Engine And Engine Cooling Related Problems of the 2004 BMW M3

Table 1 shows three common engine and engine cooling related problems of the 2004 BMW M3.

Table 1. Engine And Engine Cooling related problems of BMW M3

Problem Category Number of Problems
Engine Exhaust System problems
1
Engine And Engine Cooling problems
1
Oil Pump problems
1

Engine Exhaust System problem #1

Before I start explaining, I should mention that the car has been meticulously maintained with majority of the parts being genuine BMW. The chassis has 110,xxx miles at the moment, and the engine has 78,xxx miles. The engine had a failure in 2006 due to a rod bearing failure (recalled from BMW), and a remanufactured engine has been installed by BMW technicians at a BMW dealership service center in virginia. Recently my 2004 BMW M3 had a failure inside the engine that could have been very dangerous. On halloween night 2011, as I was leaving the gas station, I hear a very faint rattling noise up in the engine bay. I was contemplating rather I should take the car to the local dealership, or fix it myself. But prior to this, I've read many unsatisfying experiences people had at their local BMW dealerships. I worried that since this was a major problem that could be life threatening, I decided to do the work myself. I removed the valve cover, and noticed the exhaust side hub on of the BMW double vanos has failed. A mechanism designed to improve torque and fuel consumption. The hub had one of the 2 tabs completely broken off. Luckily the broken tab was still stuck inside the oil pump. If instead the broken piece came out of its location, and moved around in a engine this could cause a catastrophic failure. Ranging anywhere from approx $15,000 remanufactured engine replacement to possibly a high speed collision if the car was in motion during the failure. With a damaged engine, it is difficult to follow the minimum speed limit of 40 mph on the local freeway. The total replacement parts in my situation costs well over $3000 using BMW parts. Unfortunately, even with the current replacement parts from BMW, the problem would not be fixed since the currently new parts have just as much chance of failing as the old.

Engine And Engine Cooling problem #2

Vehicle drops out of gear randomly. As I was taking a left turn, the vehicle dropped into 0 gear and on coming traffic almost ran into me head on. I had no way of moving the car due to transmission being shifted into neutral. This is due to a defective temperature sensor on the smg pump. BMW ignores the issue.

Oil Pump problem #3

One of the vanos exhaust hub tab broke and damaged the oil pump disc. I had to replace the vanos exhaust hub and oil pump disc.


Engine And Engine Cooling related problems in other BMW M3 model year vehicles:



Safety Ratings of M3 Cars
Fuel Economy of M3 Vehicles
M3 Service Bulletins
M3 Safety Recalls
M3 Defect Investigations