Timing chain replacement interval
Timing chain replacement interval
I searched around here on the forums and can't find much of anything concerning if/when the timing chain should be replaced on an OM606...
Any insight would be appreciated. I've worked on two different camshaft/injection pump drive scenarios in my life - belts or gears...never messed with one that had a chain...or a combination of chain/gears (like the OM606).
MB wants you to replace it after 4* of chain wear. You must determine this using the valve tappet lift method.
The chain will 'last' well beyond this wear, but perhaps it is not accurate enough for MB's taste. Unlike the om61x engines, they do not provide a cam advancement option for chain wear.
With proper care, a chain should definitely go 200k miles. After that, it really depends how the car was driven etc.
There are way too many variables to say xxxxx miles is when to change it. But if you have over 250k.... you should inspect the wear / timing delay.
4° of chain wear...nice. Sounds like something the Germans would say. I can't blame them, though - it's not like every engine wears at the same rate.
I'd be surprised if the timing wasn't off a little on my engine at the mileage she's at. Does the RIV tool work on the OM606.962? They're such a simple tool - it's shame they go for $200-300.
There is no set time or mileage interval.
If you use synthetic oil the chain should nearly not wear at all.
Most of the year I run 5W-40 full synthetic Rotella T6. Right now I'm on my second fill of Delvac 1300 15W-40 as an experiment to see if the mileage would change. It didn't...but I'm on the highway at 65-70mph for > 95% of my commute.
The oil is much darker with the Delvac - leading me to believe it keeps soot in suspension better than the Rotella. I'm not a fanatic about oil analysis or scrutinizing the details of oil specs. I use good oil, good filters and change them on a regular basis - done.
(11-04-2010, 10:12 AM)HoleshotHolset Most of the year I run 5W-40 full synthetic Rotella T6. Right now I'm on my second fill of Delvac 1300 15W-40 as an experiment to see if the mileage would change. It didn't.Thats because Rotella isn't synthetic. Its extra-refined dino to remove more of the natural crude oil contaminants. It still has impurities and imperfections that a true synthetic doesn't.
Quote:The oil is much darker with the Delvac - leading me to believe it keeps soot in suspension better than the Rotella.Other way around. Darkness means soot clumping together, light oil means the soot is being better dispersed.
(11-04-2010, 10:12 AM)HoleshotHolset Most of the year I run 5W-40 full synthetic Rotella T6. Right now I'm on my second fill of Delvac 1300 15W-40 as an experiment to see if the mileage would change. It didn't.Thats because Rotella isn't synthetic. Its extra-refined dino to remove more of the natural crude oil contaminants. It still has impurities and imperfections that a true synthetic doesn't.
Quote:The oil is much darker with the Delvac - leading me to believe it keeps soot in suspension better than the Rotella.Other way around. Darkness means soot clumping together, light oil means the soot is being better dispersed.
The 617 manual specifies only the keys. I would say once you are out of spec after a key its time. Also look for wear on the chain links themselves (plenty of data on this in relation to motorcycles).
ForcedInduction Thats because Rotella isn't synthetic. Its extra-refined dino to remove more of the natural crude oil contaminants. It still has impurities and imperfections that a true synthetic doesn't.
ForcedInduction Other way around. Darkness means soot clumping together, light oil means the soot is being better dispersed.
winmutt The 617 manual specifies only the keys. I would say once you are out of spec after a key its time. Also look for wear on the chain links themselves (plenty of data on this in relation to motorcycles).
ForcedInduction Thats because Rotella isn't synthetic. Its extra-refined dino to remove more of the natural crude oil contaminants. It still has impurities and imperfections that a true synthetic doesn't.
ForcedInduction Other way around. Darkness means soot clumping together, light oil means the soot is being better dispersed.
winmutt The 617 manual specifies only the keys. I would say once you are out of spec after a key its time. Also look for wear on the chain links themselves (plenty of data on this in relation to motorcycles).
(11-08-2010, 10:54 AM)HoleshotHolset How do they get away with advertising it as 'synthetic'?
Quote:In a 1999 law suit brought by Mobil filed against Castrol essentially for false marketing practices, the US Supreme Court ruled in favor Castrol paving the way for them (and any other oil manufacturer) to market this group as "Synthetic Oil". Castrol successfully argued that since group III base stocks were refined further than "conventional" or Group II oils, and the best of them performed somewhat similar to group IV base stocks, that they were essentially synthetic. Group III base oils are rapidly gaining in popularity in the USA.
(11-08-2010, 10:54 AM)HoleshotHolset How do they get away with advertising it as 'synthetic'?
Quote:In a 1999 law suit brought by Mobil filed against Castrol essentially for false marketing practices, the US Supreme Court ruled in favor Castrol paving the way for them (and any other oil manufacturer) to market this group as "Synthetic Oil". Castrol successfully argued that since group III base stocks were refined further than "conventional" or Group II oils, and the best of them performed somewhat similar to group IV base stocks, that they were essentially synthetic. Group III base oils are rapidly gaining in popularity in the USA.
Wow. I did NOT know that...and now suddenly feel like an idiot for buying Rotella-T 5W-40 "synthetic" all these years. Son of a &^%@*.
Is Mobil 1 synthetic? That's about the only other thing I can find on a regular basis that I would consider. I have friends that hawk Amsoil, but that stuff is crazy expensive...and I do not like that they're proponents of hugely extended drain intervals.
Lance has been prattling on about that forever
Until I get my leaks fixed I am using Rotella T, then back to Mobil1. I just wish there were more options avail.
This is the first time I've heard of such a thing. Maybe it's not a big deal, maybe it is a big deal. I know my engine doesn't turn over in the cold WX as easily and the lifters clatter for a second or two with the Delvac. This doesn't happen in the summer, of course...and never happened with the 5W-40 Rotella.
Doesn't MB recommend a 10W-30 for the OM606? I know I've seen Mobil 1 stickers under the hoods of a lot of OEM performance vehicles...and there's no doubt in my mind that it's good oil, but I've never run it in a diesel.
(11-08-2010, 11:11 AM)HoleshotHolset and I do not like that they're proponents of hugely extended drain intervals.
(11-08-2010, 11:11 AM)HoleshotHolset and I do not like that they're proponents of hugely extended drain intervals.
(11-08-2010, 11:25 AM)winmutt Forced has been prattling on about that forever
Until I get my leaks fixed I am using Rotella T, then back to Mobil1. I just wish there were more options avail.
(11-08-2010, 11:25 AM)winmutt Forced has been prattling on about that forever
Until I get my leaks fixed I am using Rotella T, then back to Mobil1. I just wish there were more options avail.