Notice some engine bay howling this past week, was committed to changing out the idler pulley so far as to purchase one locally to swap out. Pull everything apart, only to find out that the water pump is the culprit. Serves me right for not listening to the components before hand.
Round up a pump and thermostat in a day, and get to it. Figured I would replace the VC gasket, tube seals, and the timing chain tensioner o ring while I'm in the engine bay, in hopes to seal up the oil leak this thing has had.
Few things that I read on the web that I should have listened to:
1. You should really have a serpentine belt tensioner tool (unless you have a very long 18mm box wrench)
2. You should really have a ratcheting 17mm box wrench to loosen the belt tensioner assembly.
I didn't listen to either of those things, and that made the job exponentially more annoying. Not hard, just annoying. There is simply so little space to work between the accessory side of the engine and the body, that it ends up as a game of Twister that involves lots of hard parts, various extensions, sockets, and your forearms. One of these things is more able to be damaged than the others.
Generally, except for me cursing myself for not having the exact right tools, and forcibly disconnecting my AC compressor clutch wire (whoops), everything went okay.
The water pump was definitely the culprit, which was an easily identifiable success, but the verdict is still out with the oil leak. I will say that the chain tensioner o ring and the VC gasket were basically plastic, so fingers crossed that the engine decides to keep it's oil inside moving forward.
Also did the second drain and fill of the C60 in an effort to get all of the junk fluid out of there. Sure enough, the fluid draining this time was pretty dang gross too. Took a chance on this one and went for the good stuff with a Syncromesh/MT90 cocktail that folks swear by for the C60. Worlds different already.
A few tips if you are going to take on any work like this on a Vibe/Matrix:
1. Bungee the wire harness that runs above the accessory drive out of the way, you're going to fight it the whole time if not.
2. Remove the brackets on the low side (I think?) AC line, but don't disconnect the line and bungee that out of the way in the other direction. These two points are going to increase your experience exponentially.
3. Remember your AC clutch connector is on the alternator harness, and if you try to remove the alternator without disconnecting the AC clutch connector, you're going to break the wire. It's thin, it's underneath the alternator, and the alternator has a lot of mass.
4. Remove every bracket you can get your hands on. Don't be shy, just remember where they all went. If you leave them, be prepared for you to be angry and damage your hands/forearms.
5. Loosen your serpentine belt tensioner before you decide to remove the timing chain tensioner. You won't be able to get the tensioner all the way out if you don't loosen the bracket (the chain tensioner hits the belt tensioner damper/shock/whatever), but it can sure as hell extend and not allow you to reinstall if you can't loosen the belt tensioner bolt. That would be bad.
6. The jiggle valve on the thermostat is to be orientated at 12 o clock (service manual says so). If you don't do this the first time, get ready to drain all that damn coolant you just poured back in the radiator to make sure.
7. The water pump has two different size bolts that are used. Find a way to keep track of where they go.
8. Work slow, and smart, take breaks. There isn't a lot of space in there and E36 M3 is going to be sort of frustrating at times. Remember you're doing this for a reason and you'll be really happy this work is done when it's over.
Here are a few photos, also, I finally gave it a basic wash. I think it could stand for a clay bar and a polish (what cheap car doesn't?), but it didn't clean up too bad for a 750$ car. As it sits right now, the 6th gear repair adding a bit to the budget, I'm in it for just over 1700$. More than I wanted to be into it for, but not bad considering the end result.
See ya next time, when we fix the audio, and whatever else I get up to! In the meantime, happy revving!
-Steve