R56 Misfire, no compression on cyl 4
#1
Misfire, no compression on cyl 4
Folks,
I think my N14 engine on the R56 MINI just bought the farm.
Massive misfire started out of the blue on I-78, car limped home on three remaining cylinders. No forewarning of any kind. Just check engine light on the way home, then loss of power, then intermittent stalling.
Read the codes - there is a TON, but all point to massive misfire all around, and particularly on cylinder 4.
Pulled the plugs - the one in cyl 4 was missing its electrode altogether! Reset all codes.
Put new plugs in, still misfire on cyl 4, car runs on three cylinders. Reset all codes.
Swapped coils around hoping that one is bad - still misfire on cyl 4, car runs on three cylinders.
Ran compression test on cyl 4 - gauge read ZERO compression. I tried on other cylinders to make sure gauge is not broken - sadly, gauge and other cylinders are OK, cyl 4 is not. Could be stuck/bent/etc valve, could be something more dramatic.
Can anyone suggest ANY scenario from the above description that does not end up with me rebuilding the existing or buying a new N14 engine?
TIA,
alex
I think my N14 engine on the R56 MINI just bought the farm.
Massive misfire started out of the blue on I-78, car limped home on three remaining cylinders. No forewarning of any kind. Just check engine light on the way home, then loss of power, then intermittent stalling.
Read the codes - there is a TON, but all point to massive misfire all around, and particularly on cylinder 4.
Pulled the plugs - the one in cyl 4 was missing its electrode altogether! Reset all codes.
Put new plugs in, still misfire on cyl 4, car runs on three cylinders. Reset all codes.
Swapped coils around hoping that one is bad - still misfire on cyl 4, car runs on three cylinders.
Ran compression test on cyl 4 - gauge read ZERO compression. I tried on other cylinders to make sure gauge is not broken - sadly, gauge and other cylinders are OK, cyl 4 is not. Could be stuck/bent/etc valve, could be something more dramatic.
Can anyone suggest ANY scenario from the above description that does not end up with me rebuilding the existing or buying a new N14 engine?
TIA,
alex
#4
Miss fire
Folks,
I think my N14 engine on the R56 MINI just bought the farm.
Massive misfire started out of the blue on I-78, car limped home on three remaining cylinders. No forewarning of any kind. Just check engine light on the way home, then loss of power, then intermittent stalling.
Read the codes - there is a TON, but all point to massive misfire all around, and particularly on cylinder 4.
Pulled the plugs - the one in cyl 4 was missing its electrode altogether! Reset all codes.
Put new plugs in, still misfire on cyl 4, car runs on three cylinders. Reset all codes.
Swapped coils around hoping that one is bad - still misfire on cyl 4, car runs on three cylinders.
Ran compression test on cyl 4 - gauge read ZERO compression. I tried on other cylinders to make sure gauge is not broken - sadly, gauge and other cylinders are OK, cyl 4 is not. Could be stuck/bent/etc valve, could be something more dramatic.
Can anyone suggest ANY scenario from the above description that does not end up with me rebuilding the existing or buying a new N14 engine?
TIA,
alex
I think my N14 engine on the R56 MINI just bought the farm.
Massive misfire started out of the blue on I-78, car limped home on three remaining cylinders. No forewarning of any kind. Just check engine light on the way home, then loss of power, then intermittent stalling.
Read the codes - there is a TON, but all point to massive misfire all around, and particularly on cylinder 4.
Pulled the plugs - the one in cyl 4 was missing its electrode altogether! Reset all codes.
Put new plugs in, still misfire on cyl 4, car runs on three cylinders. Reset all codes.
Swapped coils around hoping that one is bad - still misfire on cyl 4, car runs on three cylinders.
Ran compression test on cyl 4 - gauge read ZERO compression. I tried on other cylinders to make sure gauge is not broken - sadly, gauge and other cylinders are OK, cyl 4 is not. Could be stuck/bent/etc valve, could be something more dramatic.
Can anyone suggest ANY scenario from the above description that does not end up with me rebuilding the existing or buying a new N14 engine?
TIA,
alex
#6
X2
Do a leakdown test, check to see where its leaking from. Hopefully the valves and not the rings/bottom.
Check for intake valves carbon buildup and clean of needed. If the valves look with no carbon buildup and you still have low compression, the head will probably need to be removed and inspected.
Do a leakdown test, check to see where its leaking from. Hopefully the valves and not the rings/bottom.
Check for intake valves carbon buildup and clean of needed. If the valves look with no carbon buildup and you still have low compression, the head will probably need to be removed and inspected.
#7
Trending Topics
#8
The electrode is complete missing. The rest of the plug is intact, but fouled-up badly.
May well be the NGK defect. That electrode had to go somewhere ...
a
#9
#10
#11
#13
What exactly the issue is, I will get to find out myself once I start taking the head off tomorrow. Could be broken valve, could be stuck valve, could be massive amounts of carbon build-up, could be broken spring, could be anything else.
At $135/hr, it would have been cheaper for the dealer to drop in a new engine without looking. I may end up doing the same anyway, but have to take a look first.
After initial shopping around, BMW-rebuilt long blocks with factory 2 year warranty can be had for ~$3,400 + shipping + core deposit. Local NJ-area dealers quote them at between $4,350-4,600 (+ tax + core), so shopping around is mandatory.
Engine valve failure on a non-abused 56K engine is highly disappointing. Dealer not willing to do much to help out (we will charge you only $135 warranty vs $150 regular labor rate) is not surprising, but not much better. Oh, and this is from the best of the 3 dealers around (don't ask me what makes other 2 even worse) !
a
#14
Cracked exhaust valves on these cars is not uncommon, but you should have gotten more the 56k miles. You could still get lucky on this, and only need to replace a couple of valves and some machining. Be sure to post up what you find out and what you plan to do about it. A learning moment for all of us..
Last edited by AZdsrt; 03-23-2014 at 09:22 AM.
#15
I just had a similar failure on my mini... Only both 3rd and 4th cylinder is dead and no compression pressure. The shop that I brought the car to have tested 0 compression pressure on those 2 cylinder and suggested me to bring the car to dealer. The shop said they suspect the rocker arm broke and there was a service bulletin covers it.
The only service bulletin I know of was for the tensioner, am I missing something? My car is at 110k after 6 years, is replacing the engine my only option? Do you guys have any recommendation?
Doesn't mean to hijack the post... But I have been searching online for the last 2 days trying to find similar issues and just ran into this post with a similar problem 😑
The only service bulletin I know of was for the tensioner, am I missing something? My car is at 110k after 6 years, is replacing the engine my only option? Do you guys have any recommendation?
Doesn't mean to hijack the post... But I have been searching online for the last 2 days trying to find similar issues and just ran into this post with a similar problem 😑
Last edited by odobo; 03-22-2014 at 10:47 PM.
#16
I had low compression on two cylinders on my 2006. As a point of reference, I spent $3200 for a valve job at an independent shop (BMW/MINI specialist).
I'm surprised the rate is that low in NYC. Last time I checked about 2 years ago, the labor rate at SF Bay Area dealers was $180/hr.
I'm surprised the rate is that low in NYC. Last time I checked about 2 years ago, the labor rate at SF Bay Area dealers was $180/hr.
#17
I just had a similar failure on my mini... Only both 3rd and 4th cylinder is dead and no compression pressure. The shop that I brought the car to have tested 0 compression pressure on those 2 cylinder and suggested me to bring the car to dealer. The shop said they suspect the rocker arm broke and there was a service bulletin covers it.
The only service bulletin I know of was for the tensioner, am I missing something? My car is at 110k after 6 years, is replacing the engine my only option? Do you guys have any recommendation?
Doesn't mean to hijack the post... But I have been searching online for the last 2 days trying to find similar issues and just ran into this post with a similar problem 😑
The only service bulletin I know of was for the tensioner, am I missing something? My car is at 110k after 6 years, is replacing the engine my only option? Do you guys have any recommendation?
Doesn't mean to hijack the post... But I have been searching online for the last 2 days trying to find similar issues and just ran into this post with a similar problem 😑
Sorry to hear about your engine letting go. This is clearly a highly disappointing state of N14 reliability.
Given the rocker arm reference, I assume your shop concluded that the issues is also with the valve train. If there is a TSB for N14 valve-train that would apply in my case (suspected exhaust valve issues on cyl 4), my dealer was not aware of it. I doubt they were holding back as it would make the difference between them doing the job and billing MINI USA vs. loosing the revenue.
It would seam a bit to coincidental for two sets of rocker arms to disintegrate at the same time and leave 2 sets of (exhaust?) valves open on 2 separate cylinders. I'm not arguing that that is not the case, but there probably is something else going on.
My dealer claimed to have broached the subject with MINI USA, and got nothing back. I somewhat trust this shop as they were the only one (out of 2 others in the area) to correctly diagnose and execute timing chain job a year ago.
Even with the offer to use discounted warranty labor rate on engine rebuilt (25 hours of labor plus parts = $9.1K) vs. replacement (20hr labor and overall slightly cheaper), it makes little financial and strategic sense not to buy and install a "new" (BMW rebuilt) engine. There are too many issues with N14s, from carbon build-up, to abuse from 15K factory oil changes, to valve-train weakness, and it would suck a lot to rebuilt valves only to see something else give out a few thousand miles later.
If you want to fix-and-dump the car, do what's cheapest.
If you want to keep the car, consider buying and installing a new factory rebuilt engine with 2-year warranty and getting the car a new lease on life.
In my case, I have spare cars and space in the garage, and can afford to tinker with R56 for my own amusement. I am leaning towards pursuing option #2 (will likely cost me ~$4K out of pocket, plus own labor). Time is a luxury I can ill afford to dedicate to this experiment vs. work and family, but even if it takes me a month or two to get through it, it has a certain educational value for the kids. We just finished building a mechanized Lego-Technic F1 car with them, so now it's time to go to play with full scale model ;-)
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#18
Last year, our '08 Clubman S bent the intake valves on #2 due to chunks of carbon being ingested. symptoms: destroyed #2 sparkplug and zero compression on #2 ($4200 @dealer to fix) No warranty @111,000 mi.
This year, a cracked crankcase vent hose caused a lean condition which sent the engine into a tizzy(technical term for erratic running and CEL). $839 later, a new hose and a new thermostat housing(and a multi-point inspection). It ran fine on all four until (on my way home from the dealer) I accelerated on an on-ramp in 4th gear and a major tizzy reoccurred. Made it home on three and had AAA take it back to dealer. Dealer now says burnt valve on #3 due to lean running condition. I'm expected to pay them another $4200 since it is "not related" to previous experience. I'll be damned...
This year, a cracked crankcase vent hose caused a lean condition which sent the engine into a tizzy(technical term for erratic running and CEL). $839 later, a new hose and a new thermostat housing(and a multi-point inspection). It ran fine on all four until (on my way home from the dealer) I accelerated on an on-ramp in 4th gear and a major tizzy reoccurred. Made it home on three and had AAA take it back to dealer. Dealer now says burnt valve on #3 due to lean running condition. I'm expected to pay them another $4200 since it is "not related" to previous experience. I'll be damned...
#19
odobo,
Sorry to hear about your engine letting go. This is clearly a highly disappointing state of N14 reliability.
Given the rocker arm reference, I assume your shop concluded that the issues is also with the valve train. If there is a TSB for N14 valve-train that would apply in my case (suspected exhaust valve issues on cyl 4), my dealer was not aware of it. I doubt they were holding back as it would make the difference between them doing the job and billing MINI USA vs. loosing the revenue.
It would seam a bit to coincidental for two sets of rocker arms to disintegrate at the same time and leave 2 sets of (exhaust?) valves open on 2 separate cylinders. I'm not arguing that that is not the case, but there probably is something else going on.
My dealer claimed to have broached the subject with MINI USA, and got nothing back. I somewhat trust this shop as they were the only one (out of 2 others in the area) to correctly diagnose and execute timing chain job a year ago.
Even with the offer to use discounted warranty labor rate on engine rebuilt (25 hours of labor plus parts = $9.1K) vs. replacement (20hr labor and overall slightly cheaper), it makes little financial and strategic sense not to buy and install a "new" (BMW rebuilt) engine. There are too many issues with N14s, from carbon build-up, to abuse from 15K factory oil changes, to valve-train weakness, and it would suck a lot to rebuilt valves only to see something else give out a few thousand miles later.
If you want to fix-and-dump the car, do what's cheapest.
If you want to keep the car, consider buying and installing a new factory rebuilt engine with 2-year warranty and getting the car a new lease on life.
In my case, I have spare cars and space in the garage, and can afford to tinker with R56 for my own amusement. I am leaning towards pursuing option #2 (will likely cost me ~$4K out of pocket, plus own labor). Time is a luxury I can ill afford to dedicate to this experiment vs. work and family, but even if it takes me a month or two to get through it, it has a certain educational value for the kids. We just finished building a mechanized Lego-Technic F1 car with them, so now it's time to go to play with full scale model ;-)
a
Sorry to hear about your engine letting go. This is clearly a highly disappointing state of N14 reliability.
Given the rocker arm reference, I assume your shop concluded that the issues is also with the valve train. If there is a TSB for N14 valve-train that would apply in my case (suspected exhaust valve issues on cyl 4), my dealer was not aware of it. I doubt they were holding back as it would make the difference between them doing the job and billing MINI USA vs. loosing the revenue.
It would seam a bit to coincidental for two sets of rocker arms to disintegrate at the same time and leave 2 sets of (exhaust?) valves open on 2 separate cylinders. I'm not arguing that that is not the case, but there probably is something else going on.
My dealer claimed to have broached the subject with MINI USA, and got nothing back. I somewhat trust this shop as they were the only one (out of 2 others in the area) to correctly diagnose and execute timing chain job a year ago.
Even with the offer to use discounted warranty labor rate on engine rebuilt (25 hours of labor plus parts = $9.1K) vs. replacement (20hr labor and overall slightly cheaper), it makes little financial and strategic sense not to buy and install a "new" (BMW rebuilt) engine. There are too many issues with N14s, from carbon build-up, to abuse from 15K factory oil changes, to valve-train weakness, and it would suck a lot to rebuilt valves only to see something else give out a few thousand miles later.
If you want to fix-and-dump the car, do what's cheapest.
If you want to keep the car, consider buying and installing a new factory rebuilt engine with 2-year warranty and getting the car a new lease on life.
In my case, I have spare cars and space in the garage, and can afford to tinker with R56 for my own amusement. I am leaning towards pursuing option #2 (will likely cost me ~$4K out of pocket, plus own labor). Time is a luxury I can ill afford to dedicate to this experiment vs. work and family, but even if it takes me a month or two to get through it, it has a certain educational value for the kids. We just finished building a mechanized Lego-Technic F1 car with them, so now it's time to go to play with full scale model ;-)
a
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Last edited by odobo; 03-23-2014 at 10:40 AM.
#20
Cracked exhaust valves on these cars is not uncommon, but you should have gotten more the 56k miles. You could still get lucky on this, and only need to replace a couple of valves and some machining. Be sure to post up what you find out and what you plan to do about it. A learning moment for all of us..
Once I took out the intake manifold, all intake valves were gummed up beyond belief. I'm surprised they were sealing and passed leak-down test. Except for cyl 4, where intake valves were shining clean. I tried taking a few pics, but it's surprisingly hard to focus the camera and get correct exposure through the intake ports in the head. I will post more pics once the head comes off (I'm more interested in getting the new engine to fire up right now).
On the exhaust side, the valves looked OK all around. The only thing that gave away trouble in #4 was excessive amount of oil all over it. I am enclosing a few pics of the exhaust ports and valves to give an idea.
Oil was present in the intake manifold and throughout the intake piping. It took me a while to take everything apart an clean it all, but I believe I got 95% out. The rest will get trapped by the oil catch can that will be joining the engine bay.
a
#21
#22
The only carbon buildup I've seen is on the intakes, and not in the combustion chamber but on the intake side of the valve itself. It's conceivable that a chunk could get loose and block open an exhaust valve causing it to burn. The remedy there would be to do a valve job - I can't image a valve job costing $4K.....anywhere!
OP, did you ever have the walnut shell blast done on the intake valves? I did it on my 56K mile car recently and mine weren't too bad, I did it as a maintenance/preventative measure.
I would have pulled the head before agreeing to a new engine, just to see what was up.
I would definitely contact MINI USA yourself to ask for goodwill or help on this repair, since you're so few miles out of warranty. However if you decide to do this you need rec'ts showing you changed the oil regularly and used the correct oil and filter for your car, otherwise they won't be inclined to help.
OP, did you ever have the walnut shell blast done on the intake valves? I did it on my 56K mile car recently and mine weren't too bad, I did it as a maintenance/preventative measure.
I would have pulled the head before agreeing to a new engine, just to see what was up.
I would definitely contact MINI USA yourself to ask for goodwill or help on this repair, since you're so few miles out of warranty. However if you decide to do this you need rec'ts showing you changed the oil regularly and used the correct oil and filter for your car, otherwise they won't be inclined to help.
#23
Well, it's sorta nice to see I have company. My '07 MCS N-14 engine with 79,000 miles just failed (out in the middle of nowhere). Drove 450 miles on 3 cylinders to the SLC dealership. Bore-scope shows broken #2 exhaust valve, damage to piston top and cylinder walls. Elected to go with a new engine, new clutch package, trans seals, coolant hoses to create a zero-mileage 8-year old car, since I plan on keeping it long term anyway. A new engine was about $2K more expensive than repairing the original motor.
This car is an early '07 model when we had to wait in line to order one. The engine was clearly not ready for prime time - 4 timing chain/tensioner replacements, HP fuel pump, both water pumps. I had the walnut-clean treatment done to the cylinder head at 60K - which really improved the engine performance. Pre-clean photos were truly ugly to see! Aside from engine issues, the rest of the car has been flawless since new. Truth be told, I'm happy to get rid of the old engine - it's been a pain.
The service rep sez this crate N-14 engine was assembled last year, so hopefully has all the latest N-14 mods and improvements. Includes all accessories and new turbo. Also 2-year warranty. Wife is OK with the expense since I had planned to keep the car forever, but sez if it breaks one more time, I'm trading it in for a Miata ...
This car is an early '07 model when we had to wait in line to order one. The engine was clearly not ready for prime time - 4 timing chain/tensioner replacements, HP fuel pump, both water pumps. I had the walnut-clean treatment done to the cylinder head at 60K - which really improved the engine performance. Pre-clean photos were truly ugly to see! Aside from engine issues, the rest of the car has been flawless since new. Truth be told, I'm happy to get rid of the old engine - it's been a pain.
The service rep sez this crate N-14 engine was assembled last year, so hopefully has all the latest N-14 mods and improvements. Includes all accessories and new turbo. Also 2-year warranty. Wife is OK with the expense since I had planned to keep the car forever, but sez if it breaks one more time, I'm trading it in for a Miata ...
Last edited by oldMGguy; 11-25-2014 at 06:06 PM.
#24
#25
Brand new (and/or factory rebuild) N14 can be had for ~$3.5K from select MINI dealerships. If you can DIY, with a few extra tools you will have a brand new engine for under $4K. And that buys you a new water pump, oil pump, thermostat, spark plugs, removal of all oil leaks from your current engine, and removal of any and all carbon deposit on the intake valves. Basically, around ~$1.5K worth of goodies that your current N14 already needs, or will need real soon now.
The alternative is to ditch the R56 for scrap metal, to part it out, or sell it to someone else who is willing to repair it. Figure $500-$3K at most.
As long as you R56 is worth more than $4.5-$7K, you are way better off fixing the car and enjoying the brand new engine for at least another 60K miles.
Even bare bones clean first-year '07 MCS still go for around $10K these days.
Add a bit of curiosity, and a tinkering bug, and a dropping in a new engine becomes an obvious course of action for any DIY guy.
If you can't DIY, or are sick of your car, than the decision tree branches differently.
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