Peugeot 406 Coupe - 3.0L V6. Complete refurb... very slowly

Peugeot 406 Coupe - 3.0L V6. Complete refurb... very slowly

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PhillipM

Original Poster:

6,524 posts

190 months

Tuesday 14th February 2023
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Well some of you might remember my old 306 that had...quite a lot done to it ( 1360cc and too much time on my hands ) - although Photobucket dying has rather killed that old thread.
At the end of that I mentioned I replaced it with a 406 Coupe, which I currently still have, it's been quite a journey as all sorts of issues came up over the years and the car now really needs a complete respray to finish it off, but I thought it was time to finally put up a thread detailing what I did to it over the years so far, it's not had anything too extreme more of an ongoing journey of maintenance and a few small tweaks.

I'll dump a few pictures of if and a few of the parts/upgrades along the way here and then flesh out stuff in further posts, you can have fun guessing what parts were what biggrin

































It's got a touch more power, a touch less weight and slightly different geometery to standard, but mainly just work to keep it on the road and QoL changes.


Edited by PhillipM on Tuesday 14th February 15:30

Jhonno

5,779 posts

142 months

Tuesday 14th February 2023
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Are those bushes 3d printed?!

PhillipM

Original Poster:

6,524 posts

190 months

Tuesday 14th February 2023
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Jhonno said:
Are those bushes 3d printed?!
Yes, I've done a fair few suspension, engine and exhaust bushes over the years with printing.

tvrfan007

413 posts

175 months

Tuesday 14th February 2023
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I have half your back catalogue on my Rallye, so know your 306 (and buggy) very well from the GTi6 forum. Will red with interest!

Jhonno

5,779 posts

142 months

Tuesday 14th February 2023
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PhillipM said:
Jhonno said:
Are those bushes 3d printed?!
Yes, I've done a fair few suspension, engine and exhaust bushes over the years with printing.
Interesting. Always thought it would be possible, what material do you use? (If you don't mind me asking?)

shalmaneser

5,936 posts

196 months

Tuesday 14th February 2023
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I love these old buses, please do keep this updated. Such a great looking machine.

PhillipM

Original Poster:

6,524 posts

190 months

Tuesday 14th February 2023
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Jhonno said:
Interesting. Always thought it would be possible, what material do you use? (If you don't mind me asking?)
Depends on the actual part, mainly a combination of high HDT polyurethanes or in the case of engines and exhaust mounts, a microfoaming polyurethane (like suspension bumpstops use, etc) - suspension bushes are generally multi-piece designs with TPU outers encasing acetal bearing surfaces, etc.

Edited by PhillipM on Tuesday 14th February 16:30

Jhonno

5,779 posts

142 months

Tuesday 14th February 2023
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PhillipM said:
Jhonno said:
Interesting. Always thought it would be possible, what material do you use? (If you don't mind me asking?)
Depends on the actual part, mainly a combination of high HDT polyurethanes or in the case of engines and exhaust mounts, a microfoaming polyurethane (like suspension bumpstops use, etc) - suspension bushes are generally multi-piece designs with TPU outers encasing acetal bearing surfaces, etc.

Edited by PhillipM on Tuesday 14th February 16:30
Thanks! Makes sense.. I was wondering about printing some bushes for my Mustang. (I've built my own printer, but mainly deal in PETG and PA CF. I've not delved into TPU yet, but have some to try, just not got round to it yet..)

PhillipM

Original Poster:

6,524 posts

190 months

Wednesday 15th February 2023
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Okay, so when I first got the car it made all the right noises, looked stunning after a polish, the only slight thing letting it down was the handling was a little floaty, a slight suspension knock, and these black mask headlights:





Which despite kinda suiting the car, had been pretty poorly done and had condensation and oxidisation on the inside of the lenses:



Fortunately I bought a load of random spares from a friend scrapping his car, so I had a set of old oxidised standard headlights, so I refurbed those and swapped them over before vs after here:



And it also turned out that some of the 'right noises' were because the backbox had got rather more holes in it than the usual two - the joints were gone on either end, rotted through.
Aftermarket replacements looked very shoddy, so instead I cut the box open, ripped out the remains of the baffles and then put a bit of perforated pipe straight through one side to the other, rewelded the casing back on, welded the intake pipe back up and since I had a little stainless tube hanging around, welded a couple of stainless tips on the end instead of the old oval single exit it had that was rusty anyway:





Which still left it fruity but a lot, lot quieter - it's a beautiful engine for that, it's got a little bark at full throttle but quite often when it's idling I forgot it was even on - it's smooth as butter and you can't hear it. Sometimes I had to check when it stalled (yes, we had a small random stalling issue, I'll get to that later).

Doing the usual Peugeot thing, after you fix two problems it has to break something else, it promptly blew a powersteering fitting off the rack when I was parking up one night, sprayed PAS fluid right over the rear exhaust manifold and set half the engine bay on fire. Fortunately, I always carry a fire extinguisher behind the seat (I know people will laugh but this is the 3rd time I've needed one!) so being a moron I opened the bonnet and put it out.
Because what's the risk of losing your face versus your shiny new ride? It'll heal, right?



So it got parked back up for a little while...after a fun morning neutralising and scrubbing down to remove all the extinguisher powder anyway.






Edited by PhillipM on Wednesday 15th February 01:23

Cambs_Stuart

2,880 posts

85 months

Wednesday 15th February 2023
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I was watching one if these on ebay at the weekend, wondering if it would make a good/interesting weekend car. Really interested to see what you do.

As for the 3d printed bushed/mounts I've got a 3d printed lower engine mount from you and it's far better than OEM or polyurethane.

Podie

46,630 posts

276 months

Wednesday 15th February 2023
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Such a great looking car.

carinaman

21,326 posts

173 months

Wednesday 15th February 2023
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Great looking cars. I sometimes look at adverts of them for sale. I saw an advert on eBay for one that had had the OS corner of the front bumper cut out. I don't know if a 'group buy' for a part of such rarity would ever be a goer. There's one locally that I see now and again and was disappointed to see recently that's taken a knock to the NS front bumper corner.

carinaman

21,326 posts

173 months

Wednesday 15th February 2023
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Are front bumpers too big and too much material to be able to 3D print?

shalmaneser

5,936 posts

196 months

Wednesday 15th February 2023
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carinaman said:
Are front bumpers too big and too much material to be able to 3D print?
You can get house sized 3D printers.

The question is how expensive is it? Answer is too expensive. You'd be better off getting a good bumper, taking a fibreglass mould and remaking in fibreglass/carbon fibre if you're feeling fancy.

Jag_NE

2,993 posts

101 months

Wednesday 15th February 2023
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Lovely looking car. A real accessible classic that I think will age well.

PhillipM

Original Poster:

6,524 posts

190 months

Wednesday 15th February 2023
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carinaman said:
Are front bumpers too big and too much material to be able to 3D print?
Too expensive, you'd be better just making fibreglass copies. 3D printing is very slow and very expensive compared to almost any other manufacturing process, where it wins is you can do internal geometry that's impossible any other way (Like in Cambs engine mounts he had off me above, there are internal voids and features to give it a progressive spring rate and some damping by pushing air between chambers inside) and that you don't need to invest in moulds up front for small batches.

However, speaking of the bumpers, they do have a tendancy to fade with age and crack on these with small impacts - it's why everyone is searching for good ones. Mine were immaculate, but within 3 days of having the car, my next door neighbours brother ran into the front of it, and cracked the bumper. I was very happy. smile
I was even happier when he promised to leave his insurance details with my neighbour and then did nothing of the sort and just fked off (and, I later found out, always parked around the corner while visiting for a while so I didn't see him) - some people are very nice...

Edited by PhillipM on Wednesday 15th February 13:17

itcaptainslow

3,703 posts

137 months

Wednesday 15th February 2023
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Looks lovely! Anyone else thinking of that chap “Lion” who appeared a few years ago on here, who was utterly obsessed with Peugeot? biggrin

williamp

19,265 posts

274 months

Wednesday 15th February 2023
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Buyers guide in this months classic cars magazine

And yes, they do mention the parts problem with the bumpers..

Had a 2 litre coupe back in 2001. Took it to le mans, france several times. Great looking, comfortable. Would like a 3 litre someday as a second car

PhillipM

Original Poster:

6,524 posts

190 months

Wednesday 15th February 2023
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The bumpers are repairable tbh, they're only an ABS/PC blend, you can weld them. I'm just gonna repair mine when I get around to doing the paint so I'll show how on here.

roadie

645 posts

263 months

Wednesday 15th February 2023
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I think these cars are such an elegant and pretty design so it is fantastic to see one being kept going and seeing use. Going down the OEM+ route with some choice mods would be great to see.