Maytag: The Alpine '87 529i

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geordi
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by geordi »

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Maytag and Cupcake should mate… what are your stud fees?
bkbimmer
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by bkbimmer »

cek wrote:Someday I'm going to upgrade the headlights in Maytag with Vlad's old Cibies. I pulled them apart and cleaned the insides of the lenses. The glass is pitted but they still work great.

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I'm forming a collection of stuff to be powder coated, mostly for the blue car. Once I have enough pieces to make a trip to the powder coat place worth it, I'll get the buckets done. The ones on Maytag are pretty rusty.

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You should buy my car for a parts car.
LuckyHenriksen
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by LuckyHenriksen »

Great thread! I've really enjoyed reading through all the work you've done on this car
tig
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by tig »

I found my head! I've had a search going on CL for a while for a good 885 head and I finally hit the jackpot.

Just a few thousand on it (supposedly) since rebuild. E30 guy who met me in his jacked up Tacoma with big 'murican flag in the back. Really nice kid who works at Boeing. Had built his ultimate E30 325i and then got it crunched. My gain.

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He included the intake and valve cover, which I don't need.
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I noticed this on the head. Any idea what it means? It looks like it's glued on.
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For a little extra $ he threw these in:
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I have no idea if these 130mm rods are any good. Thoughts?

I'd like to get the exterior of the head, and the combustion chambers cleaned up. Any tips/techniques for doing so. I'm assuming it's be a bad idea to use soap and water...don't wan the camshaft etc... to start rusting.

Now I'm either going to find a nice donor bottom end or rebuild the Seta bottom end I have sitting on the stand from the parts car.
Kyle in NO
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by Kyle in NO »

The little glued on tag is a machine shop stamp. Basically means a shop has gone thru the head and rebuilt it.
tig
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by tig »

Kyle in NO wrote:The little glued on tag is a machine shop stamp. Basically means a shop has gone thru the head and rebuilt it.
Any significance to the "HT250"? I thought maybe it had something to how much the head might have been decked or something.

On that topic, is there any way of easily telling that?
wkohler
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by wkohler »

The depth of the divots in the head will tell you how much it's been decked.
cddallara
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by cddallara »

Mi gusto taco grande!
tig
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by tig »

Jeebus, it looks I stole these rods. $417?
http://www.maxspeedingrods.com/index.ph ... Series+E28

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Motivating me to tear down that block and rebuild it.
1st 5er
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by 1st 5er »

You reap what you sow.
ldsbeaker
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by ldsbeaker »

Bought the same brand rods for the M30/M90 hybrid. They look okay to me...
If'n I could just find a couple lumps of metal to go on the fire end....
tig
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by tig »

The seller reached out to me today to let me know he just realized he mis-priced the rods. Since I didn't know what they were until I got home (I assumed I was buying a new set of OE rods) I felt bad that he'd made such a costly mistake. We worked it out. I still got a killer deal.
stoney
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by stoney »

Just finished reading this thread, and for the first topic to go through, I'm amazed and impressed at the detail and effort you have put into this car.

Very motivating.

Keep up the good work.

Now to find another spare day to read about Vlad
stoney
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by stoney »

I finished reading this topic, now realising I have opened up about ten more browser tabs on other topics you have started....
lizard
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by lizard »

cek, thank you for taking the time to post details on this and your other threads. All your efforts will help many other e28 enthusiasts!
tig
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by tig »

It warms my heart knowing I'm enabling others to not get the sleep they need, procrastinate on doing the things they should be doing, and to get even more passionate about inanimate material objects. Others did it to me, so I'm happy to give back. :-)
leadphut
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by leadphut »

cek wrote:It warms my heart knowing I'm enabling others to not get the sleep they need, procrastinate on doing the things they should be doing, and to get even more passionate about inanimate material objects. Others did it to me, so I'm happy to give back. :-)
That's not what I meant when I said I read your threads when I can't sleep.
2 5's and a 7
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by 2 5's and a 7 »

Kyle in NO wrote:The little glued on tag is a machine shop stamp. Basically means a shop has gone thru the head and rebuilt it.
Thats a heat tab............if the center is melted out they won't warranty their part.......they know you've overheated it.
wkohler
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by wkohler »

Yep. It should melt at 250°. Those have saved the ass of many rebuilders.
Karl Grau
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by Karl Grau »

wkohler wrote:Yep. It should melt at 250°. Those have saved the ass of many rebuilders.
Interesting. I learn something new every four to six weeks.
ldsbeaker
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by ldsbeaker »

Karl Grau wrote:
wkohler wrote:Yep. It should melt at 250°. Those have saved the ass of many rebuilders.
Interesting. I learn something new every four to six weeks.
Me, three!
2 5's and a 7
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by 2 5's and a 7 »

I've been putting them on Used Engines and heads for 25 years...........or well I have someone do it for me.
Mike W.
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by Mike W. »

ldsbeaker wrote:
Karl Grau wrote:
wkohler wrote:Yep. It should melt at 250°. Those have saved the ass of many rebuilders.
Interesting. I learn something new every four to six weeks.
Me, three!
That makes at least 4 of us now.

Of course I would think being warped into the shape of a banana would be enough proof by itself, not to mention antifreeze and a conventional cap raises boiling point to ~275 and the crazy 2 bar caps on later cars pushes it up to around 300, suggesting you could get it pretty hot without a boil over. :dunno:

I'm still banking on the banana shape to tell me if it's been overheated or not. :D
2 5's and a 7
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by 2 5's and a 7 »

Stupid question on the e to i conversion.......since your lowering the compression. Couldn't you advance the timing? that's what we did in the early 80's on low compression SBC's.
tig
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Re: Maytag: The Alpine '87 528e Bench Player

Post by tig »

(This is one of those "I've done light diagnostics but haven't had time to really dig in. I'm procrastinating at work, so I figured I'd ask to see anyone had ever seen this one before and knew the obvious solution" posts).

Yesterday everything (apparently) that goes through fuse 9 stopped working. RHS front and rear marker lights, dash lights, license plate lights. Check panel indicates the problem (all 3 indicators are lit).

Replaced fuse, cleaned contacts, jiggled fuse, etc... Still no worky.

I'll put a voltmeter on fuse 9 asap to see for sure, but this has either got to be a supply issue (something broke between the light switch (pin 3) and fuse 9) or something broke 'after' fuse 9 (the GY/WT wire).

My suspicion right now is it's in the switch.
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