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Broke a rocker arm, need to find parts


warmwaffles

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So I'm driving down the highway, and suddenly a lot of poping and no power coming from my car. I cut the engine and coasted to a stop. Got my car home and as I feared, it was something with my valve / rocker

http://imgur.com/a/2LX3W

Can you guys help me out? I need to get a set of gaskets and apparently a new rocker arm...probably a few of them just in case.

EDIT: this is my daily driver :( not to mention my only vehicle

Proud owner of a 1972 2002.

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Well that's handy... My diesel broke a rocker shaft a couple weeks ago :P

As far as rocker arms go, you'll have to pull the head pull em, or pull the motor. I'd just replace the rocker that broke. Chances are the other 7 are fine. Maybe you just got one bad one.

-Nathan
'76 2002 in Malaga (110k Original, 2nd Owner, sat for 20 years and now a toy)
'86 Chevy K20 (6.2 Turbo Diesel build) & '46 Chevy 2 Ton Dump Truck
'74 Suzuki TS185, '68 BSA A65 Lightning (garage find), '74 BMW R90S US Spec #2

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Yes, look at the far left intake rocker. I broke two of them when I was tearing the head apart 5 years ago. Both of them broke in the same spot so I'm thinking I need to replace them. At least with the way it broke, the valve was shut and and nothing too catastrophic happened other than exhaust shooting through the air intake

Proud owner of a 1972 2002.

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I have a set of used rockers off a head I stripped down for a race engine, and a cam too if you need it. Bought head so don't know condition, but evrything else checked out. Let me know your address and I will mail them to you No Charge.

Mark

73tii

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I noticed that the valve cover gasket is severely squished around the studs.

You might want to ease up on the nut torque a bit.

Also, to minimize cam and rocker wear, you should re-install all the surviving rockers in their original location.

No amount of skill or education will ever replace dumb luck
1971 2002 (much modified rocket),  1987 635CSI (beauty),  

2000 323i,  1996 Silverado Pickup (very useful)

Too many cars.

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uh, there's something else wrong, too, I suspect-

that's an exhaust rocker.

The intakes almost always break first- the valve's heaver, and what breaks

them is floating off the valve stem.

If you're lucky, it's something obvious like a broken or collapsed valve spring,

or sticking valve....

How fast was the engine turning when it broke?

t

"I learn best through painful, expensive experience, so I feel like I've gotten my money's worth." MattL

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Those are the cheap aftermarket rockers, if you look carefully they don't break any of the corners and they are thinner than the factory rockers. They are stress riser festivals! If you have broken one, others are not far behind. Replace them all!

While you have it apart to replace the rockers have a good look at the valve springs, most likely they are 40 years old and if they are not controlling the valves and they float even a little bit they will KILL rockers.

1970 1602 (purchased 12/1974)

1974 2002 Turbo

1988 M5

1986 Euro 325iC

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Those are the cheap aftermarket rockers, if you look carefully they don't break any of the corners and they are thinner than the factory rockers. They are stress riser festivals! If you have broken one, others are not far behind. Replace them all!

While you have it apart to replace the rockers have a good look at the valve springs, most likely they are 40 years old and if they are not controlling the valves and they float even a little bit they will KILL rockers.

1970 1602 (purchased 12/1974)

1974 2002 Turbo

1988 M5

1986 Euro 325iC

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That explains the other two breaking. I've never heard of one breaking, much less three. Hard to imagine someone making after-market rocker arms for 50 year old BMWs. I wouldn't think there was a big market. It may be more cost affective to look for some low mileage used ones.

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That explains the other two breaking. I've never heard of one breaking, much less three. Hard to imagine someone making after-market rocker arms for 50 year old BMWs. I wouldn't think there was a big market. It may be more cost affective to look for some low mileage used ones.

mmm, pretty common, even on factory replacements these days. While regular valve adjustments are a good idea in preventative maintenance, its still not a "cure".

As for HD aftermarket pieces, there's a link above showing just that.

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