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the one and only e30 s52 engine swap


AsparagusMike

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15 hours ago, AsparagusMike said:

So once I got over to the shop later today I thought over what yall said and went back to start assessing the possibility of a bad ground issue as @jc43089 stated. I went over to the other garage and snagged the jumper cables from the shelf, hooked one clamp to the alternator mounting bracket and the other side to the front subframe mounting bolt. Hopped in the car... turned the key over to start and I was suddenly welcomed with the sweet sweet sound of the starter beginning to crank, hallelujah!!!

Jumped the fuel relay to get some fuel up to the fuel rail, hopped back in the car and she came to life once again.

This is where it gets very odd though. After I ran the motor for a few seconds I shut it off, pulled the jumper cables off and the car started right back up again. Wait, what? Did it just need some kind of encouragement? I shut the car off and started it 5 different times tonight with no issues. I suppose I will leave everything the way it is and further asses the problem if it decides to return.

Thank you to everyone for their helpful feedback!

 

Thats really weird. Maybe you were just doing something strange last time. Battery terminals tight? Not turning the key all the way? LOLZ

 

Either way, that's great news! 

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Update:

Gonna go back a bit before the engine not cranking phase so I can be thorough on whats been a happenin.

So my adapter for my coolant temp sender unit showed up from auto meter. Right away I tried screwing in the vdo sensor and the inside hole between the threads was way to small of a diameter for the sending unit to slide through. As I wanted to get the thing put on that day I went ahead and decided to drill the hole out big enough (I believe it was a 21/64ths) to get the sending unit threaded in and get both installed on the head.

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Sense I tend to not think things through before doing I forgot about the fact that drilling out the inside hole larger was only gonna make the walls around it thinner and weaker. As I began to thread in the adapter I didn't even get it flush with the head on the block before the threads snapped off from the larger portion.

After taking a short walk down the driveway to cool off and think everything over I proceeded to remove the portion still threaded in the head out which wasn't all that terrible.

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I didn't have another adapter or a way to get the vdo sending unit installed I decided to just throw the brown top m20 back in and run with the stock gauge for now.

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Once I do end up doing the head gasket I will order a vdo sending unit with the correct thread pitch so I won't need to deal with finding an adapter that will work.

Also installed both my oil pressure, oil temp, and factory oil pressure gauges onto the BW distribution block and tightened that into place. Luckily I had no issues there. Routed some wiring for the sending units.

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Once installed I went ahead and pulled a vacuum on the cooling system to check for any leaks. I did have a fairly quick loss of vacuum and started checking around to find that the other coolant sensor for ecm was only hand tight. Tightened down and tried again... good to go!

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Filled the system up with bmw coolant I think it sucked in something around 2ish gallons all in all.

Got the intake system reinstalled, filled my power steering system with some fresh castrol atf and ran the car for a few minutes to reach around operating temp. Everything seems to be functioning great! Still slowly leaking from the head gasket above the timing cover though. 😡

Next thing on the list... exhaust.

My buddy Forrest came back over last week and started cranking out the rest of the piping. So far its looking great!

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After getting it welded past the rear sub frame I started figuring out how we were gonna hang the thing. Went to other side of the shop and dug through my tub of old parts to scavenge up my old rear sub frame bushings. Luckily we had a bit of scrap 16 gauge stainless sitting around and we went ahead and cut a long rectangular piece out in which we took the press and bump formed a piece to fit around the bushing. We left a flat section to drill a hole through for the M8 bolt that threads into the rear sub frame.

After that piece was made we took some measurements, took a piece of 3/8 stainless bar stock and shaped into something that we could use. Once shaped and fitted up, he tacked it on and welded it up.

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Sense the diameter of the inside hole on the bushing was larger then the 3/8 bar stock we ended up just filling it all around with some weld beads so it fit more snug. Also threw on a little end knob to keep the hanger from slipping out.

Everything installed...

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Originally was gonna run with a magnaflow muffler but found out that the inlet pipe was 2 1/4 inch and I didn't like the idea of having to reduce the pipe back down. Instead I went ahead and ordered a vibrant street power muffler which had an option for a 2.5 inch inlet. Hoping to see that tomorrow and we will be able to go ahead and get that installed and the exhaust will be complete.

Found me some seats!!! I originally said that I was having some sport seats shipped over from Florida but after doing some further searching through Craigslist I found a guy who was selling his e30 vert and had a spare set of leather sport seats from the car he was looking to get rid of sense he had got some cloth ones for it instead. Took a trip up there about a week ago and picked them up.

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Ya they aren't mint and will definitely need a little work but all the brackets are in solid shape and my plan will be to reupholster them this coming winter. For now though, I will be throwing some nice matching seat covers from the old set back on and run them for the rest of the warm season.

Onto more things, fan relay is wired up.

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When ahead and mounted it next to the power distribution block. Ran the wires along the tunnel behind the fender. Grinded away some paint on one of the holes beneath the passenger side headlight for a proper grounding point for the fan. Decided to run the relay independent from the car so, (for those of you who are familiar with the spal harness) instead of running the orange wire to ignition I ran it to ground. By doing this I keep the relay on a +12 volts constant and it can run freely whenever needed. I also had to go ahead an order the 2 prong switch as the 3 prong I had originally purchased was not gonna work well with my setup. Hoping to see that show up tomorrow sometime.

After reinstalling the front end and fenders I went ahead and threw the front wheels back on and layed the car on the ground.

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Right away I was completely disoriented by how low the car was. I have been so use to the jack stand height of the car that I had completely forgotten what its ride height was on the ground. The rear end is gonna need some tweaking as it sits forward a bit. Yes I know, definitely gonna need some different wheels.

Received a cone air filter from AEM today. Went ahead and installed that but realized I was gonna have to do a little triming to the throttle body silicone elbow from BW in order for it to fit right.

Couldn't get it completely back together as I broke one of the band clamps that hold it to the throttle body. Will pick up another tomorrow to get it fully installed.

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Ideally I'd like to make a custom air box system so I can somehow route in some colder air then the warm engine bay air this will be sucking in. Threw it on the list for a next winter project.

Got the hood bracket blasted up.

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Planning to give that a coat of paint sometime this week, gonna keep the color the same as the engine bay so it doesn't stick out to much.

Started working on wiring up the gauges inside the cabin. So far I have the lights for all three done. Plan is to run that power source off the light control switch that runs the rest of the back lighting.

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Ran out of the connectors needed for this so I had to take a pause tell tomorrow so I can pick some more up.

Quick question for these as well. Where is the ideal place to splice into for ignition power for the gauges themselves?

Still working on getting the car insured and registered (hobbyist plates) But I'm still hoping to take the car for a short spin down the road and back on Wednesday to make sure everything else is feeling good.

Also, the car badly needs a wash and I have been oh so fortunate of having some great friends who love to write me encouraging notes to keep me motivated.

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Stay tuned!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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I see the issue now with the head port confusion for the temp senders.  The OBD2 cars only have one M14x1.5 port with a dual function sending unit for ECU and dash gauge.  The port you are using was originally for the throttle body heater circuit nipple.  OBD1 heads have another M14x1.5 hole between those two, you can see in the casting where it would be.  Easiest thing for you is just what you said, buy an M12x1.5 VDO sending unit.

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4 hours ago, HipMF said:

After washing:

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Scrubbing, Prep-All, and Simple Green all failed to take it off. Aggressive clay barring worked.

When the car got painted I was gonna go ahead and do a wet sand and buff a few days after, Buuttt life happened and being that it is quite the tedious job I never got around to do doing it. That's why I didn't really flip shit over it as it is still on the list to do after all is done.

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  • 3 weeks later...

Updates have been lacking as usual. A lot has happened in the last couple weeks so it's been tough for me to get enough motivation to finally type out an update and get yall caught up.

Enough with the blah... Yets go back to where we left off.

Muffler/exhaust finished up.

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Couldn't be more happy with the final results and the sound is exactly what I wanted. Being that this was a 318, I did have to cut the exhuast hole on the rear valance larger so I could fit the two muffler tips through.

Gauges wired up and installed.

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I did end up finding some 3m weatherstripping adhesive at my local auto parts store that I was recommended to try for the vinyl on the door cards and it worked perfect. The stuff is fairly expensive but it was well worth it, I don't see this stuff coming lose ever again now.

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Seats covered and installed. Had to take some of the pieces off the old seats to make these ones fit in and make all the adjustments work properly. Not the best but it will do for now.

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After installing the seats and exhaust I went ahead and placed the car on 4 wood blocks we had laying around the shop and set the pre-load on the swaybars.

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After pre-load was set I went ahead and placed it back on the ground and took it out for a little test drive around the block to break the motor in.

I ran it for two 25-30 minute sessions letting the engine cool down completely in between. Engine ran great both times and felt awesome! No I didn't baby it while I was driving it around and in fact did the exact opposite and did several strong pulls in 2nd and 3rd gear letting off the gas and letting the engine slow the car down to help pull the piston rings out and bed in properly. After the second session I gave my head gasket leak a good inspection, still leakin :(

So, out of frustration I took the following day off work and decided to get the dumb thing whipped out so I can put it behind me and move on to other things.

I started bright and early and began dissembling the engine to get ready to pull the head.

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It took me tell about lunch time to get everything dissembled and ready for the head to be pulled off... and done.

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I took time to look over every cylinder and check for any odd stuff going on.

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Nothing unusual was found. There was some light vertical scratching on all the walls though, I assume that's just from the rings bedding themselves in.

After wiping down both surfaces with acetone, I laid down a fresh new head gasket with some rtv on the timing cover area to seal up that area where it was previously leaking and layed the head back on the block.

After re-torquing it to spec I went to the front to tighten down the front three m6 torque head bolts.  :(

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I pretty much just sat there kicking myself thinking of how I could have avoided this. After fighting myself for a while I decided to just take a break and let it sit for the rest of the weekend so I could clear my head. Monday rolled around and after getting out of work I went straight to Gibson's salvage yard and got myself another timing cover out of an M50. After thoroughly degreasing it I dropped the cover off at my buddies house who took it with him into work the following day and bead blasted it. During that time I went ahead and pulled the head back off the block, Removed the timing cover and started cleaning off all the old gasket material. Ordered fresh timing cover gaskets and another head gasket, may not have been totally necessary but its really not worth the risk of the other one potentially leaking after all this work.

Picked up the timing cover the following day.

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Right away I drilled out the center hole and heli-coiled the threads so I can avoid repeating what I had to deal with when I installed the head for the first time. I ran a tap through the outside holes to make sure the threads are clean, I believe the reason I broke the original timing cover was because some of the rtv I had put along the timing cover had squeezed into the hole and dried so when I went to thread the bolt in it caused resistance along the threads causing the cover to break.

Reinstalled the cover and then the cylinder head. After getting the head bolts halfway through the torque sequence I moved to the front and shined the light down each hole to make sure no gasket seeped down the hole. Each bolt got a dab of blue loctite and torqued to 6.5 ft lbs. After I got every bolt to spec I went ahead and torqued down the rest of the cylinder head. Now that the hard part was behind me I covered the motor up and finished installing the rest of the components the following day.

Before reinstalling the intake I swapped out the stock coolant sending unit for the cluster to the vdo unit for the water temp gauge. Much better.

(Ya the intake is already on in this pic, this is an after the fact shot as I forgot to snap a pic of it before)

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Now that everything was hooked back up I dropped in 7 quarts of 10w-30 Quaker state oil, a bottle of Lucas oil zddp additive and a fresh mahle oil filter. Went ahead and cranked the engine over a few times to prime the oil pump, did the same with the fuel system. Plugged the fuel pump relay back in, hopped in the car, only took a couple cranks and she popped right off once again sounding just as good as before but this time, no leaks :)

I let the car reach temp keeping an eye on all the gauges which everything was looking perfect so I decided to take the car out for a short spin that night. Everything is working great, Engine was running awesome! I didn't take the car far as it was already late so I parked it back in the shop tell the next day.

The following day after work I cleaned up the shop and got the hood installed. After thoroughly looking over the whole car and drive line for any unusualness I brought the her home.

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After taking time to enjoy the fact that it was finally home for good I went ahead and gave the car a good scrub down removing all that 8 month old dust. Once rinsed off I noticed that all the drawings and comments were still etched into the paint (as expected). so I grabbed some meguiar's medium cut buffing compound I had laying on the shelf, a polishing rag and some elbow grease and went at it. Took everything off really well and made the paint look quite a bit better.


Pic of the roof where most of the markings were. (Someone likes his creamy cucumbers, lol)

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That following Friday I dropped the car off at accurate in Appleton to get a 4 wheel alignment and straighten up that steering wheel. Picked the car up after work the same day.

Saturday rolled around and I had planned to go up to our trailer with a few friends for a nice two days of swimming and cooking out. What better way to enjoy it then bringing the car along with me.

It's about a 50 mile drive there (just about an hour) and the car drove all the way up there and back like a champ. There are a few areas where the roads get twisty and it gave me a great opportunity to test out the z3 rack with fresh suspension and brakes. It was really quite a wonderful thing and gave me all sorts of goosebumps keeping a smile on my face the entire time.

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I was able to sneak a pic of the gauges during the trip up there. It seems the engine's happy temp is right around 200 degrees. (This was cruising right around 65 and it was just about 80 degrees out, it stayed right there for water temp when I started going a bit harder on it as well).

As far as I've read online 197 degrees is oem operating temp for the s52 so I assume I am okay. I am running a 88 degree Celsius thermostat though so I am curious if it should be lower then what it's at now.

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Now, as for most engine swaps there are always some little things to tweak or fix. For me, I had a few slightly small issues that revealed themselves on the road trip to my trailer and back.

First off, the fan. It hasn't been running.

I know for a fact it's the switch. When I remove the two wires and jump them together the fan kicks on full power, no problem. I purchased the switch off a carpartsdiscount cite which was actually the only place I could find a 82 - 88 degree 2 prong coolant switch. The part number is 61-31-1-364-272-82. My only guess is that the switch is defective and I will have to find a replacement but where? Nobody seems to carry them anymore. Help on what others have done for this would be awesome!

I'm thinking I will probably wire up a toggle switch temporarily to those two wires for me to control tell I can find something else.

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Next thing was the transmission. It seems that I have a pretty decent leak coming from the main output shaft seal. I am guessing when I had pulled the flange off originally to remove the dampener I had disturbed the seal. I know as for a preventative maintenance item I should have replaced all the seals on the trans but I had not and now I get to deal with it after the fact, yay. Monday I called the dealership and had them order me the output shaft seal which will be arriving tomorrow. Luckily I had ordered an extra quart of redline mt-90 gear oil way back when I originally put fresh fluid in the trans so I went ahead and checked the current level through the fill plug, level was a bit low as expected.

Lastly, The engine. I should mention that the flywheel gives off quite a bit of chatter at idle and between gears. Of course I new this was going to happen when I ordered it but wasn't quite sure what to expect. At first I sort of was getting annoyed by it but after the trip I had completely forgotten about it and it no longer bothers me. Sense I don't plan to daily this all that much I feel its worth it for the gains being made. Definitely would consider switching back to the stock flywheel though if it were a DD.

Took a little time to get use to the stage 2 clutch as it is quite a bit heavier then I'm used to but after driving it a bit I was already use to it's weight. That UUC shifter though... Sssssssoooooooo gggoooooooodddddd!!! I love every bit of it and feels awesome! I recommend it to anyone who is considering going with a short shifter, well worth the money spent!

Alright so the engine has an odd little quirk I have been noticing every once in a while during idle. The idle would stay steady and then begin to jump around for a few seconds returning back to a steady idle (800-1000 rpms). Not sure if maybe one of the few sensors I had used from the junk yard is on it's way out, maybe the MAF? Like I said its only once in a while and for a few short seconds so I'm fairly certain it wouldn't be any mechanical. I will see if I can get a video of it to post up. Also, every time I came to a stop bringing the trans to neutral and disengaging the clutch the engine would hop in rpms and back down to idle. Separate issues for sure but slightly odd. Any help on why either of these are happening would be greatly appreciated.

There are still a few little things I have to take care of in terms of aesthetics. Big goal right now is to take care of everything major.

 

Short little clip one of my friends took of me opening it up down a frontage road... Enjoy

https://youtu.be/eHWn1qLF9Vw

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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nice work!

i had the same idle bounce (s50) that mostly showed up when coming to a stop after prolonged driving (but sometimes randomly). after inspecting everything, I surmised it was a combination of a small vacuum leak and a sticky TB. I ended up replacing every vacuum hose, all the intake manifold seals, cleaning the ICV, and cleaning the TB. It made the symptoms much better, but it still seems to happens about once per month. I suspect the TB is still just ever so slightly staying stuck open when letting the throttle back to zero. i need to re-clean and re-lube it again to see if that will finally fix it all the way. 

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Correct me if I'm wrong, but you're using an ECU that you got from me, yeah you totally are because I totally dropped the ball on it for a long time.
now that we've established that.

I had a similar thing with my chip from them, they seem to need a handful of drives to get their idle return figured out. I would have mine walk around a bit at idle when dropping off throttle (coming to a stop etc.) and it would clear up after a day or three of driving it around. 
Unplug the battery and it would be starting over again. 

May not be the case, just figured I would provide my experience with their chips. 

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There are just about 500 miles on the motor so far, thing has been spectacular. I've been dailying it for that last week or so getting a feel for everything and working any existing bugs out. As of yesterday I haven't been seeing the jumpy idle at all, hoping the ecu figuring itself out was all it was.

On the other hand though, My operating temp has sort of been pissin me off.

As I said before, it seems its happy place is right around 200 for the water temp. Well, its sort of moving itself up a bit towards more like 205 while running down the highway or speeds higher then 35 especially in 80+ degree weather. Cooler times at night it will sit around 200 though. Coming through town I'm looking at something closer to 208-210 and even with the fan on it doesn't want to come down.

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That being said it never gets above 210 when running even sitting at idle on a hot day so I guess it isn't the worst but once I give er juice going down the on ramp she comes back down to 200ish. I just wish for driving it around not pushing it to hard that it would stay somewhere more in the 190's area. How others are keeping their temps lower is beyond me. I have a solid water pump, csf rad, and a good fan. What else can i do? Can putting a 80 degree Celsius thermostat in do me any good here?

 

Went ahead and did the main output seal on the trans last week Wednesday.

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I immediately noticed that the shifter selector rod seal is also leaking and may be the major player in the leaking issue as well as it is still leaving a small puddle same as before. I did go ahead and order a selector rod seal late last week from FCP that showed up today.

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Still waiting on a tube of curil k2 sealant I ordered a few days back, once it shows up I'll go ahead and tackle this thing and hope I don't have to look at it again.

Other things done:

I  picked up a toggle switch from my local auto parts store and spliced it in to the circuit as an override. For now that is all I have to turn the fan on. It seems kind of inconvenient as it's one more thing to keep an eye on but I don't mind it and only really utilize it when going through town and slower traffic.

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I spent most of my morning last Sunday giving the car a thorough cleaning inside and out that was well over do.

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Wrapped up the main part of the harness to hide that huge cluster of wires, much better now. (Would have been an alright picture if hadn't been for my stupid finger)

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I have an 88C thermostat, Stewart water pump, 80/88C fan switch running a Spal puller and BMW blue coolant.  My temp stays very steady in all conditions unless stopped it will creep to near 210 and stay there.  The fan will cycle and it seems to work good.  It sounds like your flow isn't great, you shouldn't have any bubbles in the system because they would have bled out by now.

 

Another thing to note that both I and Snap have experienced is that voltage fluctuation will cause the gauge reading to change.  Maybe make sure you don't have an electrical issue causing a falsely hunting gauge.

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I have a stock e36 6cyl radiator, bmw blue coolant, 80C (176F) wahler thermostat, and an OEM saleri composite impeller water pump in my S52. The ECU reads the coolant temps from the sensor in the head (OBD2) at around 188F cruising down the freeway regardless of temperature, and it can get up to 200F before I switch the fan on while sitting. With the fan running it tops out at 195F idling on a hot day. If you have an 88C or even the stock 92C thermostat, temps in the 200-210 range seems normal since I would expect it to scale fairly linearly.  I would look into the voltage fluctuation issue @jc43089 mentioned as well, but if you are looking for more temperature buffer an 80C thermostat might not be a bad idea. 

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I took the car up to my trailer again Tuesday night and it was fairly cool outside cruising right around 70 and even with the fan flipped on at that speed the thing was still staying right around 205-208. Slowing down up to 210 but never any higher. Thing ran like a charm though.

Tomorrow I'm gonna take a temp gun to the thing and make sure that the temps are matching what the gauge is reading. If they are, I'm wondering if that small kink on the section where the spider hose runs into the header core is possibly causing some unnecessary restrictions. Otherwise I'm just gonna have to assume that it likes to run crazy hot and will have to consider switching to a lower degree thermostat in the near future.

Also, my occasional jumpy idle is back... again😡

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15 hours ago, AsparagusMike said:

I took the car up to my trailer again Tuesday night and it was fairly cool outside cruising right around 70 and even with the fan flipped on at that speed the thing was still staying right around 205-208. Slowing down up to 210 but never any higher. Thing ran like a charm though.

Tomorrow I'm gonna take a temp gun to the thing and make sure that the temps are matching what the gauge is reading. If they are, I'm wondering if that small kink on the section where the spider hose runs into the header core is possibly causing some unnecessary restrictions. Otherwise I'm just gonna have to assume that it likes to run crazy hot and will have to consider switching to a lower degree thermostat in the near future.

Also, my occasional jumpy idle is back... again😡


Did someone say.......










TEMP GUN?!?!?!?!?

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  • 4 months later...

I have put just about 3500 miles on the car sense I put er into storage 2 months ago. Over the couple warm months I was able to enjoy it, I got some bugs worked out of her and figured out what needs adjusting/fixing and what I need to change/improve.

To follow up a bit from the last post, Trans leaks have been completely resolved. As for my temp issues, It seems that all is good now. My gauge reads slightly off. When I brought the car up to its op. temp. (the gauge read 210) I shot a temp gun at the cylinder head just past the thermostat housing and I was getting a reading of right around 192. The other day though, I took the car up to Appleton and all the way up the gauge stayed right below the 200 so I may take a look at the wiring to the gauges and see where there may be an interference or what may be causing this inconsistency otherwise I haven't been too bothered by it as the car hasn't been having any issues keeping itself coo

l.

SO... I have compiled a list of everything I have noticed needs work and what I hope to accomplish over the project season. There will probably be more to add to the list but this covers the major things I want to get to.

Issue #1

Oil has been changed twice now and it looks that I burn just about ¾ of a quart every 1000 miles which is supposedly quite normal. Also, about every 100 miles I find that the rear bumper gets covered in oil spots. So, I have added a catch can to the list of parts to order to hopefully solve some of my oil consumption issues.

Issue #2 (still on going) Jumpy idle.

I have detected that the weird idle I get once in a while is a bit more serious then I figured.

After driving it for a while I did end up getting a CEL to pop up and immediately stomp tested the system to retrieve those codes. 2 codes were saved...

1263 (Purge valve)… not worried about this one as it makes complete sense why it is on since I don’t have it hooked.

1222 (Lambda control 1)… My cause for the idle issue. Big fix that I have read is the O2 sensor failing. Problem with this is the fact that my o2 sensor was brand new. I have not yet pulled it out and tested it but I have hi doubts it’s the cause. As for other things I have inspected/checked, I pulled the maf and thoroughly cleaned it as well as hooking it up to a power source and testing that its working properly. I pulled the IAC valve out and made sure it was clean. Reinstalled and confirmed good connections of all vac lines ( all lines are new anyways). An idea of mine is maybe I’m not getting a strong fuel pressure because of a possible original e30 fuel pump not cutting it for the s52’s requirements. Other possibilities may be injectors or a possible faulty ecu. We shall see.

Issue #3

A while back I started noticing a squeaking noise coming from underneath the car in 1st and 2nd gear. At first I didn’t think much of it tell it started clunking more than squeaking. Lifted the car up and gave the drive shaft a little jerk and there was quite a bit of slop in the center and outside u joint. After pulling the heat shield off I was able to notice what really was causing the issue…

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The same day I pulled the driveshaft out and brought it over to my buddies to weld up. Since I was worried about burning a lot of the rubber, we decided to braze it instead. There was still some rubber that burned of course but it was only minor and worked out well.

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I haven’t had any issues since but I do notice the slop in the u joints when changing over from reverse to 1st so I am now on the lookout for another used or possibly a new driveshaft (for the perks of being able to service the u joints then).

Issue # 4, 5 and 6

Although the car was a blast to drive the alignment was just not right. Unfortunately, I installed the wrong rear sub frame bushings and earned myself a bit to much negative camber on the rear wheels. I found that there were bushings made for this to correct this issue when your car is lowered. These bushings are now in my hands so that will be the first thing I tackle this winter. Not only will I be fixing the sub frame bushings but also the eccentric hardware. Unfortunately, the garagistic’s smooth cams on their hardware like to walk quite often and its been throwing my rear toe and camber all out of whack. I have a couple ideas to solve this issue, but my plan is to center these and hopefully not have to mess with them at all as I have found that you can't properly tighten the outside bolts when the sub frame is in the car. With the trailing arms out, I will be messing with the rear dust shields, so I can install the e-brake system as that is something I have been greatly missing.

Issue # 7

I have no heat. Over the time that the car was being re-built I temporarily shoved paper towels in the heater core inlet and outlet ports to avoid any dirt getting in the heater core so I can't see it being clogged. Also, I do remember the heat working with no issues before the engine (M42) came out so I doubt it’s the heater core at all and the blower motor works without flaw, but I only get cold air. I will be starting with the heater controls and making sure its not something net working right there.

Issue #8

One part of the exhaust sits to low. When the y-pipe was welded in it angled lower then I wanted mostly because of the way the headers sat. The plan is to cut the collector off, fab up a pie cut to angle it correctly and re-weld. My plan is to drop the motor, trans, and sub frame as one to make it a bit easier to work around for welding.

Issue #9

Interior sucks. Will go into depth on what I want to do, still working on some ideas for what I want to do but changes definitely need to be made.

 

So far that’s it for major issues first on my list to get done. There is some painting needed to be done including re-doing all the trim on the exterior and re-undercoating the rocker panel and front and rear valance. Unfortunately, the old undercoat in those places faded because of exposure to the sun and the fix is spraying a layer of clear over for protection.

I also have a list of things I’d like to get ordered in terms of spicing up the look of the car.

Tonight and tomorrow I will be spending making a solid list of everything I need and getting that order out asap. Unfortunately I need to buckle down on making the most of the time I have as not only is my next semester's schedule going to be quite busy but my use of the shop this year is going to be limited, my grandfather owns the place and he has his own projects he wants to get to.

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