Camshaft sensor leaking!




Last edited by Baltistyle; Nov 8, 2022 at 09:23 AM.
Passenger side. 1
Passenger side 2. Hidden under the intake cloth tube.
Driver side 1. Nasty goop of oil on driver side closer to the center.
Driver side 2, it's hidden under the intake cloth tube. (looking at it from the driver fender).
Also what year make and model is this?
Reason I ask is because the dealership is insisting oil never leaked from the cam position sensors into the wiring. The dealer says its the cam magnets that were leaking which is why Mercedes made the pigtails to plug on the magnets.
When looking at the 3rd picture here, it appears to me oil is coating the connector which was unplugged from the cam position sensor but without being able to enlarge this pic, its a bit hard to say for sure.
Last edited by s550hollywood; Nov 9, 2022 at 06:30 PM.




Caveat: English is my 2nd language.
Also what year make and model is this?
Reason I ask is because the dealership is insisting oil never leaked from the cam position sensors into the wiring. The dealer says its the cam magnets that were leaking which is why Mercedes made the pigtails to plug on the magnets.
When looking at the 3rd picture here, it appears to me oil is coating the connector which was unplugged from the cam position sensor but without being able to enlarge this pic, its a bit hard to say for sure.
Campaign No. 2012070002, September 2012
TO: ALL MERCEDES-BENZ CENTERS SUBJECT: Models 164, 171, 203, 204, 207, 209, 211, 212, 216, 219, 221, 230, 251, 463 Engines 272 and 273
Model Years 2005 - 2011
Retrofit Adapter Wiring Harness on Camshaft Adjustment Solenoids Revision Date Purpose A 9/12/12 Inclusion of Consequential Damage and Customer Reimbursement to Warranty information – 9/7/12 Initial Issue
This Service Campaign has been initiated because Daimler AG (DAG), the manufacturer of MercedesBenz vehicles, has determined that due to the settling properties of the seal, oil may leak from the camshaft adjustment solenoid. Dealers will retrofit four adapter harnesses onto the engine wiring harness as a precautionary measure at the next workshop visit Prior to performing this Service Campaign: ! Please check VMI to determine if the vehicle is involved in the Campaign and if it has been previously repaired. ! Please review the entire Service Campaign bulletin and follow the repair procedure exactly as described. Please note that Recall and Service Campaigns do not expire and may also be performed on a vehicle with a vehicle status indicator. Approximately 557,108 vehicles are affected.




.i guess the link above is a hoax
. If we keep looking through the different threads, several forum members have used the pigtails for the same purpose they were design. Then, engine number becomes irrelevant.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG




If I find it again, I will update this post.
If I find it again, I will update this post.
Last edited by s550hollywood; Nov 9, 2022 at 09:57 PM.




Letting bean counters playing with engineering processes is looking for defects to happen.
Part numbers from manufacturers change nearly exclusively because some characteristic of the part has changed. To wit: a revision.




I think we should think this way for camshaft position sensor and phasor/magnet solenoid.
01. It is consumeable items. Set a mileage or years when you think its good to change without having yet a leak or while a super small leak.
I replaced my phasor/magnet solenoid when it was still healthy , simply out of fear it will leak and there is a new P/N, assumed revised better one.
I did not replace my cam pos sensor because the current P/N is the same as the one on my engine.
By year 10th if no leak on cam pos sensor, I would want to replace it anyway, take it as preventive and plastic will age at 10th year.
I do watch these sensors per oil change or 5,000KM or per 9 months, whichever sooner.
Seeing my 10th year rejuvenation list , cam pos sensor is cheap parts $$ wise and a simple DIY job.
I spent so much on engine* mounts ( *need workshop, my indie ) and tranny mount (DIY) because I am hyper sensitive when these mounts have passed its Creme La De Creme moment, which for me is approx 20,000KM.
So adding cam pos sensor and phasor/magnet solenoid as consumebale does make sense $$ savings wise and no need to loose sleep over it.
Last edited by S-Prihadi; Nov 10, 2022 at 04:27 AM.
I checked my cam sensors and did indeed find oil leaking from them. Also had the oil at the ECM connector pins.
I've cleaned the contaminated connectors with contact cleaner and am considering opening up the ECM to check the oil contamination inside. Has anyone opened one up? I'm concerned that a special sealant may be need during reassembly for a watertight seal but so as to not contaminate the electronics.
Apparently their vehicle was running well for quite a while before issues starting popping up. This makes me wonder how tolerant ECU's are of engine oil.
It looks like some of the people that posted on this problem are still active members, so I assume you still own the vehicle.
What have you done to resolve the issue and how is your vehicle running?




I replaced all 4 phasor magnets for caution only sometime ago.
My car is very low mileage, only 37,000KM today, so less likely to leak but probably will leak as plastic will age.
By year 10th or 2024, the cam pos sensors all 4 I will replace, again out of caution.
FYI, I had as much oil on the ECU plugs as in the pictures in the first post.
Since the internal board looks clean, I'm not going to open the ECU. Every few months, I will check and clean the connectors, until the oil has migrated out of the wire harness.
Hope these pictures give anyone panicked by this, a sense of relief. From what I am finding out on professional forums, it takes a lot of oil to mess up the ECU. I have read that when the vent plug was removed from the ECU, oil would pour out!!
Hopefully our ECU's are also as resilient to the presence oil.




I checked my cam sensors and did indeed find oil leaking from them. Also had the oil at the ECM connector pins.
I've cleaned the contaminated connectors with contact cleaner and am considering opening up the ECM to check the oil contamination inside. Has anyone opened one up? I'm concerned that a special sealant may be need during reassembly for a watertight seal but so as to not contaminate the electronics.
Your phasor magnets all dry at connectors ?
Is there a difference (besides the part number) between the camshaft solenoid A2761560490 intake and A2761560790 exhaust or are they interchangeable?
Nino
Have a family member with M157 2015 ML 63 84k miles. Car was babied and garage kept for the past 7 years. Found oil in harness and ECU, Car started misfiring, dealer quoted 35k for new harness. I had 17 year Mercedes tech that wanted to look over the engine first before throwing a harness at the vehicle. Found cylinder 4 has cylinder was scoring and that cylinder is down about 10-15 psi on compression. Spark plug came out oily, so think that the oil made it to the ecu and possibly caused an injector issue on the cylinder.....?? Cylinder leak down is happening this evening. Trying to make this all make sense. Could oil in the harness lead to a scored cylinder wall? This car didn't have the oil pump solenoid removed so that might be a contributing factor as well?
With this info i checked out my personal car. 2015 ML63 with 28k miles on it and driver side cam position sensor that is right on top of the engine was covered in oil, no oil in the ECU so I am going to replace all the sensors. The magnets did have a spot of something in the connectors so I am going to do that as well.
I honestly think the we are on to something with the oil solenoid removal and that should help prevent the cylinder walls scoring because the engine is properly lubricated.
I am trying to make sense of the family car. Could the oil in the harness and making it to the ECU cause the injectors to leak or malfunction to cause the washing down of the cylinder?? Tech stated that the injectors weren't leaking. I am leaning to the oil solenoid is what caused the scoring, what i found with searching here is that the solenoid doesn't give the engine 60psi of oil pressure until 3500 rpm and that doesn't turn on the oil squirters until is sees 60psi.
Thank you everyone. REPLACE SENSORS AND MAGNETS!!!!!




Have a family member with M157 2015 ML 63 84k miles. Car was babied and garage kept for the past 7 years. Found oil in harness and ECU, Car started misfiring, dealer quoted 35k for new harness. I had 17 year Mercedes tech that wanted to look over the engine first before throwing a harness at the vehicle. Found cylinder 4 has cylinder was scoring and that cylinder is down about 10-15 psi on compression. Spark plug came out oily, so think that the oil made it to the ecu and possibly caused an injector issue on the cylinder.....?? Cylinder leak down is happening this evening. Trying to make this all make sense. Could oil in the harness lead to a scored cylinder wall? This car didn't have the oil pump solenoid removed so that might be a contributing factor as well?
With this info i checked out my personal car. 2015 ML63 with 28k miles on it and driver side cam position sensor that is right on top of the engine was covered in oil, no oil in the ECU so I am going to replace all the sensors. The magnets did have a spot of something in the connectors so I am going to do that as well.
I honestly think the we are on to something with the oil solenoid removal and that should help prevent the cylinder walls scoring because the engine is properly lubricated.
I am trying to make sense of the family car. Could the oil in the harness and making it to the ECU cause the injectors to leak or malfunction to cause the washing down of the cylinder?? Tech stated that the injectors weren't leaking. I am leaning to the oil solenoid is what caused the scoring, what i found with searching here is that the solenoid doesn't give the engine 60psi of oil pressure until 3500 rpm and that doesn't turn on the oil squirters until is sees 60psi.
Thank you everyone. REPLACE SENSORS AND MAGNETS!!!!!
He changed the engine, and he is now enjoying his "fixed vehicle".
My personal summary: ECU injection control mismanaged that injector (or the injector was busted). He did not summarized if he was able to reuse the ECU from the damaged engine onto the "used engine".
EDIT: here is the thread where the car ended with a "new used engine" ( https://mbworld.org/forums/e-class-w...fire-woes.html)
Last edited by JCM_MB; Jun 19, 2024 at 01:35 PM.






