The N62's valve stem seals harden with age and let oil into the cylinders — the classic startup smoke show. We replace all of them with the heads still on the engine, right at your home.
The N62TU V8 — found in the 545i, 645Ci, 745Li and X5 4.8i — is a smooth, characterful engine with one aging problem that defines it: valve stem seal degradation. The seals are small rubber components at the top of each of the 32 valves, and their job is to meter oil running down the valve stems. After years of heat cycles they harden, shrink and crack. Oil then drains past them while the car sits and burns off in a blue cloud at startup, and gets sucked past them under the high vacuum of deceleration.
The N62 adds its own twist: as seals fail and crankcase vapors get oilier, the PCV system starts gurgling and pushing oil mist into the intake boots. Pull an intake boot on a high-mileage N62 and find it wet with oil — that's the system telling you where things stand. Combined with smoke at startup and on decel, it's a textbook presentation.
Dealers quote this as a heads-off job, and on a V8 that's an enormous teardown with machine-shop time once the heads are out. The on-car method does the same seal replacement with the heads bolted in place — each cylinder held under air pressure, springs compressed in situ, all 32 seals renewed. Same fix, roughly half the surgery, which is exactly why it's the right way to save these cars.
If your BMW is doing any of these, this is the likely cause:
Left alone, the oil burning gets worse on a one-way curve — seals don't recover. The burned oil steadily contaminates the catalytic converters, which are four-figure parts on a V8, and oil-fouled plugs start dropping cylinders. The bigger risk is simple math: a car consuming heavy oil between top-ups is one forgotten check away from running low on a long highway run, and an oil-starved V8 is the end of the engine, not just the seals.
Yes. The on-car method was developed exactly so this repair doesn't need an engine-out or heads-off teardown. Compressed air holds each cylinder's valves closed while the springs and seals are changed, with the engine sitting in the car the whole time. What it needs is the right tooling and two full days — both of which come to your driveway.
Because the factory repair method removes both cylinder heads from the V8 — that's days of labour at dealer rates, plus gaskets, machine-shop checks and the risk pile-up of a major teardown. The on-car method reaches the same 32 seals without any of that. We confirm the diagnosis first, then give you one flat quote for the complete job before any work starts.
On an N62, usually yes. As the stem seals fail, the crankcase vent system pulls oilier vapor and pushes oil mist into the intake tract — oily boots plus startup smoke plus decel smoke is the classic N62 triple. We check the PCV side during the job so you're not chasing a second 'leak' afterward.
If the rest of the car is solid, yes — the N62 is a strong engine once the seals are done, and these cars are worth very little with a smoking V8 but real money running right. The seals are an age failure, not a sign the engine is worn out. We'll give you an honest read on the whole car before you commit.
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