dpbayly
New Member
- Posts
- 26
- Location
- Royston, Herts
Well Sunday I was accelerating up a hill off a roundabout and the rpm got to 4k and just stopped I very quickly backed off then throttled again and it carried on as normal, I though that's weird so dropped my wife off at home and popped to work and thought I'd blank off my EGR and clean my MAF (which was filthy) then went and found a hill and pushed it and all seemed fine.
Then I set off home where it suddenly did the same again so I pulled up and tried to again to see if I could narrow it down and this time it spat its dummy out and there was a nasty noise and no more boost the noise was a rattle/metal on metal squeal.
Funnily enough when I had the car on the ramp last Tuesday night when I was looking over it before buying it I remarked to the previous owner that the turbo looked a bit tiered and it made a constant low volume whistle at idle and I used this as a bargaining chip after telling him I suspected the turbo was on borrowed time.
Any way yesterday I had a quick look on line for a guide to use on removing the turbo and I found next to nothing all I found was a youtube video where the chap was very misleading after saying you need to remove the cam cover and injectors to gain access to the turbo now this is a very long winded (autodata time for cam cover removal is 5hrs) and very much the wrong way of doing it.
From the position of already having the pollen filter part of the bulkhead and the air filter and air box to turbo pipe removed which is needed to diagnose the turbo as knackered from this position it took me just 25 mins to get the turbo off and on the bench total inc the first part of stripping the air box total time 35-40 mins so dead easy.
The trick is once the air filter is removed in the bottom of the air box there is 3 grommets that you can remove:

Then under that you'll find a heat shield which has a removable panel that just un-clips:

once this is removed you can access the 3 turbo to manifold bolts to remove them the bolts are 12 point 12mm bolts so you'll need a multipoint socket to undo them:

I only cracked them off at this point then nipped them back up because you will need the turbo held solid when undoing the turbo to down pipe bolts from underneath.
Next you need to remove the turbo to inter-cooler pipe off the turbo by just undoing the jubilee clip and sliding it off and flex it out the way.
Once thats out the way you can undo the oil feed pipe from the block the other end stays attached to the turbo till it's out and on the bench:

Then you can go underneath and first undo the 2 down pipe to turbo nuts:

Next you need to remove the oil return pipe 2 10mm bolts at the turbo and the jubilee clip at the block:

Then remove the bracket from the bottom of the turbo with the 3 13mm bolts

Once this is done the exhaust needs to be removed because the turbo needs to be removed through the gap the down pipe sits in, I obviously had the use of a ramp so on the floor this will be a little more difficult but doable just unhook the whole system off the rubbers the the entire system can be lowered out the way.
Once this has been done you need to go back up top and remove the turbo to manifold bolts that you cracked off and nipped back up earlier with the last of the 3 bolts you need to support the turbo and once undone gently lower the turbo and rest it on the engine mount below then pop back underneath and pass it through the large gap where the exhaust went through.
Job done the refit is obviously the reverse
Hope this helps anyone looking to change there turbo them selves it is a easy job and can defiantly be done on your drive.
Here's a pic of my knackered exhaust side of the turbine
you can see the a broken blade:

Here's a video showing the play in the shaft:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j30YkfnaVWc
My new turbo will arrive tomorrow morning so I'll slap it on tomorrow night, I'll also change the oil, oil filter, air filter and crank case filter to do all I can to help prolong the life of the new blower.
Then I set off home where it suddenly did the same again so I pulled up and tried to again to see if I could narrow it down and this time it spat its dummy out and there was a nasty noise and no more boost the noise was a rattle/metal on metal squeal.
Funnily enough when I had the car on the ramp last Tuesday night when I was looking over it before buying it I remarked to the previous owner that the turbo looked a bit tiered and it made a constant low volume whistle at idle and I used this as a bargaining chip after telling him I suspected the turbo was on borrowed time.
Any way yesterday I had a quick look on line for a guide to use on removing the turbo and I found next to nothing all I found was a youtube video where the chap was very misleading after saying you need to remove the cam cover and injectors to gain access to the turbo now this is a very long winded (autodata time for cam cover removal is 5hrs) and very much the wrong way of doing it.
From the position of already having the pollen filter part of the bulkhead and the air filter and air box to turbo pipe removed which is needed to diagnose the turbo as knackered from this position it took me just 25 mins to get the turbo off and on the bench total inc the first part of stripping the air box total time 35-40 mins so dead easy.
The trick is once the air filter is removed in the bottom of the air box there is 3 grommets that you can remove:

Then under that you'll find a heat shield which has a removable panel that just un-clips:

once this is removed you can access the 3 turbo to manifold bolts to remove them the bolts are 12 point 12mm bolts so you'll need a multipoint socket to undo them:

I only cracked them off at this point then nipped them back up because you will need the turbo held solid when undoing the turbo to down pipe bolts from underneath.
Next you need to remove the turbo to inter-cooler pipe off the turbo by just undoing the jubilee clip and sliding it off and flex it out the way.
Once thats out the way you can undo the oil feed pipe from the block the other end stays attached to the turbo till it's out and on the bench:

Then you can go underneath and first undo the 2 down pipe to turbo nuts:

Next you need to remove the oil return pipe 2 10mm bolts at the turbo and the jubilee clip at the block:

Then remove the bracket from the bottom of the turbo with the 3 13mm bolts

Once this is done the exhaust needs to be removed because the turbo needs to be removed through the gap the down pipe sits in, I obviously had the use of a ramp so on the floor this will be a little more difficult but doable just unhook the whole system off the rubbers the the entire system can be lowered out the way.
Once this has been done you need to go back up top and remove the turbo to manifold bolts that you cracked off and nipped back up earlier with the last of the 3 bolts you need to support the turbo and once undone gently lower the turbo and rest it on the engine mount below then pop back underneath and pass it through the large gap where the exhaust went through.
Job done the refit is obviously the reverse
Hope this helps anyone looking to change there turbo them selves it is a easy job and can defiantly be done on your drive.
Here's a pic of my knackered exhaust side of the turbine
you can see the a broken blade:

Here's a video showing the play in the shaft:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j30YkfnaVWc
My new turbo will arrive tomorrow morning so I'll slap it on tomorrow night, I'll also change the oil, oil filter, air filter and crank case filter to do all I can to help prolong the life of the new blower.
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