But wait BS, wouldn't it go from page 28 to 33 instead?Blue Shadow wrote: Aug 25, 2024 8:19 PM Longer section of each inner sleeve faces center of car. From the BMW manual page 33-28
And so it starts, Maeve
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
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Re: And so it starts, Maeve
Well it would except the chapter starts on page 576 or something on the pdf as mentioned in the table of contents.gwb72tii wrote: Aug 25, 2024 11:12 PMBut wait BS, wouldn't it go from page 28 to 33 instead?Blue Shadow wrote: Aug 25, 2024 8:19 PM Longer section of each inner sleeve faces center of car. From the BMW manual page 33-28
Dang Germans, can't try to figure em out. but I guess section 33 is the rear axle in all their manuals.
Last edited by Blue Shadow on Aug 26, 2024 8:50 AM, edited 1 time in total.
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
He said page, not pages...
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
I know, I know, it's just that I was sitting here in Whistler, B.C, after a great dinner with nothing to do so I thought I'd try to keep BS honest, lol, and wound up stubbing my toe.
And if you've never been to Whistler in the summer its one of the great places to visit.
And if you've never been to Whistler in the summer its one of the great places to visit.
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Re: And so it starts, Maeve
I like the road sign on the way up 99 the coast road before going inland to Whistler that announced M Creek, one on each end of the bridge.gwb72tii wrote: Aug 26, 2024 10:38 AM
And if you've never been to Whistler in the summer its one of the great places to visit.
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Vanco ... FQAw%3D%3D
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
No progress the last week, we were in Whistler BC for fun. If you've never been, lot's to do if you like the outdoors. We e-biked for the first time, and went across the suspension bridge at the top of Whistler. Everyone is happy in Whistler, strangers will stop to assist you with a smile, could not be better. Great food, something we care aboot (see what I did there?). And then a free concert in Olympic Plaza. Good times.
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Re: And so it starts, Maeve
Did you have to preload the suspension before torquing down the TA bushing bolts/nuts?
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
Haven't gotten that far yet. My car has been on my lift for a long time as most of the time it would be my wife and I trying to push it back on if I rolled it off. Plus the old motor is out and the new one is not yet in.
edit: just re-read your post. Which trailing arm bushings do you mean? I know about the front suspension but have not read/heard about the rear?
edit: just re-read your post. Which trailing arm bushings do you mean? I know about the front suspension but have not read/heard about the rear?
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Re: And so it starts, Maeve
I just meant the trailing arm itself -where it attaches to the subframe. I was not sure if the rear suspension needs to be preloaded before the bolts on the trailing arms are torqued down.
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
I'm not aware of any loading necessary for the rear trailing arm bushings.
Maybe someone smarter than me can chime in and educate us.
Maybe someone smarter than me can chime in and educate us.
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
On to the dirty work. Cleaning up 36 years of dirt, game and oil:
The transmission tunnel as well. The firewall insulation is dried out and cracking:
The transmission tunnel as well. The firewall insulation is dried out and cracking:
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Re: And so it starts, Maeve
Interesting thread!
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
slow progress but going to work on the car all day tomorrow.
Cleaned up the oil filter assembly. It was caked in dried up oil and grease. Elbow grease, brake cleaner and aluminum alloy cleaner cleaned it pretty nicely. If Maeve was going to be concours I'd have the assembly bead or sand blasted back to new aluminum, but Maeve will be a daily driver.
More tomorrow.
Cleaned up the oil filter assembly. It was caked in dried up oil and grease. Elbow grease, brake cleaner and aluminum alloy cleaner cleaned it pretty nicely. If Maeve was going to be concours I'd have the assembly bead or sand blasted back to new aluminum, but Maeve will be a daily driver.
More tomorrow.
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
Kind of a long day cleaning aluminum bits like the intake manifold, alternator bracket, etc.
I went to Harbor Freight and bought soda for my cheap ass sand blaster. it's one of those hose end attachments with a smallish media reservoir on top, all of about $30 on Amazon. The soda does a nice job of cleaning all the assorted crap that found its way onto the manifold over the past 35 years. I'll post pics later, but the manifold looks great.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CJNNJKFF?re ... asin_title
I'm thinking I should go buy a lotto ticket. We drove the car from Mesa, AZ to the great PNW, and then parked it and started the disassembly for paint and mechanical refresh. I have found numerous bits either worn out or damaged that, if they failed, they would have stranded us on the way north. The most recent is the gasket for the oil filter assembly. Interesting that BMW has 3 different designs due to updates on the block design over time (I assume). I took the oil filter assembly off the old motor, and it had the wrong gasket. Oh well, the new motor now has the correct gasket. Pretty lucky the motor didn't pack it in at some point when we were cruising along at 70mph.
I went to Harbor Freight and bought soda for my cheap ass sand blaster. it's one of those hose end attachments with a smallish media reservoir on top, all of about $30 on Amazon. The soda does a nice job of cleaning all the assorted crap that found its way onto the manifold over the past 35 years. I'll post pics later, but the manifold looks great.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CJNNJKFF?re ... asin_title
I'm thinking I should go buy a lotto ticket. We drove the car from Mesa, AZ to the great PNW, and then parked it and started the disassembly for paint and mechanical refresh. I have found numerous bits either worn out or damaged that, if they failed, they would have stranded us on the way north. The most recent is the gasket for the oil filter assembly. Interesting that BMW has 3 different designs due to updates on the block design over time (I assume). I took the oil filter assembly off the old motor, and it had the wrong gasket. Oh well, the new motor now has the correct gasket. Pretty lucky the motor didn't pack it in at some point when we were cruising along at 70mph.
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
Gradual progress; removing, cleaning and installing old parts from the previous motor onto the new motor.
And the soda medium cleaned the intake manifold nicely. But as is common, the old intake manifold gaskets stuck to the manifold, so no other choice but to scrape with a box cutter blade and then 400 grit sand paper.
And the soda medium cleaned the intake manifold nicely. But as is common, the old intake manifold gaskets stuck to the manifold, so no other choice but to scrape with a box cutter blade and then 400 grit sand paper.
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
This is basically my day today, continuing to clean 35+ years of dirt, oil and grime. This is the battery tray where crap collects, plus you can see the results of a leaky power steering pump. This crap is hard to get off:
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
I have all this room and time to do the blade fuse upgrade, but thinking I should wait until I get the new motor in and running so I can tell if I do it correctly.Galahad wrote: Aug 14, 2024 1:05 AMYou're installing such a nice motor next to a fuse box with zip ties? When's that getting upgraded to match?gwb72tii wrote: Aug 13, 2024 3:16 PM ...
Next step is cleaning a very dirty engine bay before installing the new motor:
Project looks great, excited to see the engine go in.
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
Indeed, I would wait. You kind of want to do one major thing at a time so if something doesn't work, you have a better idea of why. Not that I've always ascribed to that theory, but I think it's a good one.gwb72tii wrote: Nov 23, 2024 8:23 PM
I have all this room and time to do the blade fuse upgrade, but thinking I should wait until I get the new motor in and running so I can tell if I do it correctly.
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Re: And so it starts, Maeve
You are complaining about the nice, metal battery tray when we have folks here that don't have any metal in that area? This is a more count your blessings than a pita.gwb72tii wrote: Nov 23, 2024 8:14 PM This is basically my day today, continuing to clean 35+ years of dirt, oil and grime. This is the battery tray where crap collects, plus you can see the results of a leaky power steering pump. This crap is hard to get off:
Use chemicals. That stuff will come right off.
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
There was so much shit caked on there would be no way for battery acid to eat into he metal lol
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
AS BS suggested, a little elbow grease and chemicals. Looks better.
And I'm pretty much done with transferring bits from the old motor to the new motor. Next weekend it finds its forever home in the engine bay:
And I'm pretty much done with transferring bits from the old motor to the new motor. Next weekend it finds its forever home in the engine bay:
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
Not a bad idea, messing with multiple things at once can cause problemsgwb72tii wrote: Nov 23, 2024 8:23 PMI have all this room and time to do the blade fuse upgrade, but thinking I should wait until I get the new motor in and running so I can tell if I do it correctly.Galahad wrote: Aug 14, 2024 1:05 AM
You're installing such a nice motor next to a fuse box with zip ties? When's that getting upgraded to match?
Project looks great, excited to see the engine go in.
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
Tomorrow is the day! Torque the flywheel bolts, install the pressure plate and clutch, add the tranny and then get the entire assembly in the car.
Re: And so it starts, Maeve
Here is a pic of the injectors that came with the car, 27lb Ford. These will be replaced with stock spec new Bosch injectors.
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Re: And so it starts, Maeve
5.0L Mustang injectors are what I used with the Euro cam - ran great!