What did you do to your E28 today?
Drained the rear diff fluid to correct "level", as it was slightly overfilled just before it was mounted back on the car, hence the input seal weepage.......(I hope that's the reason!)
Replaced all the parking/turn bulbs with 'MisterFixIt' upgraded bulbs......noticeably brighter!
Replaced the front foglight glass lenses with nearly new (uncracked) ones.
Shot DeOxit into all electrical connections and finished it off with Bulb (Dielectric) Grease......freebie from Autozone.
Drove it. Hard. To 112 MPH. Then went home
Replaced all the parking/turn bulbs with 'MisterFixIt' upgraded bulbs......noticeably brighter!
Replaced the front foglight glass lenses with nearly new (uncracked) ones.
Shot DeOxit into all electrical connections and finished it off with Bulb (Dielectric) Grease......freebie from Autozone.
Drove it. Hard. To 112 MPH. Then went home
Busy, busy couple of days.
Yesterday, I had the M5 brackets welded onto the frame rails and he found a pair of the plates leftover from an E36 kit that also used the Energy Suspension bushings, so that's all done. Then, welded the LR bumper bracket back together, so I could reinstall the rear bumper. Also put in new UCAs with urethane bushings (UBER MEGA AWESOME).
Then, I decided to see what was up with my drivers seat. The inner thigh bolster popped away from the frame, so I figured I'd need to have that welded. Unfortunately, there was a lot of flexing if I had the rear of the seat at any height other than the lowest, so I pulled the seat out and started disassembling it. Within 45 minutes I had it completely disassembled without leather, foam, etc and saw that the base cracked down the middle on each side. So, I took it in this morning to have it repaired and reinforced. Got it back around noon and started reassembly at around 5pm. By 6:30, I was happily motoring again and everything works perfectly.
Next up: Brake pads.
Yesterday, I had the M5 brackets welded onto the frame rails and he found a pair of the plates leftover from an E36 kit that also used the Energy Suspension bushings, so that's all done. Then, welded the LR bumper bracket back together, so I could reinstall the rear bumper. Also put in new UCAs with urethane bushings (UBER MEGA AWESOME).
Then, I decided to see what was up with my drivers seat. The inner thigh bolster popped away from the frame, so I figured I'd need to have that welded. Unfortunately, there was a lot of flexing if I had the rear of the seat at any height other than the lowest, so I pulled the seat out and started disassembling it. Within 45 minutes I had it completely disassembled without leather, foam, etc and saw that the base cracked down the middle on each side. So, I took it in this morning to have it repaired and reinforced. Got it back around noon and started reassembly at around 5pm. By 6:30, I was happily motoring again and everything works perfectly.
Next up: Brake pads.
-
- Posts: 4163
- Joined: Feb 12, 2006 12:00 PM
- Location: Richmond, VA
-
- Posts: 6135
- Joined: Aug 05, 2007 4:57 PM
- Location: 24477
-
- Posts: 1915
- Joined: Apr 13, 2008 3:22 PM
- Location: Frisco, TX
- Contact:
-
- Posts: 1323
- Joined: Feb 12, 2006 12:00 PM
-
- Posts: 2069
- Joined: Sep 30, 2008 10:32 PM
- Location: Jax, FL
Swapped out the 19lb injectors which were running way too rich and replaced originals. Car runs better than ever.
Waiting for Brody to send chip for 19lb injectors and will try them again when I finally install the Miller MAF.
Began troubleshooting sudden flakiness in tach. Cleaned and retightened valve cover ground strap, checked other grounds, rolled fuses. The search continues....
Waiting for Brody to send chip for 19lb injectors and will try them again when I finally install the Miller MAF.
Began troubleshooting sudden flakiness in tach. Cleaned and retightened valve cover ground strap, checked other grounds, rolled fuses. The search continues....
-
- Posts: 6135
- Joined: Aug 05, 2007 4:57 PM
- Location: 24477
Had my son drive it to the inlaws' house about an hour away. Told him to keep it under 100; he said he did, but he got there a lot quicker than I did in the 735!
That is a great fix, isn't it. I did the same a while back; it's great to be able to shift without the lever hitting the console!Xenocide wrote:Just replaced all the shift bushings last night. The shifter's tight as hell now, I'd almost forgotten what it felt like
Over the course of Fri/Sat/Sun:
-Replaced stock injectors (196K) with Cruzin rebuilt set
-Replaced CSV with new one (son of a f@cking bitch job!)
-Replaced FPR with new one
-Replaced all rubber fuel lines in engine bay
-Replaced valve cover gasket with new dealer one
-Adjusted wiper track 'north' on the AFM
-Cleaned/lubricated ICV and TB
-Readjusted throttle plate clearance and TPS
-Sprayed DeOxit into all above electrical connections
My cold start is still crappy, my idle is still lumpy, but I'm happy to report that the engine is smoother than ever, has more pep and is much more tractable, i.e. the overall drivability has greatly improved.
Next on the agenda: Fuel pressure testing (cold start problem) and propane gas sleuthing (idle problem, aside from fixing my known 'farting' leak at the manifold-to-downpipe gasket).
I love to tinker with these older, simpler machines. Proper perspective is needed, as mentioned recently in the M5/M535i forum, because you dont want to be overwhelmed with the 'what the hell is wrong with it now' syndrome. It is a learning experience, from which your DIY skills will only improve.
Great website.......thanks to all contributors!
Ed
-Replaced stock injectors (196K) with Cruzin rebuilt set
-Replaced CSV with new one (son of a f@cking bitch job!)
-Replaced FPR with new one
-Replaced all rubber fuel lines in engine bay
-Replaced valve cover gasket with new dealer one
-Adjusted wiper track 'north' on the AFM
-Cleaned/lubricated ICV and TB
-Readjusted throttle plate clearance and TPS
-Sprayed DeOxit into all above electrical connections
My cold start is still crappy, my idle is still lumpy, but I'm happy to report that the engine is smoother than ever, has more pep and is much more tractable, i.e. the overall drivability has greatly improved.
Next on the agenda: Fuel pressure testing (cold start problem) and propane gas sleuthing (idle problem, aside from fixing my known 'farting' leak at the manifold-to-downpipe gasket).
I love to tinker with these older, simpler machines. Proper perspective is needed, as mentioned recently in the M5/M535i forum, because you dont want to be overwhelmed with the 'what the hell is wrong with it now' syndrome. It is a learning experience, from which your DIY skills will only improve.
Great website.......thanks to all contributors!
Ed
Saturday on the $500 Beat Her:
- pulled the godawful sunroof wind deflector (that thing was giving me shingles just thinking about it)
- properly secured rear center console piece (now I can pull the e-brake without the console moving with it)
- put in a new plastic cage so that I have a cig lighter for my radar detector
- tried to put in a radio, got it powered up, it ate my Eminem CD, but refused to play or eject it. Thought I wired it correctly...
- and found almost a dollar's worth of spare change. (right to the ash tray!)
slow and steady...
a ROLLING project. a ROLLING project... etc.
- pulled the godawful sunroof wind deflector (that thing was giving me shingles just thinking about it)
- properly secured rear center console piece (now I can pull the e-brake without the console moving with it)
- put in a new plastic cage so that I have a cig lighter for my radar detector
- tried to put in a radio, got it powered up, it ate my Eminem CD, but refused to play or eject it. Thought I wired it correctly...
- and found almost a dollar's worth of spare change. (right to the ash tray!)
slow and steady...
a ROLLING project. a ROLLING project... etc.