Crankcase breather valve for the M276 engine
Oil drip pan (10 in diagram) part # 2730100162
Bolt (20) 000000000281
Seal (40) 2760180080
O-ring (50) 0239970345
Housing (30) 2760100331
Bolt x4 (60) 000000003648
Thank you so much for your post and very detailed explanation about the Centrifuge which I though was the crankcase breather or PVC valve. I have a 2012 C250 and the part # 2760100331 centrifuge cover it tells me that is not the correct part for my vehicle. In addition, your repair instructions seem much more complex than what I had believed would not require draining coolant or diving into the crankcase. Is all of that necessary just to replace the centrifuge and it's cover? I know it is in a hard to reach area, but is that whole procedure necessary? I have the 1.8L 4 -cyl Engine 271.860 Turbo
Do you think an issue with the centrifuge could be causing oil to drip down into my oil pan? Thank you sincerely for the awesome detailed instructions, but please let me know how much of those detailed steps are necessary?
Thank you sincerely,
Greg
Last edited by Knightstale04; Dec 14, 2020 at 11:49 PM. Reason: more information about my car
I cannot thank you enough for your help with this issue! I tried to have repaired by my local Walnut Creek Mercedes service shop. I took it there for a diagnostic check to find where the strong gas fumes are coming from. They could not find the cause, and only pointed out the strong smell of gas on the dip stick. Then they told me there was nothing they could find as the reason. The car actually runs well and it just passed the smog test for my registration, but there is something causing gas to leak into the oil pan. When I drive on the freeway the fumes are very strong in the cabin and when I park in the garage the fumes are brutal around the car too. There are no visible leaks anywhere and no error codes, and I am only speculating from reading information from Mercedes forums that the issue might be the oil separator, centrifuge, crankcase breather or PCV valve? You seem to be very familiar with these cars, what would you think could be the most likely cause for this issue? Does this engine have the centrifuge and centrifuge cover? If you do think the issue I am having is related to the diagram you provided, which of the listed parts would you recommend replacing? I really love the car and if I could solve the gas fume issue it would be huge! Is it possible over filling the the engine oil level could cause an issue like this? . The car was not being used for the past several months because the pandemic had me working from home, but now I need to start commuting again and need to find a solution ASAP. Again, cannot thank you enough for the help, and super quick response.
Greg
Last edited by Knightstale04; Dec 15, 2020 at 02:27 PM. Reason: More info
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Any advice. While the instructions are good to have, they seem very high level and don't give the real world garage applications that maybe necessary.




Does this all sound like a clogging PCV issue? I've had clogged PCV's in the past and they too had a hesitation with them, but never figured oil could get into the intake tubing from one, but on a scale of 1-10 on wrenching ability, I'm probably a 4 in general, 1 on a MB. I only know what I don't know..
Thanks!




Last edited by CaliBenzDriver; Oct 25, 2021 at 12:34 PM.




Does this all sound like a clogging PCV issue? I've had clogged PCV's in the past and they too had a hesitation with them, but never figured oil could get into the intake tubing from one, but on a scale of 1-10 on wrenching ability, I'm probably a 4 in general, 1 on a MB. I only know what I don't know..
Thanks!
I have the same MY'14 with leaking oil smell since day-1. The intake is swamped with PCV oil. Intake valves never see gasoline in this direct injection engine. Cats and O2 sensors get contaminated by burnt oil.
It's better to get the PCV upgraded before excessive pressure blows through the heat exchanger skinny gasket. Normally the crankcase is under a slight vacuum to help pistons travel and recycle blowby fumes... Not pressure!
While getting your PCV repaired concider getting your spark plugs done too! Removing the intake plenum allows to dump all the engine oil out of the intake track.
Reset the ECU to relearn the idle mixture at once for minimal hesitations.
Have you had your secondary chain tensioners renewed?




Now you can reset the ECU through the scanner DTC Menu (without having read a fault, Reset option stays greyed out)
Without a hard reset... the new mixture adaptation is slowly tuned over a 1,000 miles or more using historical fuel trims records.
If your engine suffers from mild hesitations between deceleration and acceleration, something may be slightly leaning out your fuel trims.
The learned rich/lean mixture map is super sensitive to combustion results.




