What did you do to your other car(s) today?

General conversations about BMW E28s and the people who own them.
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mechacode
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Post by mechacode »

davintosh wrote: I hate the thought of sticking a pickle fork in there & ripping up a perfectly good ball joint boot. A pitman arm puller might work if I can find one that has the right gap between the arms. But dang; you wouldn't think it'd be this much of a pain to get two stoopid ball joints loose. :roll:

Have you considered slotting a washer, sliding that in between to protect the rubber boot, so the fork will be rubbing against two metal surfaces instead of the rubber?
mtnman533
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Joined: Oct 02, 2008 6:59 PM
Location: Los Gatos, CA

Post by mtnman533 »

Found and fixed a short that was blowing my brake light fuse.

Before fix, the clutch would short on the tab where the brake light switch wire joined. You would think caterham would notice something like this in R&D... Had this happened during a race, that'd be one stupid black flag to get.
Image

After, quick rotation, fixed the issue, no more shorting, and my brake lights work!
Image
davintosh
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Post by davintosh »

djazz wrote:
davintosh wrote:Went to work on changing the lower control arm bushings on my son's Civic on Saturday, and we're stuck trying to get the stupid arm off of the ball joint. Grrr. I've beat on it with everything short of a long-handle sledgehammer, hit it with BFHs from both sides, heated it up with a torch, cussed at it, growled at it, but it refuses to pop. We've also tried getting a gear puller & steering wheel puller to do the job, but they can't get a decent grip on the control arm. I've checked several places looking for a lever-type ball joint separator... Nothing locally. I've borrowed the tool before from one of the Advance Auto shops in town, but their kit is out on loan right now...
Is Harbor Freight nearby? They carry them... and at single use prices too! Wear safety glasses. The first one I bought snapped like it was made of pot metal. Oh wait, it is. Got the job done though. And harbor freight took it back for replacement as I had purchased it that day.
Nope; no Harbor Freight. Northern Tools opened a store here recently, but they don't carry much for automotive tools, and didn't have that one. We did manage to track down a set of tie rod tools at an O'Reilly's store on the other side of town, and ended up using one of these to get it out:

Image
mechacode wrote:
davintosh wrote: I hate the thought of sticking a pickle fork in there & ripping up a perfectly good ball joint boot. A pitman arm puller might work if I can find one that has the right gap between the arms. But dang; you wouldn't think it'd be this much of a pain to get two stoopid ball joints loose. :roll:
Have you considered slotting a washer, sliding that in between to protect the rubber boot, so the fork will be rubbing against two metal surfaces instead of the rubber?
No; hadn't thought of that. :oops: Must tuck that idea away for future reference though. Thanks!

We finally got the car buttoned up and out of the garage last night. He had bought new bushings locally (~$130 with his student discount!) and was planning to press the old ones out and the new ones in, but he discovered that he could order decent quality refurbished control arms with the bushings already in for less money than he paid for the bushings alone. Go figure. The CAs came in on Monday but between school and work and everything else, last night was the first opportunity we had to finish up. All's well that ends well I guess.
cddallara
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Joined: Apr 03, 2010 8:45 AM
Location: Lagunitas, Ca

Post by cddallara »

Opened up my box o' shocks from thebmwpartstore.com only to find the (2) glass hatch shocks.
:confused:

Called them, as all 6 (hood, glass, and hatch) were circled on the invoice (as if they were all boxed together).

Mike said: "No worries, I'll deal with UPS on this and get a replacement order out asap."

I wondered because the box was ~30" long and had 6" shocks in it. :lol: I guess the others fell out somewhere along the way.

I can't wait to not prop the hatch/glass up with my head!

so i guess i didnt do anything to it! :lol:
1st 5er
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Post by 1st 5er »

cddallara wrote:... box o' shocks...
Glad ours all currently work. ;)
davintosh
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Post by davintosh »

Got a nice profit sharing check at work yesterday, so I ordered some Bilstein HDs for the e32 today! :banana:
Mark 88/M5 Houston
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Post by Mark 88/M5 Houston »

Put new wiper blades on the Tacoma. Glad I did as I had a 40 mile commute this morning in the rain.
MicahO
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Joined: Jan 07, 2010 7:50 AM
Location: Warwick, NY

Post by MicahO »

Looking back at fuel use and maintenance on the ZHP, I realize that I have done 20,000 miles in that car in the past 361 days. Dayamn! It wasn't even the car that went back and forth to Florida (twice) or out and back to Iowa. That's a lot of miles....
cddallara
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Post by cddallara »

+ side: got the wood trim for my driver side glovebox

- side: found out Pi discontinued their e34 shocks/struts.

Looks like Paul wins, gonna go Spax to match the springs...
Mike W.
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Post by Mike W. »

Lets see.

Changed the MAF on the E39 with great success.

Dressed up the shoes on the driver E12, polished the rims, cleaned and waxed the centers and dressed the tires. Adjusted toe as it was twitchy and wearing out the insides of the tires.

Loosely bolted up the cat on the project E12.

A productive day for a change. :up:
a
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Post by a »

I've got the trans and shafts out of the Ranger, finally. I have it in a tent and work on it for an hour or so after work. After I deal with all the broken stuff and frame rot, I will replace the clutch . pressure plate and slave. I have low expectations, it is a rusty old Ford . Its one saving grace, is that it was waaay cheaper than a rusty old Tacoma.
The truck is a friggen joke. It is a marvel of low ball engineering. The slave cylinder/ throw out bearing saves about a buck over the traditional clutch fork . At the cost of a tranny R+R down the road. What car companies should do is to give their bean counters a tool box and orders to R+R components and deal with repairing what they cheaped out on. Yah, like that is gonna happen. Car makers have no desire to make their products easy to fix. Bad for business. It is just a lucky accident the E28s are easy to work on. Not enough robots?

My 60s bugs were hand constructed by happy Germans using "goot Cherman schteel " . So was the E28, though to a lesser extent.. The Rangers were assembled in St. Paul by Norwegian bachelor farmers. NOT!
davintosh
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Post by davintosh »

a wrote:... What car companies should do is to give their bean counters a tool box and orders to R+R components and deal with repairing what they cheaped out on. Yah, like that is gonna happen. Car makers have no desire to make their products easy to fix. Bad for business. It is just a lucky accident the E28s are easy to work on. Not enough robots?
Making them hard to fix helps guarantee an income stream for the stealerships too, Andy. ;)
a wrote:My 60s bugs were hand constructed by happy Germans using "goot Cherman schteel " . So was the E28, though to a lesser extent.. The Rangers were assembled in St. Paul by Norwegian bachelor farmers. NOT!
Not indeed! More like they were assembled by the spoiled brat nephews or bastard sons of Norwegian bachelor farmers. I've known Norwegian bachelor farmers and they have more pride in their work than what's shown on the average stRanger. True story; I used to work with a guy who had two uncles that were genuine Norwegian bachelor farmers. We went to their farmplace one Sunday to do some skeet shooting, and this place just blew me away. They had a skeet thrower set up in the yard that would throw the targets out toward the fields, over the tree grove. The trees in that direction had all been 'trimmed' over the years by all the shooting so there was a distinct dip in the shape of the grove when viewed from a distance. In the machine shed they had all manner of antique tractors (even steam-powered), cars , trucks, Wisconsin motors, etc... that they had picked up for a song & rebuilt over a lifetime of winters. It was amazing... You would've loved the place, Andy.

Boy, I guess this should've gone to The Thread Of Randomness.
cddallara
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Post by cddallara »

Glass shocks:
Image
Painted kidneys:
Image
Sticker:
Image

Also tucked the defroster wire back into its groove at the top of the back window, added some silly cone, hopefully it stays this time.
Greg E34
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Location: The Dirty Dime

Post by Greg E34 »

cddallara wrote:Glass shocks:
Image
Painted kidneys:
Image
Sticker:
Image

Also tucked the defroster wire back into its groove at the top of the back window, added some silly cone, hopefully it stays this time.
Looking good!
Mab1957
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Joined: May 14, 2010 1:33 PM
Location: Northern Virginia, USA

Post by Mab1957 »

Finished 2 weekends worth of work on the e30:
Timing Belt
Waterpump
Alternator
Belts
Hoses
Plugs, rotor, cap
Filters and fluids
Image
jhall
Posts: 909
Joined: Feb 16, 2007 11:15 PM
Location: Albany IL, 61230

Post by jhall »

Began chasing an SES light on my wife's e53 x5. I'm getting misfire codes all over the place and a random poor running condition. Whenever I run into problems like this on my non-e28 vehicles it makes me appreciate this forum so much more.
winfred
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Post by winfred »

dewatered the carb on my craftsman riding lawnmower and got it running like a champ again after it sitting long enough for it to start growing fur, step dad managed to install water somehow then i find out months later that it doesn't run :roll:
rmiddendorf
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Post by rmiddendorf »

jhall wrote:Began chasing an SES light on my wife's e53 x5. I'm getting misfire codes all over the place and a random poor running condition. Whenever I run into problems like this on my non-e28 vehicles it makes me appreciate this forum so much more.
What engine does it have? My N52 in my E90 threw a code and started running rough. It was a misfire in cylinder #5 and a call to my shop revealed that it was likely a coil. I replaced the coil and Voila!, problem solved. Just tossing it out there.
winfred
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Post by winfred »

most common m52tu/m54 issues are air leaks

drain hose from oil separator to bottom of dipstick tube rotting off, ruptured oil separator, dead coil, intake manifold adjuster, dieing maf or cracked lower air boot

plus if its close to 100k miles it may want its plugs changed, they usually go the full 100k but i have seen them start misfiring at just over 90k (the ngk's are wayyyyyyyy better then the bosch)
jhall wrote:Began chasing an SES light on my wife's e53 x5. I'm getting misfire codes all over the place and a random poor running condition. Whenever I run into problems like this on my non-e28 vehicles it makes me appreciate this forum so much more.
jhall
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Post by jhall »

winfred wrote:most common m52tu/m54 issues are air leaks

drain hose from oil separator to bottom of dipstick tube rotting off, ruptured oil separator, dead coil, intake manifold adjuster, dieing maf or cracked lower air boot

plus if its close to 100k miles it may want its plugs changed, they usually go the full 100k but i have seen them start misfiring at just over 90k (the ngk's are wayyyyyyyy better then the bosch)
jhall wrote:Began chasing an SES light on my wife's e53 x5. I'm getting misfire codes all over the place and a random poor running condition. Whenever I run into problems like this on my non-e28 vehicles it makes me appreciate this forum so much more.
Noted, Thanks winfred and rmiddendorf. Its the M62, I've done the standard tune up stuff as its just past 100k. NGK's as always, fuel filter and whatnot. I read Mike's thread about the MAF and I'm thinking along those lines. The misfire comes and goes randomly, either at a stop light or at highway speeds. Besides the misfire codes it threw an "injector circuit open" code.
winfred
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Post by winfred »

the later v8 maf's are crap, id shop around and get a new bosch or vdo one even if its not the problem and bag the current one as a back up, they drift out of spec and really make for some odd running conditions without throwing a maf code, cats can break up and clog or melt and clog (just did one last week with melted pre cats) intake gaskets can leak when cold and go away when warm or leak all of the time and the pcv plate on the back of the intake ruptures (x5s have a few weird extra hoses by the back of the engine that crack and suck air). a happy m62tu will smoke the tires without much more then turning the wheel and nailling it (awd x5 kinda kills that) it should pull hard and smooth, performance really drops off when something is out of tune on any of the v8s
ldsbeaker
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Post by ldsbeaker »

Since the e28 is running like a top (FINALLY), I can dig into my 'ix.
I got SA Konis, H&R Sports, and some new brake components to install...
oh.
Image
ummmm.....
Image

... and... DAMN.
Image

Soooooo, I hit up Blunt this morning (while he was still at home, and he STILL replied to my email!), and found out that the rails there in the back can be had for a little less than $250. Nice. Oh, and I'm grabbing the last driver's side rail(pictured) ON THE PLANET. (till they make more...)

Now I just have to find a shop willing to cut and paste.
rmiddendorf
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Post by rmiddendorf »

ldsbeaker wrote:Since the e28 is running like a top (FINALLY), I can dig into my 'ix.
I got SA Konis, H&R Sports, and some new brake components to install...
oh.
Image
ummmm.....
Image

... and... DAMN.
Image

Soooooo, I hit up Blunt this morning (while he was still at home, and he STILL replied to my email!), and found out that the rails there in the back can be had for a little less than $250. Nice. Oh, and I'm grabbing the last driver's side rail(pictured) ON THE PLANET. (till they make more...)

Now I just have to find a shop willing to cut and paste.
WOW. That does need fixed. Stop fixing this one and buy NVfive33i's 'is' for sale in VA. That is a sweet ride.

;)
ldsbeaker
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Post by ldsbeaker »

rmiddendorf wrote:
ldsbeaker wrote: WOW. That does need fixed. Stop fixing this one and buy NVfive33i's 'is' for sale in VA. That is a sweet ride.

;)
No can do. This ix was free, and the next e30 i buy will be an M3.
rmiddendorf
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Post by rmiddendorf »

ldsbeaker wrote:
rmiddendorf wrote: WOW. That does need fixed. Stop fixing this one and buy NVfive33i's 'is' for sale in VA. That is a sweet ride.

;)
No can do. This ix was free, and the next e30 i buy will be an M3.
I respect that opinion.
a
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Post by a »

Rigged a fly wheel stop with a blunted 12" long cold chisel jammed against the right swing arm of the Ranger's front end. Took the flywheel off to check the rear main seal. It is fine. The backs of the valve covers/ intake look to be leaking. Just how bad these are remains to be seen. Fly wheel is gonna be checked out in day light.
Mike W.
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Post by Mike W. »

winfred wrote:most common m52tu/m54 issues are air leaks

drain hose from oil separator to bottom of dipstick tube rotting off, ruptured oil separator, dead coil, intake manifold adjuster, dieing maf or cracked lower air boot

plus if its close to 100k miles it may want its plugs changed, they usually go the full 100k but i have seen them start misfiring at just over 90k (the ngk's are wayyyyyyyy better then the bosch)
jhall wrote:Began chasing an SES light on my wife's e53 x5. I'm getting misfire codes all over the place and a random poor running condition. Whenever I run into problems like this on my non-e28 vehicles it makes me appreciate this forum so much more.
Check and check, although I'm much closer to 200K. Wait a minute, I'm going to have to change the plugs again!!! Seems like I just did that, oh, say 70K or so ago. :roll:
cddallara
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Post by cddallara »

Put the stock tails back in the touring. The tinted ones from Germany were a little too tinted for the CHP.

Boy the back end is bright now! :lol:

Wouldn't mind lightly smoked, but unobtanium for the touring unless I make my own.
davintosh
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Post by davintosh »

Last Friday the new Bilstein shocks came in, so I put the rears and the Eibach springs on it that evening, finishing up the job on Saturday morning. I'm reasonably sure the Boges that came off of it were original; they were far too easily compressed. :shock: The ride is much firmer in the rear and far less squirrelly than before. Can't wait to get the fronts on too! Unfortunately I've had precious little time alone in the car since then, since it's been the primary shuttle between our house & my inlaws' house over the weekend. Driving the car with three passengers in the back seat just doesn't give the opportunity to get a good feel for how it compares to before.

And it'll be a few days before I get that opportunity; my wife is driving the e32 this week because she offered to lend her van to her sister while she & her fam are visiting from the Netherlands. She drives the 735i and I get my son's Muttstang. It kinda toasts my cookies a bit for us to give up a vehicle whenever they come to town; with three kids under the age of 4, they need every bit of hauler room they can get, but they're too cheap to rent a van. Renting a van is expensive, but my father-in-law has a van just like ours, and I've suggested having them rent a cheap little genero-sedan for him for the week so they can use his van, but that idea went over like a lead balloon.

Driving the craprocket today has been interesting... A Mustang GT convertible isn't exactly the ideal vehicle for winter storm driving. It does have a limited-slip axle under it and all-season tires, so it wasn't bad, but I had one whoop-de-doo getting onto the freeway at lunch time that got me tensed up pretty good. Thankfully the snow has turned to rain(?) and the drive home should be uneventful (knocks on wood).

I should just be happy that I'm not relegated to public transportation for the week. :roll:
ldsbeaker
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Post by ldsbeaker »

Two new FAG bearings installed in the front struts of the ix. Should be good for another 200k or so...
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