Timing Cover Leak
We can't point it out during service most times, as warranty thinks we are scamming them to get more work. If I'm working on a car and I see a leak like this, I have to go get the service director to approve the additional line so I can fix the leak while the car is here, if it's not mentioned by the customer at the time of drop off. It also tends to leak down the front and onto the panels and be not very obvious. If there's noticeable dripping oil after your service, most likely the cover leak was small and the real issue was spilled oil during the service. The front cover reseal on the N/A 276 is very easy, there's almost nothing in the way to remove them.
I'm a kinda do it yourself guy. Is this repair something I might be able to do?
Thanks
We can't point it out during service most times, as warranty thinks we are scamming them to get more work. If I'm working on a car and I see a leak like this, I have to go get the service director to approve the additional line so I can fix the leak while the car is here, if it's not mentioned by the customer at the time of drop off. It also tends to leak down the front and onto the panels and be not very obvious. If there's noticeable dripping oil after your service, most likely the cover leak was small and the real issue was spilled oil during the service. The front cover reseal on the N/A 276 is very easy, there's almost nothing in the way to remove them.
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Last edited by dykaar; Jun 11, 2020 at 01:43 PM.
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I had a closer look and i can actually see the black sealant between the cover and the block and when i touched it, it started coming away in my hand 🙄 is there really no gasket for this? Seems like a gasket is needed.
The ones I re-sealed never leaked, it's an issue from assembly. The sealant doesn't adhere to the cover side well from new. The surfaces are machined and super flat, the sealant done right works very well, that's all that seals your valve covers, oil pan, etc and they never leak on these engines.
The ones I re-sealed never leaked, it's an issue from assembly. The sealant doesn't adhere to the cover side well from new. The surfaces are machined and super flat, the sealant done right works very well, that's all that seals your valve covers, oil pan, etc and they never leak on these engines.
Could you link part no for the aluminium bolt going on the front cover?
Can you link part no for the stainless bolt with sealant for both cam magnet so should be x6?
I found the cover itself (mb specifies its a one time use cover part no 2760150201)
I found the cam magnet part no 2761560790
Do I need to perform any adjustment on the magnet or straight up replace them?




Could you link part no for the aluminium bolt going on the front cover?
Can you link part no for the stainless bolt with sealant for both cam magnet so should be x6?
I found the cover itself (mb specifies its a one time use cover part no 2760150201)
I found the cam magnet part no 2761560790
Do I need to perform any adjustment on the magnet or straight up replace them?
Use this to find part number : https://www.ssg.asia/cats/#/catalogs?catalogId=mercedes
I done the timing cover re-seal you speak off on same M276 3.0 Turbo engine, no need to adjust anything when replacing the magnets. Plug n play.
Here https://mbworld.org/forums/e-class-w...lant-work.html
New member to the platform (m278). Can you tell me which sealent did you use, or which is best holding up long-term ?
I have leaks near the timing covers that I will soon tackle, but I would like the best course of action regarding which sealant to use.
In addition, The leak can also be coming from the camshaft solenoids and I believe these are 2 gaskets on each bank (please correct if wrong)




New member to the platform (m278). Can you tell me which sealent did you use, or which is best holding up long-term ?
I have leaks near the timing covers that I will soon tackle, but I would like the best course of action regarding which sealant to use.
In addition, The leak can also be coming from the camshaft solenoids and I believe these are 2 gaskets on each bank (please correct if wrong)
VVT Solenoids can hardly leak.
Sealing that is busy work because the main job is replacing the chain tensioner.
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