
If I wanted to check the oil supply how would I do that? I did blow through the supply line (from the banjo bolt) and that wasn't clogged. I also blew through the return pipe and it was kind of tough to get air through BUT it was attached to the new turbo at the time (felt a little like blowing a balloon up - not the bit when you first start but once its already partly inflated).
Might I be overthinking this & its just age and wear that caused the turbo to fail?
Fritz
P.S. One other thing. I checked the crankcase filter as I had most of the bits out the way and discovered that there was no filter in there. Not the original LR part or the BMW version but as far as I can see its a sealed section so the oil simply drains back into the crank case. Could that missing filter be contributory though?