German Engineering's most fun feature: Self-lubricating electronics!
My goal was to get ahead of the known oil wicking problem. What started as preventive maintenance has now become a concern that I may be too late.
What I Found:
- I planned to replace the Camshaft Position Sensors and install the sacrificial pigtails/protection kit on the Camshaft Magnets (Solenoids).
- The Camshaft Magnet connectors were clean.
- However, after finding oil in the air filter housing, I inspected the four Camshaft Position Sensors (CPS).
- All four CPS harness connectors were soaked in oil. - Video and Picture Attached called Camshaft Position Sensor with Oil
- I immediately checked the main ECM plugs. The good news is that I found no trace of oil on the ECM pins or on the harness connectors at the ECM end. Pictures attached - ECM Plug A & B ECM Pins A & B
- I installed four new OEM Camshaft Position Sensors.
- I have been meticulously cleaning the male harness-side connectors (the plugs that attach to the sensors). For the past week, I have sprayed them daily with Liqui Moly Electronic Cleaner and let them air dry completely.
- I believe the sensor-side plugs are now clean.
My main worry is the oil I can't see.
I’ve cleaned the sensor end of the harness. But since the oil wicks inside the copper wire strands (not just on the outside), I am extremely concerned that a significant amount of oil is still trapped "in between"—somewhere in the middle of the wiring harness, slowly migrating its way to the ECM.
My dilemma is: How do I address the oil that is almost certainly still inside the wires, even if it hasn't reached the ECM yet?
- Should I button everything up and just religiously monitor the ECM plugs every few weeks, cleaning them with electronic spray if or when the oil finally appears?
- Or, is there any known method to flush or clean the harness 'in between' to get the trapped oil out before it travels any further?
- Has anyone been in this situation, found the oil, cleaned out the oil, and if any oil made it into the ECM, cleaned it and not have any codes, etc. afterward?
I'm desperately trying to avoid the catastrophic "$10,000 ECM and new harness" repair. Any advice on the best and safest next steps would be greatly appreciated.
The old Chamsaft Position Sensor
ECM Plug A
ECM A
ECM B
ECM Plug B




I am not sure there is a great answer to deal with this AFTER the fact - It is best to PREVENT heatsoaks AHEAD of baking all engine plastics.

You can add the exhaust sensors that are located low down the harness to the infamous PCM contamination.
Their failure materialize with CEL's.
Lambda use an "open-concept" so oil traveling down the harness right inside the sensor-chamber. Each new sensor gets contaminated from the old harness so you may want to install a "Lambda pigtail".
Last edited by CaliBenzDriver; Oct 26, 2025 at 08:37 PM.




But make sure you seal them properly after that.
With a mere 1 cm exposed copper strand, you can spray contact cleaner and let gravity feed the cleaning solution down to the connector.
If you peel all 3 wires, separate their position 1.5 cm apart, safer when re-sealed and less fat too.
I would not worry if I have not seen any oil trace at the ECM connector wire harness side and ECM side.
Be informed that the pins ( usually the female ones goes bad fisrt ) of the ECM has good life up to 50 insertion cycles if silver plated. So dont over abuse your ECM connector.
https://mbworld.org/forums/e-class-w...onnectors.html
Good luck....
You can add the exhaust sensors that are located low down the harness to the infamous PCM contamination.
Their failure materialize with CEL's.
Lambda use an "open-concept" so oil traveling down the harness right inside the sensor-chamber. Each new sensor gets contaminated from the old harness so you may want to install a "Lambda pigtail".
To rub salt in the wound, you are saying the oil can keep flowing into the 02 sensors and ruin them? Does the oil then run through the 02 sensors, pool in the catalytic converter, and destroy them as well?
I just want ot make sure that the fix would be to add a sacrificial wiring harness to the 02 Sensors? I've been looking online but can't find a vendor that sells one specifically for my application, so I'm stuck on this for now. Any advice would be appreciated.
Last edited by ap41563; Oct 27, 2025 at 04:58 PM. Reason: Didn't ad the quote as I should have
I would not worry if I have not seen any oil trace at the ECM connector wire harness side and ECM side.
Be informed that the pins ( usually the female ones goes bad fisrt ) of the ECM has good life up to 50 insertion cycles if silver plated. So dont over abuse your ECM connector.
https://mbworld.org/forums/e-class-w...onnectors.html
Good luck....
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Would these be the parts for preventative maintenance?
https://www.fcpeuro.com/products/mer...SABEgLG3PD_BwE
https://www.fcpeuro.com/products/mer...SABEgLNlfD_BwE
Would these be the parts for preventative maintenance?
https://www.fcpeuro.com/products/mer...SABEgLG3PD_BwE
https://www.fcpeuro.com/products/mer...SABEgLNlfD_BwE




To rub salt in the wound, you are saying the oil can keep flowing into the 02 sensors and ruin them? Does the oil then run through the 02 sensors, pool in the catalytic converter, and destroy them as well?
I just want ot make sure that the fix would be to add a sacrificial wiring harness to the 02 Sensors? I've been looking online but can't find a vendor that sells one specifically for my application, so I'm stuck on this for now. Any advice would be appreciated.
The Lambda pigtails are not super-popular until you are facing the $10k harness feeding oil non-stop into $100 Lambdas.
I've seen VW owners dealing with exact same leak issue where $10k repair was not an option.
You're not dealing with a river of oil, likely only 5mL volume.
Plan B may be to experiment custom sealing each of the lambda wire strands to preserve Lambdas contamination. Then experiment sealing the ECU male pins so oil won't penetrate the enclosure through the pins.
Last edited by CaliBenzDriver; Oct 27, 2025 at 06:32 PM.




01. 4 x camshaft position sensor <----- I will replace mine by 14th year, now been dry. I won't use extra pigtail, the more interconnector exist, the more bad contact possibility.
02. 4 x camshaft magnet, the round black thingy <---- I have replaced all four like 3-4 years ago as preventive.
03. Engine Oil pump solenoid <----- Mine is diverted, thus its like sacrificial connector in place.
04. Engine oil level switch <----- For now I pray it wont wick oil
, but I will replace it when I replace the engine oil pan baffle oil suction snorkle combo, latest by 2027-2028.All these 4 locations are oil bath region. Thus the risk is high.
If say engine or its PCV is not healthy, if high piston blow by... meaning high positive crankcase pressure, the higher the chance of oil wicking thru them wires...pressure assisted.
https://mbworld.org/forums/gl-class-...ml#post8771425
From what I gather the sacrificial harness doesn't actually stop the oil wicking it just buys you time to catch it before it makes it to the main wire harness. Is this true or do they actually block the oil and after awhile you would just get a code on what ever cam sensor and say well time to change that sensor and buy a new sacrificial harness. I'm basically looking to completely block this oil and only worry about a cel telling me the sensor is done and just change a bad sensor.
Just bought this car for my wife she wanted a weekend conv down her in Florida. I just did the full trans fluid change that was fun (not). Then found out about the hydraulic lines for the conv getting pinched and leaking now this oil wicking ****. This car is killing my OCD which is bad I worry about this car constantly is this what being a Mercedes-Benz owner is like. Cause it sucks. But the car is immaculate and we love driving it.




From what I gather the sacrificial harness doesn't actually stop the oil wicking it just buys you time to catch it before it makes it to the main wire harness. Is this true or do they actually block the oil and after awhile you would just get a code on what ever cam sensor and say well time to change that sensor and buy a new sacrificial harness. I'm basically looking to completely block this oil and only worry about a cel telling me the sensor is done and just change a bad sensor.
Just bought this car for my wife she wanted a weekend conv down her in Florida. I just did the full trans fluid change that was fun (not). Then found out about the hydraulic lines for the conv getting pinched and leaking now this oil wicking ****. This car is killing my OCD which is bad I worry about this car constantly is this what being a Mercedes-Benz owner is like. Cause it sucks. But the car is immaculate and we love driving it.
To not have oil migration I think best is to replace all 4 CAM-POS sensors on regular basis. For high mileage guys, perhaps X miles.
Me low mileage guy, I would say 12 years or next year for my engine would be good. Mine super dry now, but only 44,000KM only albeit 11 years old.
To not have oil migration I think best is to replace all 4 CAM-POS sensors on regular basis. For high mileage guys, perhaps X miles.
Me low mileage guy, I would say 12 years or next year for my engine would be good. Mine super dry now, but only 44,000KM only albeit 11 years old.




But do remember the very low torque value on the magnets and non re-useable bolts (3) , which is aluminum.
The VVT cover is magnesium.
BTW I just ordered 4 new cam sensors for my car. 1 month special order. Good for 2026 refresh.
The part number never changed till now. But my magnet has gone thru few part number changes if I recalled.
- Oil was in the air filter box when I opened it.
- The dip stick would pop up after a spirited drive.
- The Oil cap was hard to remove.
My shop checked the manifold pressure and found that the PCV breathing camber had collapsed, so it was replaced.
I am hopeful we on the other side of this issue now, but time will tell. I'll be checking everything related to this at every oil change going forward.
- Oil was in the air filter box when I opened it.
- The dip stick would pop up after a spirited drive.
- The Oil cap was hard to remove.
My shop checked the manifold pressure and found that the PCV breathing camber had collapsed, so it was replaced.
I am hopeful we on the other side of this issue now, but time will tell. I'll be checking everything related to this at every oil change going forward.




- Oil was in the air filter box when I opened it.
- The dip stick would pop up after a spirited drive.
- The Oil cap was hard to remove.
My shop checked the manifold pressure and found that the PCV breathing camber had collapsed, so it was replaced.
I am hopeful we on the other side of this issue now, but time will tell. I'll be checking everything related to this at every oil change going forward.
There is no sensor inside the engine to read that crankcase pressure ( PCV ) system.
What you can do is to test the crankcase pressure as routine maintenance, aside from visual inspection of too much oil in the intake system.
Read here : https://mbworld.org/forums/e-class-w...sure-test.html
The tool is cheap, under US$100 you can get it
The problem is for us MB owners, MB does not provide any data on what the crankcase negative pressure is to be.
So when your PCV system is healthy, note it down and use it as reference.




- Oil was in the air filter box when I opened it.
- The dip stick would pop up after a spirited drive.
- The Oil cap was hard to remove.
My shop checked the manifold pressure and found that the PCV breathing camber had collapsed, so it was replaced.
I am hopeful we on the other side of this issue now, but time will tell. I'll be checking everything related to this at every oil change going forward.
New E350 stock M276-NA + new PCV is more than capable to swamp the intake plenum with flash-vaporized oil unlike the turbo M276-TT PCV system that separates oil out much better to recycle it. Less dirty intake valves on turbo engines.
The dipstick popping up is to provide additional pressure relief - That is a witness sign of high blow-by pressure. That's from piston rings leaking uneven compressions.
The working PCV diaphragm should help normalize the idle crankcase vacuum to open oil cap.
Is crankcase pressure linked to "oil-in-harness" ?
I'd say no but pressure help feed oil through cracked plastic CPS.
Last edited by CaliBenzDriver; Nov 19, 2025 at 09:20 PM.
I feel like owning an older Mercedes makes you into an airplane mechanic. You always have something to work on and replace, and sometimes you replace stuff that "isn't bad, but it's just time".




