Emissions

William Jacobsen

Dedicated Member
British Zeds
Joined
Jan 14, 2019
Points
29
Location
East Yorkshire
Model of Z
2L
Just getting my 2L Z3 ready for the summer after SORN for the Winter but has failed the MOT on emissions. Has been perfect before then & upto hibernating for the winter. My garage is struggling to pinpoint the problem - they say the engine is 'hunting' for fuel - I followed similar issues on the forum & put Wynns Cat & Lambada cleaner in the car (full tank so may have diluted the effect) & ran for 45mins - hour but problem remains. Engine not too lumpy when not under load but hits a flat spot around 4500 revs & acts like plugs are miss firing.
Anyone had similar experience or can offer advice?
 

Nodzed

Zorg Expert (I)
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British Zeds
M Power
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Feb 18, 2016
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221
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Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire, England
Model of Z
Z3M Imola and Z4 (e89)

Richard29

Zorg Legend
Supporter
Joined
Mar 10, 2022
Points
66
Model of Z
Z3 3.0 Auto
Just getting my 2L Z3 ready for the summer after SORN for the Winter but has failed the MOT on emissions. Has been perfect before then & upto hibernating for the winter. My garage is struggling to pinpoint the problem - they say the engine is 'hunting' for fuel - I followed similar issues on the forum & put Wynns Cat & Lambada cleaner in the car (full tank so may have diluted the effect) & ran for 45mins - hour but problem remains. Engine not too lumpy when not under load but hits a flat spot around 4500 revs & acts like plugs are miss firing.
Anyone had similar experience or can offer advice?
First check all your spark plugs are tight. To rule thst simple fix out.
I have had this on my 325i and a friend had same on his z3 2.8. It may not solve the emmisions but could cause misfire under load or at higher revs.
I had 1 plug come slightly loose. It did cook/damage the coil pack so had to replace that.
 

colb

Zorg Guru (V)
British Zeds
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Nov 25, 2012
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178
Location
Newport, South Wales,UK
Model of Z
Z3 M43 1.8 (1999) and Z4 E85 2.5 (2003)
Air leaks and/or bad Maf can upset the fuel trims and cause havoc with running and mpg. After you rule out the plugs and coil packs turn your attention to air leaks. Best way to find them is to smoke test it, smoke will find the smallest of leaks. Pay attention to all the rubber inlet hoses and boots and all vacuum lines across the engine, look under the rear edge of the inlet manifold for missing rubber blanking caps that perish and fall off the unused stub ports located under there. O rings in the dipstick tube should also be looked at for smoke escaping. Those with plastic c am covers should also closely examine that for cracks that let air in and oil out. A good code reader with live data should be used to take a look at what the fuel trims are doing, high readings can be a tell tale that its got air leaks or a bad Maf. Unmetered air or wrongly reported volumes of air passing through the Maf will get picked up by exhaust sensors and the car will see this as a lean mixture. To compensate it will demand more fuel at the injectors to richen the mixture up. It will continue to do this until its adding 20% more fuel before it realises its not fixing it and will set a engine management light to draw attention to the fault. Bad Maf's don't always set codes by the way, they either work or they don't, cleaning them with Maf cleaning spray doesn't always work if the sensor is duff. If you have to replace the Maf only fit oem brands do not fit cheap ones they rarely work or last long always go for Bosch or Siemens brands, expensive but they work out of the box.
 
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Reactions: Lee

William Jacobsen

Dedicated Member
British Zeds
Joined
Jan 14, 2019
Points
29
Location
East Yorkshire
Model of Z
2L
Thanks for your comprehensive reply - it might be worth doing the smoke check as 2 perished hoses have already been replaced & it stands to reason some other may have deteriorated too - after all they will be 24yrs old
 

Lee

Zorg Guru (V)
British Zeds
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Mar 26, 2014
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193
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Basingstoke
Model of Z
Z4 Coupe 3.0si
Colb sums it up nicely.

Those 2.0 six's should be very crisp on idle so likely an air leak causing the fuel trims to mess the emissions up.

I've been finding the little rubber grommets on the back of the manifolds falling off causing air leaks recently, at least 2 on the last couple momths.
 

Rob76

Regular Member
Joined
Jul 27, 2023
Points
13
I had the same problem for the MOT. Emission fail.
When I checked the cars record for its 133k turns out it has had 3 Lambda sensors and 2 catalytic convertors at varies stages. Had to replace both again to get it through the test.
Lucky my tester is an old style mechanic who knew exactly what would fix it.
 

William Jacobsen

Dedicated Member
British Zeds
Joined
Jan 14, 2019
Points
29
Location
East Yorkshire
Model of Z
2L
Thanks for all the responses - the car is currently at a 3rd garage who specialise in BMW. Initial discussion are reassuring that they know what the're doing so feel a bit more confident. Who have thought diagnostics don't pinpoint the fault & send you on an expensive wild goose chase
 

t-tony

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Dec 31, 2013
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Torksey Lock,Lincoln, England
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E89 Z4 23i Auto
By far the biggest reason for MOT Emission test failure is down to incorrect test procedure by not getting the engine temperature into the correct "window" and measuring the engine oil temperature (which tells the machine to alter the test parameters) and following on screen prompts. If your test receipt says "Oil temp by-passed" ask why.

Tony.
 
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