Difference between revisions of "Door Lock Repairs"

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(New page: BMW e30 Driver's Lock Cylinder repair When you turn the key in the driver's door, or push/pull the locking knob from inside the car, the latch mechanism is mechanically locked or unlocked...)
 
 
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BMW e30 Driver's Lock Cylinder repair
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Two decades of having something slotted in you and wiggled about will take its toll, or so my mum says. So it is with your E30 [[Locks#Door_Locks|door locks]]. Over the years they tend to stiffen up and jam, rendering the lock on that side of the car inoperable. If that happens to both locks, then you're in serious trouble, so avert disaster by learning how to strip down and rebuild your door locks.
  
When you turn the key in the driver's door, or push/pull the locking knob from inside the car, the latch mechanism is mechanically locked or unlocked. In addition, the electric lock motor will be mechanically pushed or pulled into action at which point it sends a signal triggering the central locking control module to power all the lock motors.
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This guide can also be followed to recode your door locks. Recoding means re-organising the sequence of tumblers within the lock to match a new or original key.
  
With the key in the driver's door and door closed, you should always be able to mechanically lock or unlock the driver's door, regardless of whether or not the central locking system is working properly on the other doors.
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=Procedure=
  
The arm on the lock cylinder should rotate up or down as you turn the key 45 degrees in either direction. That arm engages and lifts/lowers the same mechanism within the door latch mechanism as does the lock knob inside the door when it is pulled/pushed.
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First off, we need to [[Remove_Door_Card|remove the door card]]. Follow those steps then come back here.
  
BMW E30 door lock
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With the door card off, you'll see the inner skin of the door is covered in a plastic membrane which needs to be carefully removed. Mine was already missing so I replaced when I refitted everything.
  
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Now this is where you needed a hole in the door, which some E30s have and some haven't - there isn't yet a consensus as to BMW's logic on this. At the back of the door, if you have this hole, you will see the microswitch, lever and a horseshoe clip retaining the lock. In the way is a black plastic shield, which prevents the lock mechanism being lifted by a coat hanger/other implements.
  
Note the roll pin is shown partially removed. The arm is meant to move only through 45 degrees each way. When turning the key to the 90 degree double locked position, the arm does not move down any further. Only the piece with the roll pin through it turns with the lock cylinder shaft all the way to 90 degrees. The little coiled spring then clicks over to securely hold the arm in position. When you withdraw the key in the 90 degree position, the cylinder barrel locks in that position, the spring mechanically holds the arm down, and nothing is going to unlock that door until you put the key back in. My central locking system is still screwed up, so for the moment I've simply pulled the fuse on it (Fuse #27).
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[[Image:E30DoorLock1.jpg|600px]]
  
When I got my 86 325, the driver's door would unlock fine with the key, but sometimes it would not lock. It felt like the key mechanism had gone soft. Sometimes it would catch and lock normally. Other times it would click all the way over to the 90 degree (double lock) position without locking the door at all. I could see the inside knob hadn't gone down, leaving the door unlocked. The only solution to that problem is to buy a replacement lock cylinder.
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The bodge tape around the hole is to prevent me repainting the door in arterial red...
  
Now that I know how, I could probably do it again in half an hour. But the first time, following the instructions in Bentley, it took me most of an afternoon to get the old cylinder out.
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The horseshoe is sat on its side, on a UK drivers side like a 'C'
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To pop it off, a long screwdriver levering it to the front of the car will see it ping off into the recesses of the lower door. Fish it out, you will reuse it.
  
To disassemble the lock cylinder, once you have it out of the car, you only need to drive out the roll pin that keeps the double lock mechanism attached to the lock cylinder shaft. I used a hammer and small nail to push the pin out. The piece with the spring still attached is the mechanical double lock gizmo. You can see that it has a squared hole that fits on the squared end of the lock shaft. It always turns with the key. The piece with the arm on it has a round hole fitting over the lock shaft. It looks like it rotates independently on the lock shaft.
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The lock and the microswitch plate will now be free, the lock will twist and turn out the door side. The microswitch plate will stay more or less in place.
BMW E30 door lock internal mechanism
 
  
Slowly lift the arm piece off the lock shaft, being careful not to lose sight of the tiny ball that will certainly fall out and roll into the darkest corner of your garage...
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Once the lock is out, you will need to pull it apart, to find out what went wrong and to rebuild it.
BMW E30 lock mechanism
 
  
That tiny ball was the cause of the problem with my door lock. The lock shaft has a small notch in it (yellow line) in which the ball is held. In that position the ball locks the arm mechanism securely to the lock shaft. The arm is then forced to rotate with the lock shaft. The ball normally rides around in a narrow track (red outline).
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From all the locks I have seen, if they go wrong its not worth a repair job, as the parts fail properly. Small components are very difficult to repair and, more importantly, the lock repair set is currently £21.47 inc VAT direct from the stealers.
  
When the key is turned 45 degrees to unlock, or 45 degrees to lock, the locking arm is forced by the ball to move with the shaft. When the key is turned further to the 90 degree double lock position, the ball drops into a widened cut-out slot. When that happens the locking arm disengages from the lock shaft. The square end of the lock shaft continues to turn the double lock mechanism though, which clicks over so that the spring holds the locking arm in place. At least that's the theory.
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Soper of Lincoln got me one in two days, delivered to my door. Part no: '''51219061344''' (note this is for my [[316i]] saloon, check yours in [[ETK_/_EPC_Parts_Catalogue|OEM part catalogue]] before ordering)
  
The problem is that the hard ball bearing refuses to sit nicely in its intended slot. Over time it wears its own groove into the soft lock shaft and escapes.
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The kit:
  
Close up of BMW e30 door lock
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[[Image:E30DoorLock2.jpg|600px]]
  
Instead of properly locking the arm mechanism to the shaft, the ball slides out of its slot and allows the arm mechanism to rotate loose on the lock shaft.
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[[Image:E30DoorLock3.jpg|600px]]
  
Note how the groove is only worn off to one side. When I turn the key to unlock the door, it works perfectly. But when I turn the key to lock the door, sometimes the ball pops out of its seat and smears off to the left. The key turns the shaft, but the shaft does not move the locking arm far enough to activate the lock.
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You need to spilt down the old lock to determine your key combination. Do this by tapping out the rear dowel with a nail of correct size.
I bought a new replacement door lock cylinder from Bavarian Autosport http://www.bavauto.com/. The new improved lock cylinder has an cylindrical roller in place of the old style spherical ball. It works like a charm! (Be sure to ask for the correct lock cylinder. Apparently you can buy the cylinder with or without the double lock mechanism that comes with central locking.)
 
However the new replacement cylinder also comes with a new pair of keys, which of course won't work in your old ignition, passenger door, or trunk lock. You may actually like having a second set of keys. But if you prefer to continue using your old single key for everything, all you have to do is swap your old tumblers into the new lock cylinder.
 
  
CAUTION: Read everything before trying this!
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[[Image:E30DoorLock4.jpg|600px]]
  
When the key is fully inserted into the lock, the tumblers are drawn flush with the surface of the barrel. With the key in the lock, and after the roll pin is removed, you can pull the lock barrel clean out of the cylinder to expose the eleven tumblers.
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The lock will now slide apart. Its worth keeping your key engaged in the slot, to prevent any tumblers falling out of place. If this happens you will be unable to rebuild your lock to your key without a lengthy process of trial and error.
BMW E30 door lock tumblers
 
  
CAUTION: With the barrel extracted, do not pull the key out all at once. The tumblers are spring loaded! My cylinder was gummed up with very old grease, so everything was pretty much glued together. But in theory, if you suddenly pull the key out, you could end up with eleven tiny tumblers, being fired into orbit by eleven tiny springs, to land after re-entry in eleven far away locations in the very darkest extremities of your garage (or maybe even in your lawn, if your garage door happens to be open at the time). Not that I would ever admit to having any personal experience with that sort of thing of course...
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When you have your lock to this stage:
BMW E30 door lock with labelled tumblers
 
  
One other thing to watch out for. The tumblers come out on alternating sides, top and bottom, five on one side, six on the other.
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[[Image:E30DoorLock5.jpg|600px]]
Close up of BMW e30 door lock tumblers
 
  
Pull the key out very slowly, one notch at a time, pausing to catch or lift out each tumbler and spring as it comes free. Lay the tumblers out in order, label them, document each step with photos, whatever it takes, just be absolutely certain that you can put them all back in the same order or you'll be doing a lot of trial and error later on...
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you will note there are 11 tumblers: 6 on one side and 5 on another. Open your bags and note there are different tumblers too:
  
Put everything back together the way you found it, and Bob's your uncle.
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[[Image:E30DoorLock6.jpg|600px]]
  
I can lock and unlock my driver's door now. And someday soon I will also figure out why my power locks still don't work...
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Then lay some paper out, to disassemble the main barrel.
  
Ferdinand Trauttmansdorff
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[[Image:E30DoorLock7.jpg|600px]]
E30 Tech Articles
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I noted down the numbers on each key (not complete here as I don't want you lot knowing my key configuration, its my scrap...) but you get the idea. The guides do not ping out in all directions as the springs are pretty shagged.
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Note from this picture that the two innermost followers to the car (2 and 3, and the ones opposite un-numbered in the pic) are a certain type, with a different profile to the others. With this laid out, you will be able to start to rebuild a new barrel, with correct pins/followers in place. Grease as you go using the stuff supplied. Insert a new spring into each hole (11 in total).
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[[Image:E30DoorLock8.jpg|600px]]
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You should end up with something resembling this:
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[[Image:E30DoorLock9.jpg|600px]]
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Then rebuild the rest of the lock using new parts from the bag. First:
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[[Image:E30DoorLock10.jpg|600px]]
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[[Image:E30DoorLock11.jpg|600px]]
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Then:
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[[Image:E30DoorLock12.jpg|600px]]
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Note orientation of overall lock and bits fitted- you will get it when you do it as it falls into place when its lined up correctly.
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[[Image:E30DoorLock13.jpg|600px]]
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Next:
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[[Image:E30DoorLock14.jpg|600px]]
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Again, note spring location. This part above the spring fits only one way, into a U shaped groove.
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[[Image:E30DoorLock15.jpg|600px]]
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Insert the main barrel, with key in place. The new followers will take some time and wiggling to get the key in, especially on the last two 'different' followers. Don't worry about this. ensure you grease everything again and slide it on in.
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[[Image:E30DoorLock16.jpg|600px]]
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Armature next- note the new ball bearing replacement. Grease this well and it will sit in the right place. The armature then slips into place, with the bearing moving down a channel in the middle of the spindle.
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[[Image:E30DoorLock17.jpg|600px]]
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[[Image:E30DoorLock18.jpg|600px]]
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[[Image:E30DoorLock19.jpg|600px]]
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[[Image:E30DoorLock20.jpg|600px]]
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Then the final fiddly bit, the last remaining spring and armature. Mine did need a little tap to sit well. Refit the dowel pin then use some needle-nosed pliers to fit the spring. See pictures:
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[[Image:E30DoorLock21.jpg|600px]]
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[[Image:E30DoorLock22.jpg|600px]]
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[[Image:E30DoorLock23.jpg|600px]]
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The only snag on this bit is getting the final stage to engage with the spring fitted in the early stages. Arrowed for clarity.
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[[Image:E30DoorLock24.jpg|600px]]
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Reassembly is then completed by popping the pin back in:
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[[Image:E30DoorLock25.jpg|600px]]
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It's prudent to test movement/key operation.
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To refit the lock, its a reverse of removal, however a damn sight more fiddly. You need to coordinate the microswitch plate, the new lock, the actual locking forks inside the door AND get the horseshoe back on. Its possible but you may benefit from a second pair of hands, if only to keep fishing it out of the bottom recess of the door. If you need more space to move, consider unbolting some of the window winder mechanisms to give yourself more arm space.
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Refit all trim and stand back, and be amazed that you don't have to use the central locking from the boot to open the car up any more!
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''Original E30 Zone article by [http://www.e30zone.net/modules.php?name=Forums&file=profile&mode=viewprofile&u=39397 bigwinn]''

Latest revision as of 19:49, 31 January 2013

Two decades of having something slotted in you and wiggled about will take its toll, or so my mum says. So it is with your E30 door locks. Over the years they tend to stiffen up and jam, rendering the lock on that side of the car inoperable. If that happens to both locks, then you're in serious trouble, so avert disaster by learning how to strip down and rebuild your door locks.

This guide can also be followed to recode your door locks. Recoding means re-organising the sequence of tumblers within the lock to match a new or original key.

Procedure

First off, we need to remove the door card. Follow those steps then come back here.

With the door card off, you'll see the inner skin of the door is covered in a plastic membrane which needs to be carefully removed. Mine was already missing so I replaced when I refitted everything.

Now this is where you needed a hole in the door, which some E30s have and some haven't - there isn't yet a consensus as to BMW's logic on this. At the back of the door, if you have this hole, you will see the microswitch, lever and a horseshoe clip retaining the lock. In the way is a black plastic shield, which prevents the lock mechanism being lifted by a coat hanger/other implements.

E30DoorLock1.jpg

The bodge tape around the hole is to prevent me repainting the door in arterial red...

The horseshoe is sat on its side, on a UK drivers side like a 'C' To pop it off, a long screwdriver levering it to the front of the car will see it ping off into the recesses of the lower door. Fish it out, you will reuse it.

The lock and the microswitch plate will now be free, the lock will twist and turn out the door side. The microswitch plate will stay more or less in place.

Once the lock is out, you will need to pull it apart, to find out what went wrong and to rebuild it.

From all the locks I have seen, if they go wrong its not worth a repair job, as the parts fail properly. Small components are very difficult to repair and, more importantly, the lock repair set is currently £21.47 inc VAT direct from the stealers.

Soper of Lincoln got me one in two days, delivered to my door. Part no: 51219061344 (note this is for my 316i saloon, check yours in OEM part catalogue before ordering)

The kit:

E30DoorLock2.jpg

E30DoorLock3.jpg

You need to spilt down the old lock to determine your key combination. Do this by tapping out the rear dowel with a nail of correct size.

E30DoorLock4.jpg

The lock will now slide apart. Its worth keeping your key engaged in the slot, to prevent any tumblers falling out of place. If this happens you will be unable to rebuild your lock to your key without a lengthy process of trial and error.

When you have your lock to this stage:

E30DoorLock5.jpg

you will note there are 11 tumblers: 6 on one side and 5 on another. Open your bags and note there are different tumblers too:

E30DoorLock6.jpg

Then lay some paper out, to disassemble the main barrel.

E30DoorLock7.jpg

I noted down the numbers on each key (not complete here as I don't want you lot knowing my key configuration, its my scrap...) but you get the idea. The guides do not ping out in all directions as the springs are pretty shagged.

Note from this picture that the two innermost followers to the car (2 and 3, and the ones opposite un-numbered in the pic) are a certain type, with a different profile to the others. With this laid out, you will be able to start to rebuild a new barrel, with correct pins/followers in place. Grease as you go using the stuff supplied. Insert a new spring into each hole (11 in total).

E30DoorLock8.jpg

You should end up with something resembling this:

E30DoorLock9.jpg

Then rebuild the rest of the lock using new parts from the bag. First:

E30DoorLock10.jpg

E30DoorLock11.jpg

Then:

E30DoorLock12.jpg

Note orientation of overall lock and bits fitted- you will get it when you do it as it falls into place when its lined up correctly.

E30DoorLock13.jpg

Next:

E30DoorLock14.jpg

Again, note spring location. This part above the spring fits only one way, into a U shaped groove.

E30DoorLock15.jpg

Insert the main barrel, with key in place. The new followers will take some time and wiggling to get the key in, especially on the last two 'different' followers. Don't worry about this. ensure you grease everything again and slide it on in.

E30DoorLock16.jpg

Armature next- note the new ball bearing replacement. Grease this well and it will sit in the right place. The armature then slips into place, with the bearing moving down a channel in the middle of the spindle.

E30DoorLock17.jpg

E30DoorLock18.jpg

E30DoorLock19.jpg

E30DoorLock20.jpg

Then the final fiddly bit, the last remaining spring and armature. Mine did need a little tap to sit well. Refit the dowel pin then use some needle-nosed pliers to fit the spring. See pictures:

E30DoorLock21.jpg

E30DoorLock22.jpg

E30DoorLock23.jpg

The only snag on this bit is getting the final stage to engage with the spring fitted in the early stages. Arrowed for clarity.

E30DoorLock24.jpg

Reassembly is then completed by popping the pin back in:

E30DoorLock25.jpg

It's prudent to test movement/key operation.

To refit the lock, its a reverse of removal, however a damn sight more fiddly. You need to coordinate the microswitch plate, the new lock, the actual locking forks inside the door AND get the horseshoe back on. Its possible but you may benefit from a second pair of hands, if only to keep fishing it out of the bottom recess of the door. If you need more space to move, consider unbolting some of the window winder mechanisms to give yourself more arm space.

Refit all trim and stand back, and be amazed that you don't have to use the central locking from the boot to open the car up any more!

Original E30 Zone article by bigwinn