Jump to content
Sign in to follow this  
Top Secret

E30 bad fuel economy

Recommended Posts

So I have an E30 325i that I've been driving off and on over the last three years, but only recently has it been my only daily driver, and as such fuel economy is important, and it has gotten pretty bad. I'm talking 13-14L/100km.

I drive sedately, with the odd blat up to 100kmh, and this is mixed from city and highway driving.

The car doesn't seem to have any real mechanical issues. It always starts fine when cold, although it is slightly rough until it warms up. However, when hot, one out of every ten starts will require a few more cranks until it finally catches. Other than that, it drives fine with good power.

Does anybody have any idea why it is running rich? I took the sparkplugs out and put some new ones in, and the old ones definitely show some evidence of rich running.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

ecu engine temp sensor faulty or the plug has bad conections etc

blue plug on top of thermostat housing.

bad afm??

very worn dizzy and rotor (weak spark)

also faulty thermostat , stuck open ,so the engine wont heat up quickly

what does the temp gauge sit at?? and does it come upto half way within 5-10mins etc

Edited by Brent HARTGE535i

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

sounds about right for an ocassional spirited drive and city driving. my 316i does 7 or so when i dont fang it, rises to around 11-2 when i do over the whole tank. the 320i/5 (first car i had) got about the same as what you are saying.

but to improve, start with what brett says. clearing historic error codes and/or adaptions may help in its own right.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

BMW owners manual says 12.5L/100km for "Urban Driving Cycle", so your mileage isn't too far off (i don't know the accuracy/legitimacy of the data)

When was the last time injectors were cleaned? My cold idle got smoother (because my engine was missing slightly) and fuel economy went from around ~11.5L/100km to ~10.5L/100km (on a m401b6) after professional cleaning.

Also, what fuel do you use (91, 95, 98)? etc..

Andy, what do you mean by error codes clearing etc? I saw you mention it before, does it reset meter reading of something?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Andy, what do you mean by error codes clearing etc? I saw you mention it before, does it reset meter reading of something?

when the ecu detect a fault or miss reading from a sensor it stores a code and reverts back to a basic fuel map which usually uses more fuel. clearing these codes, or much much better reading them and replacing what it reported as bad, will put it back into its normal running mode and use less fuel.

but as a guess e30s might be a little before the time of storing codes and going to a basic fuel map. i know my e30 m40 wouldnt have as it didnt have o2 sensors in the exhaust to read the air fuel ratio, so it wouldnt be able to correct it as it didnt know it. not sure if m20s had o2 sensors tho. some m50s didnt have them either and m52s have 2, one in each bank of 3 cylinders

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I refuse to believe that it can use that much just in gentle driving, and I don't give it much of a spirited thrash. I used to get down to 9L in it when I first got it! This economy is with a long trip as well.

As for injectors - I don't think they've ever been cleaned, and the car has done 230,000km. I was meant to get some injector cleaner today but I forgot. How much did it cost you to get them cleaned?

I've used 91 and 95, and the difference between them was minimal. It seems to run the same on 91 and 95.

How do I go about finding out if I have any 'historic error codes'?

Oh, and Brent, a few questions:

How do I know if the temperature sender is faulty? Or has bad connections?

How do I know if the AFM is faulty?

And lastly, how do I check if the dizzy and rotor are worn? I'll give it a search here and the web in the meantime.

Thanks all, I'm a bit of a noob with some things.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Of very little help to you but mine does anywhere between 12-15L / 100km of mainly round town driving.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

injectors costed me ~$40 cleaned each, with new Pintle Caps, o-rings, filter baskets and adjustments to make it spray in similar volumes and in good pattern.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

when the ecu detect a fault or miss reading from a sensor it stores a code and reverts back to a basic fuel map which usually uses more fuel. clearing these codes, or much much better reading them and replacing what it reported as bad, will put it back into its normal running mode and use less fuel.

but as a guess e30s might be a little before the time of storing codes and going to a basic fuel map. i know my e30 m40 wouldnt have as it didnt have o2 sensors in the exhaust to read the air fuel ratio, so it wouldnt be able to correct it as it didnt know it. not sure if m20s had o2 sensors tho. some m50s didnt have them either and m52s have 2, one in each bank of 3 cylinders

yep 100% right. on later versions i believe it could advance vanos timing to suit the driver etc too but that stuff is irrelevant for this discussion.

regarding the M40 engine, i thought the same as you but i wiped the codes and adaptions on my M40 and all of a sudden the engine ran a lot better which is strange. the car is currently on empty now after a full tank so im looking forward to seeing what difference it made. the M20 should be the same, as its a very similar ECU system if not the same.

I refuse to believe that it can use that much just in gentle driving, and I don't give it much of a spirited thrash. I used to get down to 9L in it when I first got it! This economy is with a long trip as well.

As for injectors - I don't think they've ever been cleaned, and the car has done 230,000km. I was meant to get some injector cleaner today but I forgot. How much did it cost you to get them cleaned?

I've used 91 and 95, and the difference between them was minimal. It seems to run the same on 91 and 95.

How do I go about finding out if I have any 'historic error codes'?

Oh, and Brent, a few questions:

How do I know if the temperature sender is faulty? Or has bad connections?

How do I know if the AFM is faulty?

And lastly, how do I check if the dizzy and rotor are worn? I'll give it a search here and the web in the meantime.

Thanks all, I'm a bit of a noob with some things.

injector cleaner is a waste of time. get them ultrasonically cleaned, buy new, or dont bother.

you shouldnt see any difference between 91 and 95, the only improvement will be due to your wallet being lighter. the M20 isnt technically advanced enough to make use of the higher octane.

you'd need to get a buddy/BMW mech/dealership to scan it.

Edited by _Ethrty-Andy_

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

you shouldnt see any difference between 91 and 95, the only improvement will be due to your wallet being lighter. the M20 isnt technically advanced enough to make use of the higher octane.

you'd need to get a buddy/BMW mech/dealership to scan it.

Not quite. Depends on which M20, as I know PFL m20b20s had high compression ratios, and while i haven't tried it, I'm lead to believe you could easily get a bit of pinging running on 95.

Although on the topic of his b25, I have no idea what CR they run.

Also, higher octanes allow you to run more aggressive ignition timing, which CAN improve fuel economy. (Provided it is tuned correctly).

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

take the temp sender out when cold, measure resistance change as you put it in just boiled water and compare with published figures

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

My PFL 325i E30 is a hell of a lot worse and usually does around 18l/100kms.

Doesn't quite get up to half way on the temp gauge so im going to chuck in a new thermostat but i keep putting it off.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Dads E30 325i 5 speed sits on about 11 to 12 L/100kms, and he drives like a grandad... what with him being one :lol:

His driving is mostly shortish trips, either around the suburb, or 80 zone for 8kms to town, or hilly winding 8kms to my place and whatever mixture in between. A few longer drives here and there, but basically easy driving.

It's mostly low throttle openings at less than 3000 rpm 90% of the time. Unless he's beside a honda with big wheels at the lights :D

I think auto E30's are quite a lot hungrier too.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

So my average has gone down to 11.3L/100km, which is a bit better I guess. That is with the mix of a long trip and around town, with the odd blat of course.

I've ordered a new thermostat, and in the process of getting new temperature sensors for both the gauge and the ECU, to see if it will get the needle towards the middle.

Will let you all know how it goes.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I've just replaced my thermostat thinking my old one was bung because I would only ever hit 'normal' temperature when sitting in traffic, otherwise I hover around medium cold. But my new one is no better! FFS <_<

I get 400-450k max from a tank which is a 50/50 mixture of town and country, I'll be interested how your replacing sensors on the gauge and the ECU works out.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I've just replaced my thermostat thinking my old one was bung because I would only ever hit 'normal' temperature when sitting in traffic, otherwise I hover around medium cold. But my new one is no better! FFS <_<

I get 400-450k max from a tank which is a 50/50 mixture of town and country, I'll be interested how your replacing sensors on the gauge and the ECU works out.

With a 2 litre M20 powered E 30 with manual trans and a mixture of local and motorway driving,its returning 10 l/100km.Temp gauge runs in the middle.

Edited by humguy

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I replaced my thermostat the other weekend and it now seems to run even colder and takes longer to warm up :wacko:

Can the thermostat housings cause problems like this when they get old/corrode?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I replaced my thermostat the other weekend and it now seems to run even colder and takes longer to warm up :wacko:

Can the thermostat housings cause problems like this when they get old/corrode?

Genuine thermostat?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

The figures posted here seem pretty similar to my 325i, was getting 400kms out of a tank, 100% city driving and stuck in traffic most of the time. Just got 500kms out of the last tank, 50% open road driving. works out to be 11ish l/100km

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Genuine thermostat?

Nope but I tested it before I put it in and it seemed ok. Might not be a good fit so will be putting the genuine one back in and inspecting the housing while im at it.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

My touring used to do 8.5~9L/100km on the daily commute <70kph. Facelift M20B25, manual, 3.64 diff.

Old race car did around the same thrashing it on the way to Taupo, PFL M20B25 (330,000kms), manual, 3.73 diff, stripped.

Current 'iS happily does 7L/100km blatting it everywhere, probably 8L/100km if you take into account speedo error.

All run on 98. Perhaps that's the difference?

Edited by JiB

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Nope but I tested it before I put it in and it seemed ok. Might not be a good fit so will be putting the genuine one back in and inspecting the housing while im at it.

Isn't there different temperature ratings for thermostats? i.e 88c, 92c

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Isn't there different temperature ratings for thermostats? i.e 88c, 92c

Mine are both 80degree ones. Can you actually get hotter thermostats?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

don't have a m20 so not sure for those engines. part number sites all show 80c though, might be the temp sensor as someone suggested in another thread

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Mine are both 80degree ones. Can you actually get hotter thermostats?

Genuine is 92, try that before you do anything else.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
Sign in to follow this  

×
×
  • Create New...