Tapping Noise on Cold Engine

On my ML500 I started having tapping noise when engine is cold and under load. It seems to be coming from the valves.Tapping noise happens when engine is revved up either at idle or during driving. No noise when stopped. All this happens when engine is still warming up. Once engine is warmed up, all the noise goes away.
Your insight and thought will be much appreciated.
Thanks,
This reduces the cold idle speed.
https://www.fcpeuro.com/products/8-c...i-moly-lmk0005
The kit gives you two Engine Flush bottles, enough to treat 10L of oil. Take advantage of that by doing a double oil change flush.
- Start with the first Engine Flush bottle (1 per 5L of oil). Run it for a solid 20min with the car in idle to warm up the oil and really cycle the product. They say 13min, but that won't be enough to hit the temp you want in idle. It won't damage anything as long as you DO NOT DRIVE OR REV
- Flush it all out and let it drip for a while. Get as much as possible out
- Fill oil as usual with something synthetic, but cheap. You'll be draining this oil in a couple minutes anyway
- Pour the second Engine Flush into it and run it again. This time 10-15min
- Flush that gunk out of that engine. Even though the oil is new you should see more old deposits pour out
- After the two flushes pour ONE quart of high quality synthetic oil in
- Add all the additives (shake them all well)
- Fill up with the rest of the oil. Adding the additives before the rest of the oil will help mix them in the pan
- Change filter, seals, etc.
- Boom, smooth as butter

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Good kit, but you should add two Liqui Moly 20004 Hydraulic Lifter Additive bottles to the list. Just copy paste that into Amazon.
The kit gives you two Engine Flush bottles, enough to treat 10L of oil. Take advantage of that by doing a double oil change flush.
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Let me try and visualize how small these holes are and why they can clog so easily.
This is a lifter
It's that small! Look how tiny those oil feed holes are.
Now, most commonly these just get a little clogged and a flush solves the issue. Neglect it and starving them of oil can cause the spring mechanism to go bad and break it entirely. Lots of labor hours (a.k.a $$$$) to get that fixed. The other issue might be that the oil tube is broken/clogged, which is the connecting bit that delivers oil to both sides. So, three things can be the cause. Clogged hole, bad lifter, bad oil tube.
Doing the flush is great maintenance and eliminates one of the choices in what can cause the noise. Might even improve other things in your engine with the additives.
Either way, the cost of the oil and additives is much cheaper than what a shop will run you to take apart your engine, remove the cams, secure the timing chains, depressurize all the lifters, find the broken one/ones, replace it, re-pressurize them, put it all back together, refill whatever oil was lost and hope they didn't forget anything.
If you want more detailed information about lifter noise just Google "M113 lifter noise" and you will see some very detailed results from a bunch of Mercedes forums and even videos of garages taking the block apart to explain how they work and why they can go bad. Quite entertaining if you're into mechanics and want to see the pretty internals of your engine.
These cars last forever when living by the mantra "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure"
In the end I can't tell you what to do. I can only suggest advice based on my experience and knowledge. What you do with it is up to you. Hope it works out well.
Which is why in winter people use a different grade oil than in summer, but that is an entirely different story and many threads exist with a lot of detail on the subject. The power of viscosity!
I also had loud lifter noise, and after using th e kit I posted it quieted down extremely.
The engine flush paired with the ceratec does wonders for your engine.
I also prefer using the Liqui molly 229.5 oil as imo it is better for the engine.


