Aaron Buckley wrote:
SimonWright wrote:
There's a deeper backstory to this that might be forthcoming but for now let's keep this theoretical...
Why must the flywheel be aligned on the crankshaft? My guess is that the ECU uses it to determine cylinder position. Is that why the funny "cog" on the engine side of the flywheel has one set of teeth missing?
Simon
I've never seen a flywheel that had a specific alignment (other than what is the front and what is the back).
I think it would be odd to have a Crank Position Sensor read off of the flywheel, but I've seen stranger things. - AB
BMW 325e's and 528e's used 2 sensors that read a small square "pin" on the edge of the flywheel in the same way most cars read off the front crank pulley. If the sensor(s) was bad or the pin fell off or got knocked off (commonly happened during tranny installation) the car would not start + run.
Older BMW's have timing marks on the flywheel, you shoot the timing light (remember those?) down through a hole in the top of the tranny bellhousing and you can then line up the timing marks by moving the distributor (remember those?????).
Even more modern BMW's have a specific way to align the flywheel- most have 6-8 bolts that hold the flywheel to the crankshaft, but the flywheel has one hole that is larger than the others, and the crank has a collar on one of the bolt holes, so that the flywheel will only fit on the crank one way.