Oil Leak
started with a few drops but moved to a consistent drip when on, which means it’s under pressure.
took a look and started removing things and it seems to be from the Oil filter housing or cooler itself. My guess is the housing since the oil seems to coming from higher up
My local dealership has the gaskets for both and that’s what I think i will replace. Anyone have a reason to replace the whole housing assembly?
any feedback would be appreciated.
Here is the thread I used from the W212 E63 forum which has tons of Mercedes Work Instruction PDFs on it, it was an invaluable resource. Post #114 and #116 have the main ones you need.
E63 S 4Matic M157 | Factory WIS Maintenance and repair documents - Page 5 - MBWorld.org Forums
What I replaced:
Timing Cover Seals/Camshaft Gaskets, pretty simple, uses RTV to seal and new aluminum screws (000000006365) ($10 each, I didn’t replace all of them, only the lower ones as they seemed to have more of a sealing function), remove the Camshaft adjuster magnets and replace the O-Rings (0169975045) ($5 each) and screws (0009903924) ($3 each), they are aluminum and break easily with thread locker on them.
Oil Cooler Gasket (2781840080) ($20), or use the Elring Klinger part, it’s the same as the dealership part but cheaper. This job was not too bad, remove the belt/tensioner, 4 screws, pull it off, coolant and oil comes out, clean off the sealing surfaces, put the new gasket on, reattach
Oil Filter Housing, this was the worst jobs of all of these. It requires a lot of removal of other parts just to get to it, and is not a fun job overall. You must remove most of the front end, Covers, Belt, Fan (if you want more room), Thermostat Housing (replace the O-Ring (0229976445), draining coolant, remove Charge Pipes, Turbo Coolant Lines (Thankfully I only broke 1), Radiator Pipes, tons of screws holding things on, it was really a lot of work with uncomfortable angles and not much room
I talked with my dealership and they said they typically just replace the Housing (2781800710) which is a $200+ part. It’s a well made part and has 4 points of leakage, and I replaced these instead of the entire housing which saved some $$$
Oil Filter Cap (shouldn’t leak if you replace the O-Ring (0209975445) during oil changes and don’t over torque the cap.
Oil Housing Cap (pressure relief) (2781800438) ($30)
Oil Filter Housing Main Seal (2781840280) ($10)
Oil Distributor Screw (001-997-20-01) ($10), I Stripped mine when removing the oil distributor/sensor which is why I had to replace it. Strangely enough this part doesn’t show up on the CLS or E550 M278. Only the 2015+ S550 and S63.
Hopefully this helps someone, let me know if you need more information or tips.
Last edited by AceVL; Jan 15, 2024 at 09:11 AM.
Here is the thread I used from the W212 E63 forum which has tons of Mercedes Work Instruction PDFs on it, it was an invaluable resource. Post #114 and #116 have the main ones you need.
E63 S 4Matic M157 | Factory WIS Maintenance and repair documents - Page 5 - MBWorld.org Forums
What I replaced:
Timing Cover Seals/Camshaft Gaskets, pretty simple, uses RTV to seal and new aluminum screws (000000006365) ($10 each, I didn’t replace all of them, only the lower ones as they seemed to have more of a sealing function), remove the Camshaft adjuster magnets and replace the O-Rings (0169975045) ($5 each) and screws (0009903924) ($3 each), they are aluminum and break easily with thread locker on them.
Oil Cooler Gasket (2781840080) ($20), or use the Elring Klinger part, it’s the same as the dealership part but cheaper. This job was not too bad, remove the belt/tensioner, 4 screws, pull it off, coolant and oil comes out, clean off the sealing surfaces, put the new gasket on, reattach
Oil Filter Housing, this was the worst jobs of all of these. It requires a lot of removal of other parts just to get to it, and is not a fun job overall. You must remove most of the front end, Covers, Belt, Fan (if you want more room), Thermostat Housing (replace the O-Ring (0229976445), draining coolant, remove Charge Pipes, Turbo Coolant Lines (Thankfully I only broke 1), Radiator Pipes, tons of screws holding things on, it was really a lot of work with uncomfortable angles and not much room
I talked with my dealership and they said they typically just replace the Housing (2781800710) which is a $200+ part. It’s a well made part and has 4 points of leakage, and I replaced these instead of the entire housing which saved some $$$
Oil Filter Cap (shouldn’t leak if you replace the O-Ring (0209975445) during oil changes and don’t over torque the cap.
Oil Housing Cap (pressure relief) (2781800438) ($30)
Oil Filter Housing Main Seal (2781840280) ($10)
Oil Distributor Screw (001-997-20-01) ($10), I Stripped mine when removing the oil distributor/sensor which is why I had to replace it. Strangely enough this part doesn’t show up on the CLS or E550 M278. Only the 2015+ S550 and S63.
Hopefully this helps someone, let me know if you need more information or tips.
As a new member to the platform, I'd like to say ...fantastic information...Thank you Sir!
I'd like to ask, how many cam magnet o- rings does the job require? I'm assuming 4, 2 on each bank....but please correct me if I'm wrong.
also, is Ultra Black RTV any good to reseal the timing cover?




The one on my 63 is leaking. Anyone just replace this part? Taking everything apart looks to be a terrible job but this looks much easier. How is it attached?




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I'd like to ask, how many cam magnet o- rings does the job require? I'm assuming 4, 2 on each bank....but please correct me if I'm wrong.
also, is Ultra Black RTV any good to reseal the timing cover?
Regardless, if those are leaking, it will just run downward with gravity. Could take out the AC or Alternator depending on the side.
oil in the harness has more to do with the design of the cam sensors than anything else. An external leak wouldn’t cause it to get into the harness.
Regardless, if those are leaking, it will just run downward with gravity. Could take out the AC or Alternator depending on the side.
oil in the harness has more to do with the design of the cam sensors than anything else. An external leak wouldn’t cause it to get into the harness.
1. Upper timing cover seepage (both banks)
2. Front diff seepage
3. Oil pan seepage
The floors are dry, however, I just need to know if this would indicate something more severe on the long run or even worth the repairs. Warranty will cover 100%. What say you?
1. Upper timing cover seepage (both banks)
2. Front diff seepage
3. Oil pan seepage
The floors are dry, however, I just need to know if this would indicate something more severe on the long run or even worth the repairs. Warranty will cover 100%. What say you?


