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Author Topic: Driver side manifold gasket  (Read 565 times)

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henryqwerty

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Driver side manifold gasket
« on: 25 December 2009, 22:37:21 »

Hi everybody :)
I have to change manifold gasket at driver side.Could anyone tell me is it a very big job?Is possible to change this gasket at driveway?Or much better put this to the garage or mechanik?I asking because I would like save money on labour, mot due january and road tax too.
If any mechanik from this site will be interest to do this job?What will be cost for this job.
Anyway Happy Chrismas ;D
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Bionic

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Re: Driver side manifold gasket
« Reply #1 on: 26 December 2009, 04:40:17 »

I have sent you a PM (Personal Message) which will probably be of help to you.
Do your profile too so we can all see where you are and what you drive - it will help us to respond to your requests better.
January test and tax - pay the extra and get the dates moved by getting a test again later in the year, the tax the same and do that by buying a 12 or 6 whichever moves the date. I did and mine are now in March. It was worth the extra initial cost.
 GudLuk
bionic
« Last Edit: 26 December 2009, 04:45:19 by its.ray »
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henryqwerty

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Re: Driver side manifold gasket
« Reply #2 on: 26 December 2009, 11:41:53 »

OK, so this is omega 2.5 v6 sallon.
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JasonH

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Re: Driver side manifold gasket
« Reply #3 on: 26 December 2009, 21:52:10 »

Here are some notes I collected on this (the prices are a bit out of date now):

Post 98 models should have the non-seize manifold nuts fitted

Drop the front pipe off of the manifold (two bolts accessed from under the car)

Remove the plenum and intake assembly.

Remove the scuttle cover.

Drain the coolant.

Disconnect the main stainless steel coolant pipe that runs around the drivers side head at the rear of the block (two bolts, you need to lean over the engine to reach) and remove it.

Removing the coolant pipe from the block isn't that easy - you need a long E10 socket to get past the oil pipes (and a lot of patience).

Remove the manifold heat shields. There is an extra e10 bolt on the inside of the manifold at the rear – you may find that these will shear off!!!

You also need to remove the heat shield from the exhaust manifold.  The lower heat shield usually comes off with ease (only 2 or 3 E10's)

Unbolt the manifold.

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Manifold nuts are locking nuts - when new they are oval at the ends - if you get new ones make sure they give you 13mm nuts - 2.6 & 3.2 went to 10mm nuts not as good.
 
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                                               Part no.         Price 
Exhaust downpipe nuts M10 x 2      90570845      approx £1.50 each (have helicoil insert)
Manifold gasket                        24416110            £5.91
Manifold nuts x 7                  11082413            £0.26 each
Manifold studs x 7                  90106924            £0.45 each
Coolant pipe O-ring                  9128362            £1.46
Front pipe gasket                  90499289            £4.55 each (rip off)
Secondary Air Injection gaskets x 2            90467427            £0.40 each

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By MarkDTM

My approach to this job is.
 
Drain the coolant
 
Jack the car up and remove the two front pipe to manifold nuts (should be easy on yours as it uses the later helicoiled nuts) and remove the bolt that secures the front pipe to the gearbox bracket. Pop the front pipe of the manifold studs (takes a bit of wiggling and sometimes requires a foot on the centre section silencer to get it off) and then tie the front pipe to the gearbox to give it some support before putting the car back on the floor.
 
Strip the inlet manifolds off and place to one side, no need to remove the lower manifold for this job (which saves th pain or removing 12 thread locked bolts!).
 
Now disconnect the pipes to the heater matrix assembly (fast fit connectors, press the tabs and slide the collar back, twist the connectors a few time to free them off), disconnect the vaccum pipe that goes to the bypass valve  and disconnect the pipes that attach to the coolant bridge and main coolant pipe. Now remove the bypass valve and all its associated pipe work.
 
This gives a nice amount of space to work in.
 
Removal of the header tank (again easy)  gives more room to work in.
 
Disconnect the main radiator to coolant pipe hose at the front left of the engine and disconnect the air injection rubber coupling on the left side of the engine.
 
Remove the bolt on the 1-3-5 bank lifting eye that secures the coolant pipe to the engine and then remove the lifting eye (single bolt again)
 
Now, using a short extension on a ratchet, remove the two torx bolts (think there e12 but could be wrong) that secure the coolant pipe to the back of the block, for the right hand one you might have to ease the oil cooler pipes out the way a little.
 
The coolant pipe should now come out (honestly, it does, takes a bit of manouvering!).
 
Now spray all the heatshield bolts with penetrating fluid and go and have a cuppa.
 
Now remove the heat shields starting with the upper one, then the air injection pipe and finally the lower one remembering that there is a securing bolt right at the rear of the manifold to the right of the downpipe connection.
 
Now pop the manifold off, again shouldn't be an issue given the age of the engine as again it has the later studs.
 
Clean the head face well and check the manifold carefully for cracks (it seems to be only the Police that manage to crack them from my experience) before cleaning the face of it and checking its flat, I use a belt sander to flatten them off a bit (makes cleaning easier to). I also use a tap and die to clean all the threads up.
 
Then re-assembly is reverse of removal, I use a small wipe of silicon (cam cover sealant or similar) on the rubber O ring for the coolant pipe just to hold it safely in place when re-fitting.
 
You also want to clean the rear block mating surface before re-fitting the pipe...
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