Walnut Blasting BMW Before and After | The Results are Incredible!

Sep 18, 2019Erik Blume

Have you heard of Walnut Blasting BMW intake valves? Perhaps you've wondered how Walnut Blasting works. We Walnut Shell Blasted our BMW 335i intake ports, and the results were truly amazing!

As you may have read on our blog recently, we've been hard at work on our new BMW 335i project installing wheels and doing minor performance upgrades in preparation for Proving Grounds. We'll have tons more coverage on intake upgrades and Cobb Tuning flashes here in the next week or so, but in the meantime we've been looking into Walnut Shell Blasting equipment. Here is our review / how-to on Walnut Blasting BMW 335i intake ports and valves.

walnut blasting bmw

 

We first heard about Walnut Shell Blasting on the BMW E90 Forums and knew almost immediately it was something we'd need to explore. Upon cracking open our intake manifold and looking into the intake ports, we were assured it was something that needed to be done. Take a look at this before picture!

walnut blasting bmw

When we took the manifold off, it didn't look too bad ....

 

walnut blasting bmw

... but upon further inspection, these valves/ports look nasty!

 

Obviously, these ports are filthy and in need of some major attention. Just think of the horsepower that's being robbed because of the carbon buildup on these intake valves. We sourced the proper Walnut Blasting BMW E90 equipment and got to work. The process is very straight-forward, and can be completed at home in your garage if you're comfortable operating the media blasting machine. Here are the steps in the process:

  • Remove intake manifold and cover the intake tube to prevent stray media from entering the intake tube.
  • Use tape or rags to cover the ports that are not being cleaned to prevent stray walnut media from entering your engine.
  • Jump the starter to get valve #1 closed.
  • Connect the blasting tool to a compressed air source.
  • Fill your tool with the proper walnut blasting media.
  • Connect the adapter to the intake tract that is to be cleaned.
  • Put the blasting tool under pressure and start the vacuum cleaner.
  • Start blasting in 1-2 second intervals, waiting a few seconds between cycles to allow the vacuum to work. You shouldn't need to blast each port for more than 10 seconds total.
  • Blast out the intake tract that has been cleaned with compressed air to remove any remaining granules. Use a vacuum cleaner with a small tip to get into the nooks of the port to remove any excess.
  • Finally, clean out intake tract with brake cleaner or other evaporating cleaner.
  • Jump the starter to get the next valve to close.
  • Repeat everything for the other intake tracts and valves.

When you've completed all 6 intake ports, you should have something that looks a little like this:

bmw walnut blasting

 

Look at that raw BMW intake port power! Simply amazing.

In case the visual difference isn't enough proof that this is a great way to increase power, take a look at the before and after dyno graphs! The power is visually noticeable in the mid to upper RPM range where the power seemed to taper off before the cleaning. However you chose to look at it, the cleaning was a major contributor to more power, with and increase of 18whp and 13wtq.

bmw walnut blasting

Before the cleaning is represented by the red line, where the blue line represents the power after Walnut Blasting.

We've got a bunch of great content coming up here in the next few weeks. We'll be doing in-depth analysis of the aFe Cold Air Intake system along with Dyno results of every Cobb Tuning ECU flash available for the BMW 335i. Stay tuned, you wont regret it!

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Comments (25)

  • They feature two types of oil changes since today
    all 2011 GMC cars are strictly synthetic oil. However, most of the
    methods used to try to support the oil leaks circulation have failed.

    http://yandex.ru/

    Margarito
  • Are you going to be offering this service? I have a mini cooper that needs it badly…

    Will Stelmach
  • Dealers do it as scheduled maintenance. At least good ones…

    Craig Buffington
  • Direct injection problems. That’s why you need to run seafoam into that intake mani!

    Chad McCurdy
  • We do that at my work

    Charlie Pahl
  • Even motorwerks? I have the 100,000 mile maintenance since it came with the car but they wanted to charge 800+ bucks

    Will Stelmach
  • You don’t want that shit going inside the combustion chamber…

    MSengineering David
  • EGR probably + direct imjection

    Chad McCurdy
  • I love GDI. So much fail, so much profit.

    Jeremy Turbohwagon May
  • Direct injection is the cause. Audi’s/VW’s suffer from the same problem. With direct injection you don’t have the fuel constantly being sprayed on the back of the valves keeping them clean.

    Howard Houston

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