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I believe monty400k you are meant to bypass the amp in your case, which I believe the Extension cable does. It's been mentioned before, but I'll have to dig up the info. I didn't realise this but I always saw me having my car with no sat-nav as being a hinderance. In some ways it wasn't. I hope you find an easy way, as my next rather larger update does include some info about the HU . Yep, that makes sense, been doing some hunting around online and it's a common issue, just need to find a definitive way to do it!
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Last Edit: Oct 27, 2018 9:12:56 GMT by monty400k
72 MGB GT 88 Daimler Double Six 89 Rover Mini 91 Nissan Figaro 95 Lotus Esprit S4S 18 Discovery
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ZXRob
Europe
Posts: 1,197
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Oct 27, 2018 12:59:45 GMT
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Started reading this thread yesterday and am now up to date having read it completely! I am not a BMW man, I find them overrated and not that great to drive. But E46 M3s are just mega cool! I have driven quite a few and no other car matches what the M3 can do. Really enjoyed reading this thread.
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ChasR
RR Helper
motivation
Posts: 10,297
Club RR Member Number: 170
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BMW E46 M3 : That's the ticketChasR
@chasr
Club Retro Rides Member 170
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Oct 28, 2018 21:17:09 GMT
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Started reading this thread yesterday and am now up to date having read it completely! I am not a BMW man, I find them overrated and not that great to drive. But E46 M3s are just mega cool! I have driven quite a few and no other car matches what the M3 can do. Really enjoyed reading this thread. Many thanks! I have a fairly similar opinion in many ways as you can tell! A car people now revel over (the 323i Manual) I found myself bored by! I'll be honest, I find my Merc much nicer! There is something different about an E46 M3, which is where I can see why the press raved about them and still do today. I have my reasons for why I say that but that can wait until the end of the update; it's something I discussed about the cars in general and how things may go . Now, back on track.... I may as well say it to avoid keeping you folks lingering! A few of us including RetroWarwicK of this parish have been meaning to hit the Spa racetrack for quite some time. The idea was first discussed over a year ago, inevitably in a pub, where all sorts of dangerous things are suggested! This however, would soon become a reality a few months ago when I booked the track time, accomodation, and Eurotunnel for heading over! Typically, as I've aluded to in the Citroen 2CV I've been a pretty busy person lately, with a job change, a couple of evenings of getting back home later from work due to increased mileage, as well as family news testing my time limits. Couple that, with me getting the W124 ready and fit for the roads with its own set of issues the poor M3 just sat forlorn in the unit after the Retro Rides Gathering. That would all change when I got a set of wheels for it. Sure, No-one needs a set of track tyres, but like anything, they can help bring a bit of mojo back to the table with a car. Since I hadn't done a brake fluid change since I first bought the car I ended up tying those two jobs into one. Of course, this is how the car started out: M3 Wheels by Charlieboy, on Flickr M3 Wheels by Charlieboy, on Flickr It's funny, I debate an E9x M3 at times but as time goes on, I find myself wanting one alot less. Strange I know! With the brake fluid bought and a new bleeding device obtained I made a start on preparing the car: M3 Spa Times by Charlieboy, on Flickr The Laser brake bleeder was more expensive than an Eezibleed. Despite being more fragile in some ways (easy with pulling up on the pump too hard!) it's much less of a faff to use compared to an Eezibleed, and far far easier to move about! Thanks to this new device I changed the wheels and had the fluid all changed within the hour. Not a bad result at all As for the brake fluid, yes, I know it's Ford brake fluid, but being Super DOT 4, it should be an improvement over most of the stuff at my local motor factors. Which brings me onto doing the oil filter, a job I'd been meaning to do since changing the big ends: M3 Spa Times by Charlieboy, on Flickr Under my ownership, the car has only seen genuine filters, albeit a Purflux item when I first got the car. I know it was Mahle filters before that service going by the history. This filter was a Mann that I took it. Yes, it's almost half of the price of the latest BMW/Mahle item, but the Mahle item (in the OX187 flavour, not the earlier OX68D), is said to have some good filtration material in addition to more pleats than other filters on the market, including the earlier filfilter. Maybe that seems a little overkill to do on a 16 year old car, but then again, those S54 lumps don't come cheap. Considering the filter is about the same price from BMW as an oil filter for a Focus ST/Mondeo 2.5T it doesn't make much sense to save a couple of quid for the sake of it: It was also much eaiser to install the new filter over the Mann filter, which requires disconnecting the TPS sensor every time in addition to forcing/bending it past the inlet manifold. www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=5&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwjnxp2Y-aneAhVJQ8AKHQdZCY4QFjAEegQIARAB&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.turnermotorsport.com%2Ft-S54_mahle_vs_mann_oil_filters&usg=AOvVaw20dbnvaELBgCCfoIOn7JJnAt the same time I switched the rather tired looking ignition coils for 5 new Bosch items, thus meaning all of the coils in my M3 have now been replaced. But why did I change them? Now and again on the motorway and if the engine was getting warm from sitting behind someone slow for some time, like I did with someone in an MG Midget coming back from RRG (25mph in a 50 anyone?) the car would occasionally hiccup. Not firm enough to notice,but for someone like me, who has known the car for a couple years, it was bugging me. This is what prompted me to swap out the coils. BMW now sell Bosch items if you go to them, but it seems the factory items were indeed Bremi items, albeit different to how to the Bremi items look now: M3 Spa Times by Charlieboy, on Flickr With that done, it was time to drop the car back onto the ground. I wasn't particularly happy that the new wheels were in Silver over the factory's Shadow Chrome, but the paint finish isn't what bothered me. But in truth, I'm surprised at how the silver looks. M3 Spa Times by Charlieboy, on Flickr There was one more detail to add however to the car. Some will like the detail, others won't. I'll let you folks decide what you think? Am I a bit of a wannabe Frenchie, a racer, or simply adding a simple but different touch to the front of the car? M3 Spa Times by Charlieboy, on Flickr M3 Spa Times by Charlieboy, on Flickr Overall, the looks came out fairly well much to my surprise! I was debating flashing over the wheels with some Anthracite/Grey paint but after seeing another Mystic M3 at a show this weekend, I'm not so sure. It would have to be a light Anthracite, almost silver, which would, of course, make me have to go to more of a specialist wheel refinisher to get that kind of paint finish. It seems here, stock or similar to stock finishes may be the way forward, or maybe dark Bronze? M3 with Dark wheels by Charlieboy, on Flickr M3 with Dark wheels by Charlieboy, on Flickr Hmmm, choices choices! Choices however wouldn't be something I'd be making in terms of getting this car ready! Somehow I got the car ready and then managed to dial in the tyre pressures, something which is important to consider when going from Track tyres to normal tyres. I did mine in a bit of a layman's way, which is something Tony Angelo's Hot Rod Garage presenter discussed in only last week's episode. In short, you get an Infra Red Pyrometer (read thermometer without touching the subject) to get an idea of how warm the tyres are. If you do this on an OEM tyre at the normal pressure it's surprising what results you get, and it can help explain a little about the wear/camber issues you mau have. Of course, there are no hard and fast rules, but eventually, with a few subtle changes I got the car to behave in a manner I wanted it to. On the road anyway, the Kumho V70As were not only a Kumho tyre that I genuinely liked, but also a track tyre I could get along with! They seemed to have better turn in than the R888s I had on my 205 GTI despite the M3's extra 800kg payload! Furthermore, these things gripped! They required less warming up than the Nankang NS-2Rs on the Escort RS Turbo and were lovely! Will I buy them again? Maybe not on the M3 ; my tyre sizes aren't right ; they're a profile too short. On other cars, they certainly will be considered! They are however near Michelin Pilot Cup 2 money too it should be pointed out! So the car was looking good and seemed to be driving good! It was time to hit the road with RetroWarwicK in tow. M3 Spa Times by Charlieboy, on Flickr M3 Spa Times by Charlieboy, on Flickr Unfortunately, we were halted by a broken down train at the Eurotunnel. That added around 2 hours onto our travelling time! Great! It was just what we needed as the kids had broken up for Half term! Yup, it was busy at the Chunnel alright! Eventually, we go on and pressed on to head to Liege: M3 Spa Times by Charlieboy, on Flickr It doesn't look bad now I must admit! Damn, the car does get under your skin! M3 Spa by Charlieboy, on Flickr Yes, a friend of mine did turn up in a Focus ST of all things! It was then a case of refuelling on the other side of the border, and getting to the hotel! Naturally we were quite tired once we hit the hotel at 8pm, considering we left home at 7am! Sleeping however wouldn't be easy, espeically since we were all anxious, yet full of anticipation for what awaited us the next day. M3 Spa Times by Charlieboy, on Flickr The following morning, we all hit the track. The details weren't looking good however! The car was saying it was 1 degrees C outside and truth be told it was super warm outside, albeit it felt warmer than the 7 degrees we currently have over here! Strange eh? With that in mind it was time to hit this spot known as Spa Francorhamps. That will be reported on later. Why? I'm trying to overlay Harry's Laptimer onto the GoPro vidoes, which it seems is easier than done! But you folks can wait until then, right? M3 Spa Times by Charlieboy, on Flickr
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Last Edit: Oct 28, 2018 22:00:51 GMT by ChasR
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Davey
Posted a lot
Resident Tyre Nerd.
Posts: 2,335
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Oct 29, 2018 12:40:21 GMT
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Do like a Spa track day, waiting eagerly.
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K11 Micra x3 - Mk3 astra - Seat Marbella - Mk6 Escort estate - B5 Passat - Alfa 156 estate - E36 compact Mk2 MR2 T-bar - E46 328i - Skoda Superb - Fiat seicento - 6n2 Polo - 6n polo 1.6 - Mk1 GS300 EU8 civic type S - MG ZT cdti - R56 MINI Cooper S - Audi A3 8p - Jaguar XF (X250) - FN2 Civic Type R - Mk2 2.0i Ford Focus - Mercedes W212 E250
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ChasR
RR Helper
motivation
Posts: 10,297
Club RR Member Number: 170
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BMW E46 M3 : That's the ticketChasR
@chasr
Club Retro Rides Member 170
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Nov 22, 2018 20:31:04 GMT
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Well, I left you folks hanging. In truth, with my hectic weekends, which I shall allude to soon, here is a taster of the Spa life .
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ChasR
RR Helper
motivation
Posts: 10,297
Club RR Member Number: 170
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BMW E46 M3 : That's the ticketChasR
@chasr
Club Retro Rides Member 170
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Nov 27, 2018 22:31:42 GMT
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Since the news isn't that great with the overall fleet I figured it was time to dig into a bit of positivity. Sure, it's great to hear a warts-and-all story, with the low points of the car as well as the highs. But, as per the RR Modus Operandai, if one puts something bad on the forum, something good in the form of photos etc. must balance things! OK, I know I am stretching things there, but you get my point. Or my insanity maybe. In short, a few of you saw my talk of going down to Spa. I even put up a dull video above of me driving about! For you wanting to know what the journey was like down there, here is more of an insight into how that journey went. Yup, I did stay in that spot at the begininning of the video in the car park for what seemed an eternity, once we were told to board the train! Thankfully as you know, we made it. Once we got out of Calais things were pretty smooth sailing too! But enough writing. To misquote Curly from Of Mice & Men "Let the video talk": What happened in the video? In short, it showed us queuing in Folkstone, travelling across Europe, RetroWarwicK having his guest appearance, me having a play and a great timewith a mate in his Focus ST (it was not like that folks!) me then following Matt around the track, before I tired and decided to see what final lap the car could do. Yes, the tyres were hot and ebbing away in grip, the brakes not far behind either! But it was now or never! Was it sad to leave the track? Definitely. The right thing after we subjected our cars to the torture, but still. Torture I hear you say? That was the state of the tyres from one of the cars on track. Maybe my track orientated Kumhos would have faired better! Erm.... No. OK, they were better but it didn't stop the tyre from melting onto itself like the above or not picking up tyre tread on track! But, that really didn't matter. We had bigger fish to fry in Belgium! The debriefing! There were no Fosters cans in sight! Only the finest of what Belgium had to offer! Many bits of the cars and tracks were discussed, as well as future ideas! After all, these trips do give you something to reflect upon. But who am I kidding? We enjoyed a drink and a good meal as well! It was great to come back to the UK and it was great to have been part of a great weekend. What started out as an idea in the pub soon materialised into something extraordinary. Do you have trips you want to go on? Do them. You shall wonder why you left it so long before you went or returned! I certainly do! That said, the M3 still had a few things for me to do on it. After all, this is RR .
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Last Edit: Nov 27, 2018 23:01:44 GMT by ChasR
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Marc
Posted a lot
Posts: 1,037
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Nov 28, 2018 22:02:04 GMT
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Great read as always!
Thank you.
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Ray Singh
Posted a lot
More German exotica in my garage now
Posts: 1,992
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Waiting for the next episode Chas!
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adam73bgt
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 4,975
Club RR Member Number: 58
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Nov 29, 2018 18:14:21 GMT
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Nice write up, I must get to Spa for a track day at some point. Dropped in there briefly on my way back from the 'ring this year and it looks an impressive place in person! Also think I spotted you in the M3 as I was on my way home
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ChasR
RR Helper
motivation
Posts: 10,297
Club RR Member Number: 170
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BMW E46 M3 : That's the ticketChasR
@chasr
Club Retro Rides Member 170
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Nov 29, 2018 20:52:10 GMT
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Cheers muchly folks! Nice write up, I must get to Spa for a track day at some point. Dropped in there briefly on my way back from the 'ring this year and it looks an impressive place in person! Also think I spotted you in the M3 as I was on my way home I'm trying to think where you would have seen me. I went to Wolvo today, but I've been doing my normal route now. I'm not a Gaydon boy anymore remember . I knew I forgot something from above! Partway through the trip, I found out that a Waze App update finally gave me Waze navigation on CarPlay. Doesn't sound like a big deal eh? Well, to be honest, Google's attempt at CarPlay Maps was curse word. It didn't really offer anything over the Apple Maps and it couldn't reroute through CarPlay! Are you feeling the love? Me neither. With Waze however, that was soon to change. WhatsApp Image 2018-10-23 at 10.03.12 by Charlieboy, on Flickr Not only can you quickly change routes on the go, it also updates the routes if the traffic changes. Furthermore, the search function is on a par with Google, probably the biggest thing over Apple Maps. This certainly helped us escape the dreaded traffic on the way back from Spa. For me, that's now become the way to work, and without using the motorway as much! After all a 1 hour 15 minute trip is better than a 2 hour one! As I alluded to in the Merc thread, I thought I'd sort out a bugbear of mine in both cars. Mats. In the case of this M3, it came with some 50p Wilko specials when I bought the car. Not that it mattered as it took the previous owner until I bought the car that it also had the genuine mats beneath it in great condition. Being grey, and then a daily, that was never going to last. Since the Wilko mats fitted worse than Theresa May showing her dance moves during a South African convention, they had to go. Back then I got lucky. I got some premium quality mats from Halfords. How much were they? £70? No, try £3. They were a forlorn order for over a year. That was the good news. The bad? They were a little too big, a little like a 7-year-old walking around in his dad's shoes. The fit was better than the Wilko items but they would always come adrift. Not great: BMW M3 Nov 18 (16 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr BMW M3 Nov 18 (17 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr But at least the rears had more coverage right? Look at the rear edge of the mats go all the way up to the edge of the seats! BMW M3 Nov 18 (18 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr Yes, yes, yes. I hear you folks. I really am trying to justify my meagre expenditure. So what did I do? Enter Stage Left: BMW M3 Nov 18 (25 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr Yup, I went on a bit of a spending spree. Seeing as the car tried to bleed me dry at times I figured a bit more cash wouldn't go amiss. The mats do look weird though! BMW M3 Nov 18 (26 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr That is because these are Nicoman Spaghetti mats. I wasn't sure about these for a while and thought they were Snake oil. A few people I know in the 944 world however really rated them. The idea behind them is they stay clean, bury the dirt within the mat instead on top of the mat and then can be rinsed with a pressure washer and dry again in 5-10 minutes. Cheap I hear you ask? No, but in my defence I got a good deal at the NEC show for both the M3 and the Merc. So, I had the old mats out. I've almost forgotten what it looks like with grey carpets or even the what the factory mats look like: My dad had a similar set, but in black in his E36 325tds back in the day! BMW M3 Nov 18 (19 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr BMW M3 Nov 18 (22 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr I was aphrehensive about getting Grey mats but @retrowarwick twisted my arm at the show. Was he right for me to stay grey and not black or wrong? BMW M3 Nov 18 (30 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr I reckon it was a good call. After a week or two of driving the car with them I must say the dirt resistance of them has been very surprising. Oddly, they show less dirt than the black mats ever did, and let's be honest, a clean car is a nice car. Which is why I thought I'd take the opportunity to get some snaps of it while it was relatively clean: BMW M3 Nov 18 (14 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr OK, I lied. Have you seen the weather outside? BMW M3 Nov 18 (9 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr Some may say the yellow foglights are a little scene but I have come to like them! BMW M3 Nov 18 (34 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr With that in mind I ended up taking the car twice in one day to the Fabulous Caffeine & Machine in Ettington. You may remember me showing you guys that blue M3 a while back with anthracite wheels. It was there! It was also interesting to see a track vs. fairly stock car and Topaz Blue vs Mystic. The wheels make the car in isolation seem almost as dark as Mystic Blue. BMW M3 Nov 18 (36 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr BMW M3 Nov 18 (37 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr Why did I drive down? To meet a few folks down there I've not seen for a while. Two of which owned these beauties. BMW M3 Nov 18 (41 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr The Clio V6 had been off the road for years, and has finally come back with a few tricks up its sleeve. The NSX is a lovely thing indeed too! But surely there is more I hear you ask? Yes, there is and they're not always the same cars I'm glad to say: BMW M3 Nov 18 (38 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr BMW M3 Nov 18 (39 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr The Porsche fratenity turned up BMW M3 Nov 18 (45 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr Got to love a Norton! BMW M3 Nov 18 (46 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr That Gold 911 seems to be different! BMW M3 Nov 18 (52 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr BMW M3 Nov 18 (48 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr Ah, that would be why! So I was having a great time and gelling with the M3 once again now that I could drive it with the dust settled from unit movements (people coming in and out). However, those Kumho V70as weren't the grippiest of things in the cold! Sure, they are great on the boil, but during a freezing November, driving to work at 6am, it's not fun. The DSC light coming on and off and the twitchiness no matter if you turned the DSC on or off wasn't much fun. So I bottled it. Yup, I'd refit the old wheels. BMW M3 Nov 18 (57 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr Adios track wheels. You'll be back soon: BMW M3 Nov 18 (58 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr Thanfully, a rattle gun (once the nuts are cracked off) and a good jack make light work of switching the wheels about. BMW M3 Nov 18 (61 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr It's interesting to see the difference in arch filling. The 18s look a little odd as the profile of the tyres is a little off. The stock sizes are 225/45R18 and 255/40R18. Mine are 225/40R18 and 245/35R18. I'll live with these sizes for now but on the next set of tyres I'll get closer to the factory sizing. This is an interesting one. Comparing the tyres: BMW M3 Nov 18 (64 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr From left to right : A rear 19" Michelin Pilot Sport 4, a fron 19" Pilot Sport 4S and a front 18" Kumho. Yup, the tyre pickup was still coming off and causing some interesting noises on the dual carriageway everytime I drove to work! BMW M3 Nov 18 (65 of 67) by Charlieboy, on Flickr As always I inflated the tyres; Surprisingly the 19s lost a significant amount of pressure despite being stored for 2 months. Weird! The result? Despite the 19s" having summer tyres, it's a relief having more grip again and a set of much more progressive tyres in these conditions. It's just as well as this has now gone back to being a daily with the Merc out of action. Oddly, I've really gelled with it this time and am enjoing the moment! Hopefully it lasts!
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adam73bgt
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 4,975
Club RR Member Number: 58
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Nov 29, 2018 21:54:27 GMT
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ChasR I was heading on the way out of Leamington towards the A46, took a bit of an odd route as the Aygo needed fuel (not something I get to say often! ) I know what you mean about car mats though, one of the first things I bought for the Aygo was a set of Genuine Toyota Mats... (they were actually really reasonably priced)
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b3nson
Part of things
Posts: 886
Club RR Member Number: 22
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Nov 30, 2018 12:31:19 GMT
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Ah mats.. nothing frustrates me more than bad fitting mats! Glad to see you’ve got some good ones in there! Caffeine and Machine looks great, as i’ve moved more local (just over an hour away now) I really need to get over there one weekend.
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'99 Fiat Coupe 20V Turbo '08 Panda 100HP
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ChasR
RR Helper
motivation
Posts: 10,297
Club RR Member Number: 170
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BMW E46 M3 : That's the ticketChasR
@chasr
Club Retro Rides Member 170
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Dec 10, 2018 18:55:22 GMT
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Ah mats.. nothing frustrates me more than bad fitting mats! Glad to see you’ve got some good ones in there! Caffeine and Machine looks great, as i’ve moved more local (just over an hour away now) I really need to get over there one weekend. I may well organise a mini-meet TBH! However things are busy for me. Mainly down to my W124 not being ready yet and partly me coming down briefly with a horrible stomach bug; I wonder if the 2CV's exhaust leak was the cause of it ; it stunk of exhaust fumes in that cabin when I was driving it. I've bought a number of treats for the 2CV and fixes but until the W124 comes back I can't really take it to the unit to fix it. So as of now, the M3 is certainly earning its keep! At least it's a comfy way to do to do it! Maybe not quite as refined as the W124 but it is a good laugh! Speaking of which, it's about time I updated the other two threads. But what about the mats? It's been a couple of weeks with those mats. Despite the weather being curse word, they haven't stained and they haven't moved an inch. They certainly are a great set of mats for the car .
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ChasR
RR Helper
motivation
Posts: 10,297
Club RR Member Number: 170
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BMW E46 M3 : That's the ticketChasR
@chasr
Club Retro Rides Member 170
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I fitted Birds Autos B3 shocks and springs to my 325d E91 and it has transformed it. I see they do a lot of 135i's aswell. Might be worth asking for a drive ib their demo car I was meant to be reply to this back when I remembered! But I was stupidly busy! After all, at around that time, I was: -Taking on a new job, albeit a job I knew that would entail a steep learning curve going by a colleague I already knew there. Then there was the extra commuting every week on a few occasions. -Fixing IIRC 2 cars with unexpected issues. Sister's Saab need rear brake pads quickly, which didn't go as smoothly as planned due to her needing the car that weekend for a very good reason (rear slider bushes swelled and made getting the pins back in near impossible), mum's car needed an oil change, and the old man's car needed a brake caliper and discs and pads all round. -Preparing the 2CV in that mix while doing some family stuff with my sister (due to get married, next year, hence all of the business. -Doing last minute preparations for Spa -I had zero holiday over the year due to banking on taking it later on in the year. Naturally, when I took my new role, I 'lost' that holiday time. -I had the Merc to deal with. TBH it was the right car at the right time with hindsight. But dealing with a car that's not run for two years does give you its issues, which I've detailed in that thread. Yes, I know am sounding like a moaner, and my comments are partially laziness, but I did just fancy chilling for a while. I have a friend wanting to help me change a diff in his MX-5, and he's forgotten all of my cars need maintenance of sorts first! Knowing me, I'll probably help him out.... But, back on track. I've heard the same thing. The M135i is meant to be alot better with a diff upgrade and the Birds suspension. Do they have demonstrators, however?
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sonus
Europe
Posts: 1,391
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Dec 15, 2018 19:52:06 GMT
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ChasR I'd give Kevin Bird a call. He has been very helpfull dealing with me abroad. I do believe they wrote on their facebook page a while back that the had a demonstartor, but give them a call. i love my B3 set up, but would have loved it even more if it didn't lower the already low M-sport suspension.
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Current 1968 TVR VIXEN S1 V8 Prototype 2004 TVR T350C 2017 BMW 340i
Previous BMW 325d E91LCI - sold Alfa Romeo GTV - sold Citroen AX GT - at the breakers Ford Puma 1.7 - sold Volvo V50 2.0d - sold MGB GT - wrecked by fire MG ZT 1.8T - sold VW E-golf Electric - sold Mini Countryman 1.6D -sold Land Rover Discovery TD5 - sold
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ChasR
RR Helper
motivation
Posts: 10,297
Club RR Member Number: 170
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BMW E46 M3 : That's the ticketChasR
@chasr
Club Retro Rides Member 170
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Jan 17, 2019 20:00:26 GMT
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What's been the progress with this car? Honestly? Not alot. It may be the newest in the fleet but it's oddly not the lowest mileage of the fleet either, with it possibly being the highest! It's also not problem free as I've said before. But then most old things aren't . However I figured I would splash a bit of cash onto the car. After all, it was beginning to prove itself once more . Why? My brake pads are running low and I need an MOT soon! While tyres may be discussed here is one thing I've got for my brakes. M3 Pagid Pads by Charlieboy, on Flickr While I didn't find the brakes as bad as some do at tracks I always like an improvement in stopping power, and these should do the trick nicely! I was going to get RS29s just up front, but then I figured I may as well go all round. Round about then, the supplier in question convinced me to try the RST3s. I was apprehensive and thought about it for a while. So, yes, it will be interesting to see what the car is like on these!
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ChasR
RR Helper
motivation
Posts: 10,297
Club RR Member Number: 170
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BMW E46 M3 : That's the ticketChasR
@chasr
Club Retro Rides Member 170
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Jan 28, 2019 19:08:09 GMT
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So, the 2CV has been getting alot of atention from me, with the M3 seeming almost as if it has been forgotten about! While I am driving it, this is not the case! Why? I had an MOT to get! It passed but the tester sucked his teeth a little at the rear tyres! They around 2mm. I know I know! I'm pushing my luck! But then the car isn't driven as much as it once was, and I'll be honest, I'm in limbo as to what to do with the tyres! The way I see it, partly down to self-infliction, these are my choices: -Fit some new 255/35R19s on the rear : At £200 a corner fo a Michelin Pilot Sport 4/4S, this does get pricey! -Fit CSL sizes to the 19s ; they're around £160 a corner. But you do lose a little sidewall in addition to my fronts still having tons of tread 13,000 miles later. The other choice is to get my 18s out. They're legal, but the tyres are near useless in this weather being Kumho V70a medium compounds. What will happen? We shall see. I suspect I'll retire it out of action for a month or two and then put on/wear down the V70as. They're not quite the right size for the M3 ; the same money as the Michelins in the 19" sizes I can get Cup IIs (defying the point I know!), or Yoko AD08Rs. Goodyear Eagle F1s are almost £100 a corner, but tyre designs are getting limited without going over to track orientated designs. We shall see what I do. Speaking of track orientated cars, I ended up splashing even more cash before the MOT! But it's the RR way right? Mods come before the necessities? I am joking there! I've fancied upgrading the brakes. They weren't bad at Spa or on 30 minute taster sessions, but it's always nice to have an improvement. I'm talking about the Big Brake Kit (BBK) conversions, but I'll digress. Given what happened to me on the Escort RS Turbo, with the Wilwood vs. Sliding Cosworth Caliper setup , I took these as lessons learned, especially with how the 'terrible' brakes on Stags weren't too bad on my car, which we found why for why they were on most other cars (That's me and Roger Keys, the next owner of the car). So, let's get started. I saw my choices as follows: - Porsche Boxster setup ; this can be either on stock discs or CSL items. From my calculations, these run a significantly smaller Effective Piston Area (EPA) than a stock M3 caliper 4535mm2 vs. the M3's 5655mm2. Yes, they may flex less, but not enough to make up that kind of difference (what do the brake peeps reckon here? . Many people praise this setup, but I do also wonder how many of those cars ran the correct pads and not wrong compound but cheaper 330i pads which motor factors gladly sell to owners, in addition to the condition of the fluid in addition to the discs; most owners will skimp on the latter due to costs ; they're £160+ now thanks to market forces in the correct floating format. When The Boxster setup is around £700-800 to do with discs, adaptors, pads and lines, it will make more sense for people to change the lot in one go.
Some of you will say : change the master cylinder ; then I'll have to play with the rears. Boxster rears are similar to the front of a Boxster, due to a very different weight distribution etc. to the M3, so that solution will require more head scratching, and that's before you consider the DSC getting confused by things. - K Sports ; Some of these run a similar or larger disc area to the stock M3 setup and EPA, but there have been quality concerns with these. Pads also get much more expensive.
- AP Racing/'True' Brembo setups,Stoptech. An all round conversion can come to £3k+ ; way more than I am willing to spend on a car not worth alot. I know you can't put a price on brakes, but I want a mild improvement from what I am, not something huge ; maybe I'll regret saying that...
So I wanted what everyone did, the moon on a stick. But I was aware that compromises would have to be made. What would I do? Enter Stage Left: I paid more than I wished for on a set of brakes from a Z4 M. But why one of those? Simple ; they're the same brakes an M3 CSL came with. The differences? - Larger front Disc Area : These run 345mm vs. the stock 325m. So at least the looks will improve too!
- Larger Front Carriers : While the front calipers are the same, the carriers are larger to accomodate the front discs
- Larger rear piston area : these go up to 46mm vs. the factory 42mm ; There is no doubt this was done to redistribute the braking bias with the larger fronts
These came with nearly-new genuine discs which are in surprisingly amazing condition! These shall be kept for a rainy day! As for the fronts? They're lipped but not massively and they are still surprisingly well within tolerance. So I'll use those and replace when they finally die. When the Z4 M came out and the M3 CS (with the CSL brakes) the braking had more praise but the braking feel was criticised, especially on the CS cars. While I am sure part of it was down to a lack of 4 pot calipers and having to stop 1600kg of car I do wonder how much was down to the slider bushes. My sister's car improved massively with new slider bushes installed. Many owners have reported good results with the Brass slider bushings for the calipers. So, after a couple of beers one night, my poor judgement got the better of me and I ended up ordering a set of these: People say these can get dirtier due to being exposed but then the factory ones are also exposed. Furthermore, I tend to clean these anyway when the brake pads are changed, despite most people not doing this. My plan for comparisons is to do a few stops, possibly on the track where allowed as follows - Factory setup
- CSL setup with the pads it came with ; aftermarket pads, but not factory Textars
- The above with the Pagid RS pads
So, with the Pagid Racing pads and the modified CSL setup, will the brakes improve or will it be a waste of cash? Should I sell the setup and get setups that work for other people? Time will tell. But at least I'm making the car a little more different . As I said in the thread pauly22 started, I always want to do things to cars I've not owned ; I figured I may as well make it this one, without going too far obviously and compromising it for road use.
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Last Edit: Jan 28, 2019 19:14:08 GMT by ChasR
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adam73bgt
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 4,975
Club RR Member Number: 58
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Jan 28, 2019 22:23:20 GMT
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Interested to see how you get on with the brass bushings, they should help add a bit of caliper stiffness but you'll possibly still be a fair bit off an opposed piston caliper (although not all oppo calipers are created equal! some are not very stiff at all, interestingly some Wilwoods aren't thought too highly of at work in this regard ) For the Porsche setup, would you have used standard M3 discs or CSL's? I seem to recall you can use either? (Had looked at adapting this setup onto the E34) The piston area may be smaller but the effective radius will likely be bigger if using the CSL discs, which coupled with increased caliper stiffness over the standard calipers (plus probably better pads) could explain why people like it over the standard brakes.
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Last Edit: Jan 28, 2019 22:24:22 GMT by adam73bgt
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ChasR
RR Helper
motivation
Posts: 10,297
Club RR Member Number: 170
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BMW E46 M3 : That's the ticketChasR
@chasr
Club Retro Rides Member 170
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Jan 28, 2019 23:13:11 GMT
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Interested to see how you get on with the brass bushings, they should help add a bit of caliper stiffness but you'll possibly still be a fair bit off an opposed piston caliper (although not all oppo calipers are created equal! some are not very stiff at all, interestingly some Wilwoods aren't thought too highly of at work in this regard ) For the Porsche setup, would you have used standard M3 discs or CSL's? I seem to recall you can use either? (Had looked at adapting this setup onto the E34) The piston area may be smaller but the effective radius will likely be bigger if using the CSL discs, which coupled with increased caliper stiffness over the standard calipers (plus probably better pads) could explain why people like it over the standard brakes. People use both . I'm intrigued too. I know Sam Robinson used them on his M3 with him running a BBK up front but stock calipers on the rear. He seemed to be pleased with the results as some other folk. But I suspect I'll kill off the set on the car first. As you saw, the front discs while OK, won't go back on the car again ; they won't be long for this world after a track day; I'm really surprised I didn't kill them at Spa. they began to fade a little later on in the day but they did keep on going, albeit I did nurse/brake on a couple of times as you can tell from the video . For the Boxster setup I'd have gone with CSL discs ; after all the adaptors are the same money, but the discs are the same price ; £150+ each, so it's almost a no brainer to go wih the Boxster items. I did think what you said was the case, in addition to potentially the 330i pads being used and potential overbraking now being 'aided' by theoretically less braking. Worst case scenario, I guess I can always sell the carriers off. I'll have the larger calipers on the back to work with other calipers anyway. We shall see indeed. This of course depends on my patience to run the differing setups .
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ChasR
RR Helper
motivation
Posts: 10,297
Club RR Member Number: 170
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BMW E46 M3 : That's the ticketChasR
@chasr
Club Retro Rides Member 170
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A ) what is that radio? B ) if you have INPA on a laptop, it actually bleeds the brakes automatically for you! It’s amazing! Hello stranger! Is all well? The radio is a Sony XAV-AX100. It's pretty good to be fair, and lately I've been using the car more because of it. Yes, I know I'll pile on more miles onto the car, but that HU has added another dimension of usability to it. Some manufacturers are happy to announce that their cars have CarPlay and Android Auto now installed from 2019. This one had it last year . I bought it as I wanted CarPlay, but Android Auto for if I ever changed phones in the future. However, I'll have to potentially pull the head unit out for some wiring work. Why? I plan to potentially change from Apple CarPlay to Android Auto ; yup, I'm debating getting rid of my fruit phone! What's the downside? My HU currently doesn't have the handbrake cable attached ; I've never need to have it attached. However, when I tried an Android phone on my setup, it wouldn't work ;(. It seems that permanently earthing the cable will not outsmart Android Auto either ; there have been some people out there who have installed switches etc. on and will manually change the switch to keep Android Auto happy! Ultimately, it needs a true handbrake source. I'm hoping that I don't have to tear down the centre console to fit this cable, but we shall see. At the moment, that is one point to Apple CarPlay! As for your second point, you're dead right! You also bleed out the ABS pump that way, which in other cars can be pretty tricky to bleed out. As someone told me a while back, the E46 is a reasonable car to work on to be fair.
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