Those two bolts are pins for your valve cover gasket. Look at the gasket and youll see exactly where they go
Sweet! Remember to torque the valve cover down evenly too. Use a similar pattern to the head sequence. Mind you sequence isn't nearly as critical here so don't panic about finding the correct one.
55 ft lb seems a little high for a V/C. double check your spec.
Yeah, half the total torque should be fine for the first step.
IIRC Hayne's lists 55 for permanent gasket, something like 28 for RTV or similar.
a little poking around says thats IN lb. not FT lb. Im sure you knew, but I wanted to clarify before you have to extract a broken V/C bolt from your brand new head :doh:...LOL
late model gasket should have little steel spacers to allow the gasket to compress its intended amount no more. So torque is pretty much irrelevant on these, impossible to either warp the steel VC or overcompress the gasket. Changed mine last year with Fel-Pro Permadry rubber/steel core and no leaks (well, from the valve cover anyway.)
Just snug them down. They don't have to be supper tight and the sleeves in the valve cover will prevent over tightening.
the sleeves/spacers/whatever you want to call them will take care of precisely limiting the compression of the gasket. Close on the torque is good enough. (that sounds really odd coming out of my mouth, having worked on German cars for ages - read, finicky beasts that require proper torque on everydamnthing - but in this instance, it's true.) Two finger pull on a ratchet handle is about right.
Fair enough. (Also, my DD is a B7 S4, and I won't touch it for that reason.)
Nice. Mine's a E92 335i. Except in a month or so it will probably be an old Jeep Cherokee
I got over my fear of touching it, although I paid someone to replace a fuel injector for me. The pressures of direct injection scare me a little, and the consequences of a leaky fitting are Not Good.