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Turbo Fuel Return Question


PetrolJunky
Go to solution Solved by TobyB,

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Hello,

 

I see that you need to drill a hole in the oil pan, I would rather not, simply because it looks like a pain in the butt.

 

Would it be a bad idea to just plumb it into the oil drain plug?

 

The only reason I am not doing it without asking is because, I am not sure if the presure from the oil matters, and I am not sure if there is a risk of bumping it on speedbumps/etc

 

Thanks,

Matt

Current: nada

Sold: 1974 Inka 2002tii ($15,500), 1974 Polaris 2002tii ($8k), 1975 Polaris 2002 ($1,800), 1973 Colorado 2002 ($10k), 1967 Sahara 1600 ($11,500), F10 //M5 ($42k), E60 //M5 ($15,500)

 

Classic Car Scrapper: https://petroljunky.com

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Haha, Sorry, oil return from the turbo.

 

I also see people putting it back in the valve cover, that sounds much easier.


Haha, Sorry, oil return from the turbo.

 

I also see people putting it back in the valve cover, that sounds much easier.

Current: nada

Sold: 1974 Inka 2002tii ($15,500), 1974 Polaris 2002tii ($8k), 1975 Polaris 2002 ($1,800), 1973 Colorado 2002 ($10k), 1967 Sahara 1600 ($11,500), F10 //M5 ($42k), E60 //M5 ($15,500)

 

Classic Car Scrapper: https://petroljunky.com

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  • Solution

You need to return oil BELOW the turbo bearings but ABOVE the oil level in the pan.

Otherwise, your turbo will ingest gobs of oil.  Apparently, the oil that comes out is

aerated something ferocious, and won't do anything but float on top of the oil in your pan.

 

You're right, it's a pain in the butt, and some do it with an electric scavenge pump because

THAT is easier than anything else.

 

On the B20, I returned it to the lowest corner of the timing chain case, and that works on the M10/M30 as well.

 

On the M20, yes, the top of the oil pan is probably about all you can do.  Or the very bottom of the block.

You have to be careful, though, as windage can plug it with predictable results.

 

Corky Bell wrote a great book on turbocharging- every time I didn't do what he said to do, I got to do it over again.

 

hth

 

t

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

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See mine:
AN-12 bung fitted to the front center of the oil pan, between the bolts that hold it on. Same way that BMW did it from the factory.

 

IMG_1965_zps51fbca8b.jpg

 

 

IMG_1968_zpsa16d89b6.jpg

 

IMG_1971_zps7d97ebd5.jpg

 

 

 

Factory car:

 

2002turboengine.jpg

Another angle:

 

M13BMWturbomotor.jpg

Edited by Rocan

1974 Grey European Market BMW 2002 

1976 Yellow BMW 2002 "GOLDENROD" SOLD

1972 Yellow Austin Mini 1000

A bunch of Bikes...

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The oil return doesn't need to be above the oil level, as long as the turbo is higher than the oil level by more than just a little.  I decided to risk it when I built my turbo 914 and I haven't had a problem.  The oil return for the turbo is tied in at literally the lowest point in the engine.  Oh, and you need a sufficiently large return.  Mine is AN-10.

Mark DeBernardi

BMW2002Badge.jpg

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