This is a continuation of Minion's trials and tribulations with this VANOS system.
The saga starts here:
http://www.m5board.com/vbulletin/e3...letin/e39-m5-e52-z8-discussion/203162-broken-vanos-spindle-pictures-inside.html
Continues here:
http://www.m5board.com/vbulletin/e39-m5-e52-z8-discussion/204592-help-cps-vanos-problems.html
then on to:
http://www.m5board.com/vbulletin/e3...ulletin/e39-m5-e52-z8-discussion/205110-please-help-make-sense-these-codes.html
and here:
http://www.m5board.com/vbulletin/e39-m5-e52-z8-discussion/205238-looking-individual-solenoids.html
The current issue (and likely the issue all along) is that several of the VANOS solenoids are not firing.
Minion and I did some investigation and found the non-functional solenoids.
I took the boards and decided to get up close and personal with them.
What I found is of interest to me and I wanted to discuss this since VANOS problems are going to be a fact of life with the S62s as they get older.
I tested each solenoid and found 2 on one board and 1 on the other board that did not respond to being powered up (I was using a regulated power su0ply set to 6 volts, but I upped it to 12 volts, not that it matters).
I then re-soldered all of the joints and the solenoids were still not functional
This thread was very helpful and pointed me to my next step:
http://www.m5board.com/vbulletin/e39-m5-e52-z8-discussion/191986-vanos-solenoid-repair.html
After removing the tiny board, I found something very curious - the solenoid worked perfectly once I removed it from the board!
I re-soldered it to the board and the solenoid didn't work :dunno:
This led me to think there was a short in the circuit. There is nothing obvious and the resistance across all of the solenoids is the same - 3.7 ohms.
I also noticed that on one side of the baord there are 2 resistors, on the other side they are missing, on the other board there are resistors on both boards - strange :dunno:
At this point there was much beard stroking and head scratching.
The next step was to de-solder one of the wires going from the solenoid to the board. The result - THE SOLENOIDS WORK :confused3
I am testing the solenoids at the source - the small board on the back of each solenoid to remove other potential circuit issues.
WTF is going on here? The circuit on the board is not complex, but I can't figure out why the solenoid is acting this way. I ran out of time, so it will have to sit until I can get back at it. There has to be a short somewhere, but so far I can't find it :eek7:
I am open to ideas or suggestions.

The saga starts here:
http://www.m5board.com/vbulletin/e3...letin/e39-m5-e52-z8-discussion/203162-broken-vanos-spindle-pictures-inside.html
Continues here:
http://www.m5board.com/vbulletin/e39-m5-e52-z8-discussion/204592-help-cps-vanos-problems.html
then on to:
http://www.m5board.com/vbulletin/e3...ulletin/e39-m5-e52-z8-discussion/205110-please-help-make-sense-these-codes.html
and here:
http://www.m5board.com/vbulletin/e39-m5-e52-z8-discussion/205238-looking-individual-solenoids.html
The current issue (and likely the issue all along) is that several of the VANOS solenoids are not firing.
Minion and I did some investigation and found the non-functional solenoids.
I took the boards and decided to get up close and personal with them.
What I found is of interest to me and I wanted to discuss this since VANOS problems are going to be a fact of life with the S62s as they get older.
I tested each solenoid and found 2 on one board and 1 on the other board that did not respond to being powered up (I was using a regulated power su0ply set to 6 volts, but I upped it to 12 volts, not that it matters).
I then re-soldered all of the joints and the solenoids were still not functional
This thread was very helpful and pointed me to my next step:
http://www.m5board.com/vbulletin/e39-m5-e52-z8-discussion/191986-vanos-solenoid-repair.html
After removing the tiny board, I found something very curious - the solenoid worked perfectly once I removed it from the board!
I re-soldered it to the board and the solenoid didn't work :dunno:
This led me to think there was a short in the circuit. There is nothing obvious and the resistance across all of the solenoids is the same - 3.7 ohms.
I also noticed that on one side of the baord there are 2 resistors, on the other side they are missing, on the other board there are resistors on both boards - strange :dunno:
At this point there was much beard stroking and head scratching.
The next step was to de-solder one of the wires going from the solenoid to the board. The result - THE SOLENOIDS WORK :confused3
I am testing the solenoids at the source - the small board on the back of each solenoid to remove other potential circuit issues.
WTF is going on here? The circuit on the board is not complex, but I can't figure out why the solenoid is acting this way. I ran out of time, so it will have to sit until I can get back at it. There has to be a short somewhere, but so far I can't find it :eek7:
I am open to ideas or suggestions.
