• Welcome to the Tii Register
    ... serving the worldwide community of owners. Thanks for your feedback and input to our website!

Fuel Injection

About the Kugelfisher pump and injectors

Question:

My 73 trunk smells like gas – not overpowering but enough to be noticed when the lid is opened. Is the small plastic vent line that penetrates the filler tube routed outside the car? All hose clamps are present, hoses look like they have been replaced and the pickup plate screws are secure to the tank. Any ideas?


The best solution to solving gas smell is a process of elimination.

In the photo below, the red arrow shows where the fuel pipe exits the trunk on most 2002s built from 1968-1973. We say some, because it’s not exactly clear if some USA round tail light cars had the later model charcoal vapor container which were mounted above the right rear wheel housing in the trunk.

If you have a bracket above your right rear wheel housing mounted to the package tray, chances are your tank vents to it instead. The 73 2002tii in the USA was a crossover year model which has some variations between old and new because of engineering changes which occured during that build year in preparation for the later 1974-1976 cars.


CHECK THE FUEL TANK VENT LINE

The red arrow below shows where on the early cars it vented through the floor to the exterior of the car.


On cars with the grey plastic charcoal vent container, the line connects from the rubber fuel neck inside the trunk and follows along the wheel housing to vapor canister.

CHECK FOR RUST


The 2002 fuel tank is made of two pieces of steel put together. They are notorious for rust right at the seams where it was put together because of a foam seal underneath the tank which the factory used to stop vibration. This seal was porous and held water, so the rusted severely around the tank in climates where moisture was common. This rust can lead to severe structural integrity problems.

PERMANENT CURE

Most 2002 fuel tanks are no longer available and if they are run more than $600 new. At the time of this writing, 2002tii fuel tanks are no longer available.

It is a good idea if you plan to keep your car and make it reliable is to put all fuel tank fume and leak mysteries a thing of the past.

  • Drain the fuel from the tank itself from the car. There is a small allen head drain plug near the bottom front of the tank under the car which makes it easier.
  • Remove the tank (5 black arrows in photo above). Check for rust on the car where the tank sits inside the trunk and repair if necessary.
  • If you have rust, likely you have tank edge separation. Check the edges of the tank closely for problems.
  • Seal your tank with a proven fuel tank sealer, such as POR-15 or Eastwood makes. Follow their directions.
  • Have your fuel tank boiled out by a radiator shop. The 02 tanks are small enough most shops (unless environmental laws prevent it) will do this for you.
  • Once the inside is done, the edges are next. POR-15′s putty can be used to seal edges where the metal has begun to separate. JB Weld can also be used for this also.
  • Use a high quality undercoating such as 3M in a spray for the underside of the tank, and a good rust preventative black paint on top.
  • Replace your fuel lines with genuine BMW high pressure fuel line materials. They are cheap insurance against fire and clogged fuel filters which can occur after 30 year old hoses have not been replaced.
  • Mount back in your trunk with Stainless Steel fasteners instead of the original Zinc type to prevent further rust issues (See black arrows above)
  • Last, check your trunk seal and make sure it’s in good repair.

Another note… If you have speakers in your trunk, they also may be pumping the fumes into your car also, however finding and curing the leaks and the source of the fumes normally rids your car of future smells.

Last update: 2007-08-14 19:09
Author: The Tii Register

This may be obvious, but It took me 10 years to figure it out. Occasionally my tii will not start the first time when hot. This is usually because of inattention on my part. Some of these times, the engine will become flooded. Because of the design of its fuel delivery system, the tii will not respond, when flooded, to the classical “fix” of putting the accelerator to the floor to air out the cylinders. The only real “fix” is to wait 1-2 hours.

One time in this situation, I removed the fuse controlling the electric fuel pump, thus depriving the engine of added fuel both from the injectors, but more importantly, from the cold start valve the engine then turned over briefly after starting it with the accelerator on the floor. I stopped the engine immediately, replaced the fuse, and drove on.

contributed by: Thomas A. Butterworth

Last update: 2006-12-07 00:11

Question:

My ’72 tii temp time switch electrical connection (plastic plug end) has snapped off from wire fatigue. Are there any pigtails that I can splice into the wiring harness? Any there other solutions to make the connections down in the cup of the switch?

Answer:

Other than carefully stripping each wire and mounting individual female spade connectors, we’re not aware of anything available that retrofits that connector unfortunately. BMW did use that same connector for Tii and later model cars fuel injection systems using a similar Bosch thermo time relay box. The entire cable setup including the connector you have which failed, and the other wires which reach a ground, the sender on the water tube and cold start valve on the throttle body is still available new from BMW. The part number is 61 12 1 354 671 and the current list price is $62.00. It is shown as item 13 below.

The protective rubber boot for the 2-prong connector is # 61-13 1 352 793 from BMW (Mobile Tradition). For some strange reason, it’s not listed for the tii, but under the 3.0 series cars. My thanks to Bill Williams for this tip.

My ’72 tii temp time switch electrical connection (plastic plug end) has snapped off from wire fatigue. Are there any pigtails that I can splice into the wiring harness? Any other solutions to make the connections down in the cup of the switch?

Other than carefully stripping each wire and mounting individual female spade connectors, we’re not aware of anything available that retrofits that connector unfortunately. BMW did use that same connector for Tii and later model cars fuel injection systems using a similar Bosch thermo time relay box. The entire cable setup including the connector you have which failed, and the other wires which reach a ground, the sender on the water tube and cold start valve on the throttle body is still available new from BMW.

The part number is 61 12 1 354 671 and the current list price is $62.00. It is shown as item 13 below


Comment of Jim Gerock (2008-06-29 16:23:25): The protective rubber boot for the 2-prong connector is # 61-13 1 352 793 from BMW (Mobile Tradition). For some strange reason, it’s not listed for the tii, but under the 3.0 series cars. My thanks to Bill Williams for this tip.