The road-going racing car - Sam McKee's BMW E36 328i

The road-going racing car - Sam McKee's BMW E36 328i

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McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Monday 15th June 2015
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Cheers! I've only heard good things about the Monopros too, but as you may have noticed budget is a key factor here wink definitely agree on doing everything suspension-related at once and then getting a proper geo setup, then you know it's all sorted. I still want to replace my front wishbones and will eventually force myself to do the rear trailing arm bushes, if I put a Z3 rack on at the same time then I can catch everything with one alignment session too!

All of my wheels are 7Jx16 Style 30s, mostly running 225/50R16 but the NS-2Rs only come in 205/55. I did have 5mm spacers to hand and you could get the car to roll like that, but such was the amount of interference that you could hear the tyre squeaking against the spring perch! 15mm leaves me around half a finger of clearance, and I've never had issues nor seen any witness marks on sidewalls when I take tyres off so it seems that's fine. The official line from distributors is "each car varies so we don't want to advise" - if I were you I'd keep the 5mm ones in case you're lucky, but get a set of 15mm in ready if you definitely want to be able to use the car straight away. You'll want longer wheel bolts to go with 15mms but suppose you could at least try it out with the standard length ones. Mine came from JJC Race & Rally, good prices and good service.

A PH E36 meet at a track day would be brilliant but I think we might struggle to organise it! I'll keep letting you know what my plans are. I was actually meant to be at Mallory last Friday with the car's previous owner, but that fell through and I'm looking at alternatives. Would like to get out this month. Javelin have a sessioned day at Mallory for only £99 which looks tempting!

As for modifications, in order of priority:
  • Limited-slip diff
  • Limited-slip diff
  • Limited-slip diff
  • Braided brake hoses
  • The aforementioned suspension bits and pieces
  • Get some weight out
So if anyone has an LSD they'd be willing to part with, do let me know hehe


Marky, both of yours - you did buy the Techno Violet one too? - look wonderful! Mine seems really quite tatty by comparison, but thanks for the kind words anyway biggrin would love to hear more about yours, do they have their own thread?

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Tuesday 16th June 2015
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CS, you have mail biggrin

That's a nice spec on the Techno car, Marky. Are you going to be taking all those lovely bits off and returning it to OEM suspension, or will the B8s and Eibachs stay?

TroubledSoul said:
I might actually be OK, I've just looked up the offsets of your wheels and mine and there's between 5 and 8mm difference, depending on where you read about it! My only fear is test fitting them and not being able to return them. Did you put spacers on the back to maintain the track ratio or did you not bother?
I've learnt to trust this site as the most reliable one, those are my wheels in the link - if it's 8mm extra offset it might be enough, 5mm I don't think so - it's really that close even with my 15mm spacers. I'll be interested to know what you find, though!

I've left the rear alone. The front track is noticeably wider, but as the rears tuck under the arch quite significantly, I thought I'd do more harm than good trying to space them out and I don't fancy rolling the arches. I'll take a closer look at it next time the cover's off, there might be enough space but as I've only one set of 15mm spacers I've never tried it.

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Wednesday 8th July 2015
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marky911 said:
Yep Sam, I'll be leaving the suspension alone. Wheels and ride height make a car so I always lower whatever I own. The front of E36s are especially high so I'm glad mine is sorted. It's absolutely perfect too. It's compliant and comfortable yet turn in is razor sharp and it sits totally flat through bends. It's all things to all roads. Really really good.

Plus it's on Bilsteins, albeit slightly different ones to standard but still yellow, so it's not far off OEM. I may go back to clear lenses all round. It came with ambers, of which I prefer the fronts but I prefer clear/red rears. I'll see.
High front end is a bit characteristic of my car at the moment too, I didn't want to set the coilovers too low until I was sure I would avoid any contact with the arches but now I reckon I can lose quite a bit. The centre of the front wheelarches are currently at 648mm, the rears 610mm, more negative rake than I'd like which won't be helping mid-corner understeer. Thanks for the link to your threads, more reading is always good! I think I recognise at least one of them, I did plenty research before buying biggrin

TroubledSoul said:
Just spotted this Sam and thought of you!:
http://www.driftworks.com/forum/parts-sale-private...

Ordered myself some "just in case" 15mm spacers..... I would have preferred 12 but if I go for a BBK in the future they'd be useful.
Nicely detailed ad there, "an LSD".. hehe I might have a 2.93 328i Sport one nailed down now, watch this space but if anyone hears of any more do let me know! Just seen that you have your HSDs on now, looks like you had a very similar result with the spacers on your M3. Always interesting to see how other cars turn out.


Cheers Dannbodge, the more knowledgeable folk I have to call on, the better!


My next date is looking like Bedford GT on July 20th, with MSVT, so if anyone else can come along do let me know. I'm not likely to be running in August at all, planning to be out of the country for most of the month.

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Friday 10th July 2015
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I agree TS, my 15mm fronts are further out than I'd like too. With the 205/55R16 NS-2Rs I could probably go down to 8mm or as close as I can buy to that, but I've still got some 225s to burn up before that!

That is a shame Hamster, I didn't see anything in your thread about bookings, I did check. Unfortunately it's the only one I can do at the minute.

All booked for the 20th now, looking forward to it but almost hope it's not quite so hot as today! Decision to be taken on whether I remove the currently non-functioning air con, or try to get it working. Never investigated why it's not working, but it would help me get some weight out of the front to make up for all the rear that'll disappear with seats etc..

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Saturday 11th July 2015
quotequote all
Heh, I think I knew before posting what you guys would suggest wink I think you're right, I only use it very rarely in road cars because of the efficiency impact so I expect it would see even less use on this. The only reason I hesitate is that it sometimes came in very handy on the V8 Vantage race cars, but then they were at their weight limit and it's rather less damaging to run air con when they have 420bhp.

I will certainly keep the heater and blower, for getting heat out of the coolant and for demisting it's invaluable - and as long as I'm driving the car to events, I'd rather like a heater for 6am starts in November! In my book, taking those out is one of the biggest errors made in lightweighting cars. I'm pretty sure my air con will be totally depressurised but will check before breaking any unions, nasty stuff to release into the atmosphere. I suppose if I have trouble keeping cool I could always run ducts from the rear windows - it'll get fixed polycarbonates there eventually!

As for the engine cooling fans, yep - I need to take the viscous one off when I finally get round to changing the thermostat (having it stuck open isn't the worst thing in the world for a track car, so I've left it thus far), and then it's not being refitted! Cheers for the tip on the lower temperature sensor.


Hamster, I should be around for Donington* on the 31st - probably won't be able to run my car but it's just down the road from me so I could certainly come along for a look smile



There are only three Ns in Donington, none of them consecutive! Pet hate of mine, being a local. No idea why it gets spelt wrongly so often.

Edited by McSam on Saturday 11th July 12:47

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Saturday 11th July 2015
quotequote all
Ouch, that would set me off too, maybe even warranting a Strongly Worded Email (TM)hehe hope the weather didn't get you down too much!

Fair enough. As I only use this car for track days and I think it's likely to stay in the UK, I should survive OK without the air con. It'll be a little while yet until I remove it, as I'm not starting to strip anything out until I have a good seat and harness arrangement figured out (and in budget!). Bit of a minefield trying to get a base that allows fore-aft adjustment into the decidedly daft E36 floorpan, and I lack a welder.

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Saturday 18th July 2015
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Ahead of Bedford on Monday, I've set a new personal best for ghetto bodges - I finally got tired of the odd-eye look the car had thanks to a missing front foglight, so I took the other one out and cut blanking plates from a couple of Tupperware lids, sprayed them with some Audi Blau Perleffekt that I had left over from my A4, and voila...

The messy void which doesn't even help cooling (being blocked by the arch liner on the outside, and the brake cooling duct on the inside, so it doesn't go into the wheel well or the engine bay):



Tupperware lid installed:



Not bad, really. The car hasn't moved since they were installed, so whether they make it to and then survive Bedford remains to be seen, but they look alright. If they don't stay put, I'll cave and order some proper blanks and spray them to match.



I even went really mad in the summer heat and got the polish and wax out. Chips, scrapes and dodgy touch-ups aside, she actually scrubs up rather well.


McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Friday 24th July 2015
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Well, that was another very successful track day! The weather looked pretty threatening through the afternoon, but we only had one heavy shower at around half four, totally dry and no stoppages until then, great stuff.

The car felt superb. I was extremely impressed with the NS-2Rs, there is a huge amount of grip, much more than I was expecting - turns out they respond far better to a longer run on a "proper" circuit, as opposed to my brief tests at Curborough, and of course the surface is probably grippier at Bedford. Whatever the reason, it was mega, and I would recommend these tyres for anyone's track car. I was glad I had the harder 180 treadwear compound, as some TT drivers using the softer type reported the fronts overheating a bit.. but then that's a TT, might be fine on a properly balanced car wink. What can't be denied is their durability - they've rubbered up nicely, but the tread has worn not a jot. Excellent.







Nice to see another 328i out there, and well driven too:



And this is a big one to tick off the track day spotter's list! Sounded utterly magnificent.



I had three drivers for the first time, and that was probably too much, she never had more than 15-20 minutes' rest between sessions and I'd rather do longer runs with more breaks. We got a little over three hours out on track, 185 miles chalked up, and another track day virgin has caught the bug - my fiancée's little brother this time! Here's one of his laps from later on in the day:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fnsG2VsMNqo

Not half bad. Inter-family rivalries were settled by my fiancée beating the laptime my mum set last time out hehe I can see this spiralling out of all control pretty soon.. I only had only solo run and only got one lap done before the rain came, but here's that lap:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RTnvietA1RQ

It's actually a couple of seconds slower than last time out, but this lap is technically far better, more controlled, neater and noticeably quicker in near every corner. The new chicane is now easily third rather than second smile

As for the car, no complaints all day which is always nice. We just managed the day on a tank of fuel, having filled up 20 miles before arriving and crawling out on fumes, always nice to avoid paying Palmer's prices or leaving the venue halfway through. Tyres as mentioned, no real wear at all, and the brakes felt good too - no fade at any point and the Redstuff front pads still aren't quite done yet. Mintex 1144 in the rear seemed good and much more durable at the high temperatures seen on the rear axle. Oh, and the Blue Peter foglight blanks survived too!

I was suffering a bit of a loss of power due to heat soak (you can measure half a second lost down the first part of the back straight alone, despite a much faster exit from the hairpin) - I'll need to rethink my intake design, I think I've got away with it up to now because of cooler ambient temperatures and longer breaks between sessions. If anyone has any E36-specific heatshields lying around, do get in touch, otherwise I'll try and knock something up.

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Saturday 25th July 2015
quotequote all
Cheers! Yes, they are, I'm very impressed, especially as they don't seem to generate their grip at the cost of five-minute tread life. I call them NS-2Rs because too many people say NS-2, and I wouldn't go fitting those to a track car hehe

Unsure of my next outing at the minute, as I shall be out of the country for almost all of August and then start a new job in early September, so the car might be resting for a couple of months but there'll still be plenty of season left!

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Sunday 20th September 2015
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September coming around again can only mean another sprint at Blyton Park, the Eastern layout once again - I really like this circuit, much more technical than the Outer one that's used on most track days, even if it does show up the shortcomings of my open diff a bit more.

I started the day on the NS-2Rs, and while the first session was OK I wasn't really that happy with the balance the harder I pushed, the car just felt understeery, and while I never got brake fade I did find a really quite terrible judder after a couple of hard laps.. It starts out as a steering wheel wobble under heavy braking, which I've felt before at Bedford, but becomes very severe judder at the front wheels and eventually even the rears too if you keep pushing, you can feel the whole car shuddering. I put this down to Blyton being much harder on brakes, and combined with the semi-slicks I thought I was getting them hot enough to show up pad deposits on the disc or even starting to warp them.

Putting my usual Kumho KU31 sprint tyres back on transformed the car for the better, it immediately felt more approachable and better balanced. I'd put most of this down to the lesser grip making it much easier to adjust the rear end with the throttle, but when you're driving at ten tenths these tyres seem to have a much wider and more progressive slip range than the Nankangs, which either grip or don't. I also refitted the original airbox as I wanted to see if heat soak really was a factor - she sounded nowhere near as good but did pull marginally more cleanly, so some work needed there if I want to return to the open intake.

Just before we finished the track day sessions for lunch and started the timed runs in the afternoon, I disabled the ABS and popped out to decide if I was going to be quicker with or without it. Turns out the answer is a bit quicker, it's a good system but too conservative in trailbraking, but that wasn't the real news - that brake judder completely disappeared. No matter how hard I pushed the car, I couldn't replicate it without the ABS on. The only explanation I can think of is that either the ABS pump or the calipers or "something" is stopping the car being able to modulate the brake pressure properly, causing uneven brake application when the system's really hot.. most odd. Anyone ever had anything like this before?

A couple of action shots from a fellow competitor:







Most of my timed runs were a bit scrappy, this is the fastest one, a 1'20.35 - marginally quicker than last year's 1'20.63. This time, though, I wasn't quite so lucky in my attempt to be last of the late brakers towards the timing beams at the end of the lap...

https://youtu.be/Iij3yLlKxJE

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Monday 21st September 2015
quotequote all
My first port of call is the rake, at the minute the car is at least 20mm higher at the front than the back. Exact measurements somewhere in this thread. It's not far off the factory posture, but it sure doesn't help mid-speed cornering, so I'll get the front down to at least level and perhaps slightly lower. That should help a lot. From trackside photos I've seen, the camber looks about right at 2.5° front and 1.5° rear.

The open diff doesn't usually feel so bad in the car, but it's clearly costing a lot of laptime and adjustability. I'll get it sorted.

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Sunday 27th September 2015
quotequote all
Well, setup changes might not be so urgent if the results of my latest work are anything to go by. Finally got around to tackling my front right wheel bearing, which had been making its presence felt in left-handers for a while but became really intolerable at Blyton, juddering like hell and clearly not controlling the wheel properly as I was experiencing more understeer in lefts than rights. Sod's law on a very anticlockwise circuit layout!

This is actually a surprisingly easy job, if you're wondering. You'll need a fkmassive socket, specifically a 46mm, I got this one from eBay. Went for an impact one, anticipating the need to give the hub nut some gunning since it's torqued to 290Nm. Some people seem to get away without a hub puller, but I wouldn't risk getting into the job without one on hand. The front bearings come integral in a new hub, which is nice.



The procedure:

  • Get the front end up and on stands, strongly recommend lifting both sides for stability and so you can apply lock to get a better angle to undo the hub nut.
  • Wheel off, natch, then the brakes including the disc. Even if you ordinarily just balance the caliper somewhere, do cable tie it this time as you'll be hammering on the upright.
  • The hub nut is covered by a metal dust cap. Get a thin flathead screwdriver and a dead blow mallet, and work your way gently around the edge to prise it off. Don't go off the head and destroy it unless you've bought a new one - my new hub only came with a new nut, not a dust cap.
  • The hub nut should have at least one tab punched into the cutouts in the spindle. This needs hammering back out of the way, or it won't turn, no matter how many scaffolding poles you use. Mine's already knocked back in the below image.


  • Strongman time. Undo the hub nut, just a couple of turns. I had a crack with my two-foot bar to begin with, it didn't want to move, so I railed away at it with my impact gun for a few seconds. The gun didn't budge it, but I could then turn it with the bar just fine. It wasn't seized, thanks to the dust cap, just tight.
  • Once you've got the nut cracked off, douse the hub/spindle area in Plusgas or similar penetrant fluid.
  • Use a wheel hub / gear puller to start pulling the hub off the spindle, by the flange. Once you know it's moving, take the hub nut off entirely and the hub should just come off by hand.
  • Odds are the rear inner bearing race is still on the spindle. If spraying with Plusgas before moving the hub worked as well for you as it did for me, it'll come off by hand, even though mine was 18 years and 179k miles old. Some people have found it's stuck fast, in which case you either need to bend the dust shield back and try to get pullers on it, or get the Dremel out. Good luck avoiding that situation! One technique seems to be loosening the hub nut, then refitting the wheel and lowering the car onto it - apparently this can crack the inner race off the spindle a bit easier.

Rear inner race not shown, I'd already removed it and sure as hell wasn't refitting it to demonstrate!

  • Now it's time for the new bearing. Obviously, it will be an extremely tight fit onto the spindle. Get it all perfectly lined up, place your 46mm socket in the middle, then hit that with a deadblow mallet to seat it on the spindle. It'll get stuck. If you're anything like me, you'll be knocking away at it for ages with your deadblow thinking "oh Christ it's a cheap crap bearing that's machined too tight and it won't go over", then you'll get a mini sledge out and it'll fly straight on so quick you nearly trap your fingers behind it. If in doubt, make sure it's straight, then get a bigger hammer!


Voila, shiny new hub on.



  • Run the hub nut down the thread, then torque to 290Nm. Only when fully torqued, get a flat bar (screwdrivers don't work that well) and punch a tab into the spindle cutout. This ensures the hub nut is locked and can't loosen over time. You can hammer a tab out of any part of the nut, so don't worry about where it's going to settle when it's torqued.
  • Dust cap back on, make sure you have a nice tight seal against the hub flange to keep the hub nut and bearings clean.
  • Brakes back on, wheel on, drop car, torque up, go for a test drive, find a wonderful absence of bearing noise, discover instead an alarming graunching noise as you load up the front left in hard cornering, come home again, jack it up, feel vertical wheel movement, st yourself, and then notice that one of your coilover adjustment locking rings worked loose while the upright was being hammered. Then you're done. biggrin
Feels a hell of a lot better now. Back at Bedford on Saturday 10th October, so watch this space..

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Tuesday 20th October 2015
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Another successful day! Really enjoyed Bedford on Sunday 10th, brought along a housemate who's done a few track days in his DC2 Integra Type R, but never in anything rear-wheel-drive, so that was a new experience for both of us - me being driven over the limit in my own car, and him discovering that you can't solve big slides with power alone biggrin

We got 191 miles done on the circuit, which I'm very pleased with. The NS-2Rs remain excellent, and even more obviously so if you leave them on the front but replace the rear with nasty plastic Accelera Alphas.. I did this as an exercise to make the car a bit more rear-limited, which worked well in the dry, but perhaps a little too well in the wet! Gratuitous sideways action below.

https://youtu.be/3xo8ql7u4dg



The NS-2Rs have rubbered in really nicely now...



The car felt really good with the wheel bearing issue finally sorted, that was definitely the cause of the vibration in hard left cornering, so it was nice to have a stable platform at last. Still a shade understeery so I'm going to drop the front end a little. However, I was wrong in thinking the ABS was causing the brake judder, it returned with a vengeance as soon as we got the brakes hot.. you could drive around it, if you never used more than three-quarters of the pedal then they wouldn't get hot enough to do it, but still, it was extremely annoying. The front pads are wearing thin anyway, so new discs are going on with their replacements, and I hope that cures it.

Here's my quickest lap from the day: https://youtu.be/GpJxreKzy7U

Next up, Rockingham on November 8th - with the car's previous owner!

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Wednesday 21st October 2015
quotequote all
Cheers guys! Yes, brave indeed letting that lunatic drive the car again wink

Tom, if I don't remember to come and say hello, please do so!

Bear Phils said:
I remember reading something about the track rods possibly causing judder under braking, ball joints may be at fault as well if the new brakes don't solve the problem, the outer ones are a common failure.
Hmm, that's interesting. I can't get any sort of judder or even vague feeling that I'd normally associate with track rods and ball joints in any cornering situation, only under braking. The car also feels rock solid over kerbs and the like, which I'd expect to show up any ball joint issues. But now you've mentioned it, I'll see if it behaves any differently when the steering input changes while braking - if there's any suspension fault, that should show it up. Thanks for the info.

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Thursday 22nd October 2015
quotequote all
Oh, don't worry, the tyres weren't an actual design solution hehe the car's deliberately a bit conservative because I've been using it to introduce novices to track days, but at Bedford we fancied a bit of tail-happiness so used the crap tyres as a quick and easy way to upset it!

Good to hear your experience with the camber though.. I have -2.5° front and -1.5° rear, but since I can't find any proper figures for how much camber gain the rear produces in roll, I've no idea what the balance is like when loaded up mid-corner. I reckon the front is about right, but a bit less rear could be helpful - especially if you still managed a good balance with 235-section rears! Could probably do with checking the geo anyway, it's been over a year of abuse since it was last set up so I'll play around with it then smile

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Sunday 14th February 2016
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So, the covers are off for an early start to the 2016 season - and the car can say hello to its new stablemate, too! Both in equally desperate need of a wash, but still seemed worth a photo.



For the first time, we had a non-starter. I always disconnect the negative terminal when leaving the car for more than a week, but this time it didn't want to turn over anyway. Was absolutely fine with a jump from the big Six, and ran OK. Not currently taxed or insured so I couldn't go for a drive but all seemed in order.

I dropped the oil out, for no real reason other than I felt it deserved it after 18 months and a thousand track miles.. Came out still golden and feeling as smooth as new, I was very impressed! That's Mobil 1 0W/40, I've never used anything else in my BMWs and this justifies it nicely.

The next outing is Oulton Park on Friday, half the day spent in this and the other half in an RX-8 a friend just bought - that was one of the alternatives, so it'll be very interesting to see how they compare. Looking forward to it!

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Monday 22nd February 2016
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Excellent day at Oulton Park with MSVT last Friday. It started out really cold and a little frosty on track, but that soon cleared up and by lunchtime even Druids and Lodge were feeling grippy. We were on the Island layout, a bit of a demotion from the advertised International circuit but incomplete construction at Shell Oils meant there was no other option. It was still a lovely circuit to drive, I'll certainly be returning.

I had my time split between the E36 and a friend's newly purchased RX-8:



There are 228,000 miles in that photo.. 79% of them on my car hehe for a standard road car, I was very impressed with the RX-8. It felt nicely balanced, the pedal layout and weight was decent, the gearshift good and the engine constantly begging to be revved out. It needed more serious brake pads in it and was a touch too soft when you started pushing really hard, but a very pleasant thing to drive on track and certainly a good starting point. It did feel a little gutless, mind, and despite an alleged 40bhp advantage and very similar weight and gearing, the E36 outpaced it down the straights.

Getting back into the E36 felt strange, by comparison it's actually a bit of a nightmare ergonomically, but it all made sense once I started to push it. The car felt great and ran without fault for 45 laps in the afternoon. This was the first chance I'd had to do sustained sessions in the dry with my Mintex 1155 front and 1144 rear pads, and I was impressed to find no fade whatsoever. The rears are shot now though, and I'm trying to work out whether the 740 track miles they managed is good enough, or if I should go for a more heavy-duty option. Open to suggestions on that.

Here's a few trackside photos, and some footage from a session at the end of the day where I went out behind acquaintances in a K-series Elise, a Toyota-engined Elise and an N/A VX220. Very satisfying run, and my fastest lap was a 1'49.3. For reference, the best we could get out of the RX-8 was a 2'01.6, but with a passenger and a couple of seconds lost behind an Elise at the end of the lap. A clean solo run might have seen a 1'57 or so.

https://youtu.be/R7Or11r4cpY




McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Monday 22nd February 2016
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Ahah, you should have said hello! I ended up buying this car for exactly the same reason, I was idly browsing Auto Trader and saw an advert with a photo I knew I'd seen before - it was from Synchromesh's thread on here!

Nice work with the camera, some really good shots on your website, and it's good of you to make decent-res ones freely available smile

Thanks for the kind words - I've always been interested to know how the car sounds from the outside, it's probably really quiet from the rear but it's the approach with the induction noise that I'd like to hear! Will have to let someone loose in it on their own sometime and find out.

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2016
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darrenw said:
If I see you there again I definitely will! It actually sounded great accelerating out of Lodge and up Deer Leap, classic BMW straight six. I wouldn't say it was muted, but it wasn't harsh like they can be.

Sometimes I think it's a shame that I have two cylinders less in my E36 318i and it doesn't sound the same, I'll probably end up with a six when it needs replacing but that's hopefully a few years off yet!
Excellent, glad to hear it biggrin thanks! Certainly good from the inside. You do at least have rather less weight to carry around than I do..

anonymous said:
[redacted]
Cheers! If you want to try this one, just let me know.. you'd only be the eighth person to drive me in it hehe

Hamster69 said:
I still can't recommend the performance friction carbon metallic pads highly enough. My fronts have done thousands of track miles and two euro trips, with about 50% of the pad left. The rears have done Snetterton, Brands, Silvertone, Oulton, Bedford twice and Spa. They still look new!
Hmmm. Which compound are you using, and where did you source them from? The price list I saw suggested £415 for a car set of the 08s, so they'd need to be bloody good, to pay back against the Mintex they'd need to do 3,000 miles! For comparison, Carbone Lorraine RC6 are £282, Ferodo DS3000 £240, EBC Bluestuff £148 and Mintex 1155/1144 £118. I am prepared to pay for something special, but I think even the CLs might be the limit..

McSam

Original Poster:

6,753 posts

176 months

Friday 4th March 2016
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Mmmm, premium goodness for the PistonShed. New Brembo high-carbon rear discs, a Meyle front wheel bearing to even up the one I already changed, and Performance Friction Z-rated .11-compound pads for front and rear. Only the rears are going on for now, as my Mintex 1155s still have something left to give on the front, but I'm really keen to try them out.

I ordered them from http://www.part-box.com/ run by Co-ordSport, who gave me truly excellent service, well recommended. The whole lot came to a hair over £250, which I'm quite pleased with.