Oil in water and vice versa M156
I have a saga and I'm out of ideas. Hoping someone with more knowledge of these engines has some input.
The story so far. I bought an ML63 (2007) with what was thought to be a blown head gasket. Coolant in the oil and oil in the coolant. I ran it up with some fresh oil to see what the situation was, and it ran fine but blew copious amounts of white smoke from BOTH tail pipes, which I thought was weird (twin system, totally independent exhausts from each bank). Then I compression tested it, and found that cylinder 6 was low. All the others had 175-180 psi, cylinder 6 had maybe 140 psi. Pulled that head off and one of the adjacent head bolts was broken around an inch from the bottom, so not the common failure mode I have seen, but at least it would explain a blown head gasket.
Took the head to a head specialist friend, and he thought he could see evidence of a breach near that pot, checked the head for straightness (good), hardness (good), and vacuum tested it after cleaning the valves. All good. Bought an OEM Mercedes head gasket, new bolts, and re-fitted the head, ran the car up and it wouldn't rev. Took it for a drive, still no good, but no engine codes, no check engine light, nothing. When I returned it was blowing coolant from the overflow. Checked and found that there was oil in the coolant again, and lots of water in the oil too. Compression tested the engine and found all four pots on the side I had done the head gasket on were fine (175-180 psi). But the driver's side (RHS in Australia) had low compression on all four (around 125 psi). Pulled the rocker cover and found that the inlet cam phaser had slipped around slightly, and that was strange, given that I used new bolts and torqued them to spec, but I am prepared to assume that somehow I screwed that up. Can't see how, but leave that aside. I still had coolant in the oil and vice versa, and no obvious reason.
Also, I disassembled the intake manifold and cleaned it thoroughly before re-fitting it. After I removed it the second time I found oil with water contamination in the exit of the new PCV valve I fitted. I think that's odd too, and assume that the crankcase is seeing too much pressure?
Pulled that head off and there's no sign of a breach in the gasket, and the head is straight. The deck is straight too. Took this head to the same head specialist friend, checked the head for straightness (good), hardness (good), and vacuum tested it after cleaning the valves. All good again. Again bought an OEM Mercedes head gasket, new bolts, and re-fitted the head, ran the car up, and within a couple of minutes had water in my oil and oil in my coolant.
I'm thinking a crack somewhere in the block, but I haven't been able to find one.
Also, when I got the car I cleared the fault codes - flat battery, (low voltage so dozens or even hundreds of codes). There are no fault codes now,even after all of the above.
I intend to compression test again, and also do a sniff test on the coolant to see if I have CO2 in it, but I am pretty confident it's not a blown head or head gasket.
Anyone have any thoughts?
Just an FYI, I also dismantled and cleaned the intake plenum, and rebuilt the cam adjusters (phasers), and polished the cams, which are in good nick.Also replaced all lifters (buckets) with new. Loats of money has already gone into this beast, and even more time. Huge amounts of time.




There's no oil/water cooler, these have an air/oil cooler.
There were no differences between the condition of the tops of the pistons.
I was hoping someone with detailed knowledge of these engines could suggest where the fault might be. I'm wondering for example if there could be an issue in the timing cover area, although the timing chains are not getting particularly contaminated with water.

I've done head bolts on both my engines (both pre-2012 production), and I cannot stress enough to blow out the holes in the block before putting in the new bolts. Even a small amount of fluid in the wholes could skew the torque readings and the heads won't be properly seated.
these engines are pretty sturdy if maintenance properly (catch-can is a must, along with revised injectors, and re-building the intake manifold with a new plate).
the only other possibility is that someone replaced the water pump and/or thermostat at some point and mixed up the bolts. they have different sized bolts on the same part, so if one was to put a longer bolt in the spot where a shorter bolt would have gone, they could theoretically crack the block and allow coolant to enter the oil
I think your best bet is what Baltistyle recommended. Pressurize the coolant system and see where the leak is
Keep us updated!
We did a CO2 sniff test last night and there's no sign of CO2 in the coolant.
I can't see that pressurising the cooling system is going to get us anywhere at this stage. It can't be a crack in a bore or head, or we'd have combustion gas escaping, and we don't have that. So where could we look with a camera to find the leak, other than in the bores?
The water pump bolt suggestion is exactly what I was hoping someone would come up with. We might pull the pump and thermostat housing and take a look. Wherever the leak is, it's substantial. This was fresh oil run for only a few minutes. The white colour is correct in real life. It looks like milk.

If the leak was at any of the attachment points externally a preasure test and some soapy water would highlight it pretty quickly. But if the engine is already apart for the thermostat and water pump, getting the filter housing off would be pretty easy
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Next step is to replace the radiator and try and clean out the remaining oil contamination in the cooling system, and sort out some fault codes that remain (MAF sensor open circuit, one injector open circuit, and fuel pressure sensor).


