E46 M3 SMG at high miles, any reason not to?
E46 M3 SMG at high miles, any reason not to?
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Discussion

TroubledSoul

Original Poster:

4,661 posts

220 months

Monday 22nd December 2014
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Further to a thread I currently have running, I am considering an M3 next. I *think* I want an SMG. It will see track days and a Euro trip and my Mrs would find a car with no clutch pedal a bit easier due to a chronic joint/muscle pain condition that flares up now and then.

I think an SMG M3 could feel really special as something very different to my current Impreza.

I've been reading up a bit today and it sounds as though the SMG is fairly solid in the E46, although it's not unknown to go wrong. As it stands now, with many cars reaching the 100k mark, how are SMG boxes faring? Is there anything significant to be aware of at high mileage?Any reason to expect a failure etc.?

Cemesis

771 posts

188 months

Monday 22nd December 2014
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I've just broken a 170k SMG M3 and it gad no gearbox/SMG issues.

Do get the SMG if you are planning track work...and change gear late wink

Cemesis

771 posts

188 months

Monday 22nd December 2014
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I've just broken a 170k SMG M3 and it gad no gearbox/SMG issues.

Do get the SMG if you are planning track work...and change gear late wink

Krupp Stahl

212 posts

154 months

Monday 22nd December 2014
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My 2004 SMG E46 M3 is now on 111k miles.

To date, I've had no issues with it at all (touches wood).

To give that some context, the car has been serviced on the button as per schedule, and under my ownership has had interim changes of Castrol 10W60 at 7500 mile intervals. Oil is the key to maintaining a healthy S54.

In terms of usage, it is not tracked but is used as a daily driver. My driving style is generally very relaxed with the occasional burst of foaming at the mouth here and there.

I keep a salmon coloured relay (costs about a tenner) in the glove compartment just in case - a known SMG weak point.

Of course you just never know but for what it's worth, my has been an absolute gem.


Motorsport3

567 posts

218 months

Monday 22nd December 2014
quotequote all
Krupp Stahl said:
My 2004 SMG E46 M3 is now on 111k miles.

To date, I've had no issues with it at all (touches wood).

To give that some context, the car has been serviced on the button as per schedule, and under my ownership has had interim changes of Castrol 10W60 at 7500 mile intervals. Oil is the key to maintaining a healthy S54.

In terms of usage, it is not tracked but is used as a daily driver. My driving style is generally very relaxed with the occasional burst of foaming at the mouth here and there.

I keep a salmon coloured relay (costs about a tenner) in the glove compartment just in case - a known SMG weak point.

Of course you just never know but for what it's worth, my has been an absolute gem.
Interesting, how many clutched have you used to get to 111k ?

Ian_sUK

734 posts

206 months

Monday 22nd December 2014
quotequote all
Mines on 125K and the only thing changed during its life is the gear position sensor.

The gearbox itself is bullet-proof, the pump is the weakest point.

The clutch is original and I'm not expecting to have to change it. There are reports of people changing clutches because the engine is out for other work and finding them less than half worn at 100K+ You can get all the values from the gearbox very easily with a laptop and £20 cable from ebay.

Krupp Stahl

212 posts

154 months

Tuesday 23rd December 2014
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Motorsport3 said:
Interesting, how many clutched have you used to get to 111k ?
Hi. It's still on its original clutch.

Motorsport3

567 posts

218 months

Tuesday 23rd December 2014
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Ian_sUK said:
Mines on 125K and the only thing changed during its life is the gear position sensor.

The gearbox itself is bullet-proof, the pump is the weakest point.

The clutch is original and I'm not expecting to have to change it. There are reports of people changing clutches because the engine is out for other work and finding them less than half worn at 100K+ You can get all the values from the gearbox very easily with a laptop and £20 cable from ebay.
Thanks for that, i will look for it.

Motorsport3

567 posts

218 months

Tuesday 23rd December 2014
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Krupp Stahl said:
Hi. It's still on its original clutch.
Cheers, im very impressed to hear that last for so long.

NickXX

1,646 posts

244 months

Tuesday 23rd December 2014
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I use exclusively use mine for track days and big European trips too now.

2003, 91k, SMG - still on the original clutch. Similar to the posts above, I also keep a salmon coloured relay (although have not needed to change it yet).

oxam

309 posts

199 months

Wednesday 24th December 2014
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the pump itself is bulletproof (the steel gears don't wear out and the seals are good). What fails are the electrical components

I just went through all the troubleshooting to fix the error/limpmode on mine.

1. the salmon relay where the DME is located - cheap fix
2. pump temp sensor - located on the pump unit, a nightmare to get to - cheap part, expensive to change
3. pump electrical motor - usually fails above 120k miles, wears out and cannot maintain the pressure (all depends on how the car has been driven - if only motorway miles it can last 200k miles, if stop and go traffic it can fail at as low as 80k miles). BMW does not sell the motor as a separate part (like they do for the M5 which has common problem). There is a guy selling brand new units on the german ebay for 320 GBP and they work great. Another option is to rebuild your electrical motor but at the end won't be much cheaper. To install it you need to completely remove the pump and once you put it back in you need INPA or GT1 to reset/reteach the gearbox.

I had a manual M3 convertible which I just sold and I still have the manual supercharged m3 drift car. However the SMG coupe has always been the most fun and easy to drive.

M3CS

380 posts

199 months

Thursday 25th December 2014
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123k miles here. I got the clutched changed at 85k as part of a general 'refresh' of the car shortly after purchase....probably didn't need it. Spent thousands on numerous big jobs....because i was silly and "because i could".

I have had the gear position sensor break (requiring a tow) and the salmon relay packed up recently. Otherwise, fine.
I justify the cost SMG brings over a manual with the generally higher purchase prices of non-SMG CS cars...so it all 'works out'.

Go into it with your eyes open and SMG will reward you. Amazing on track and B road blasts. Also useful on M25 traffic to not have to keep actuating the clutch.
I hate the newer dual clutch systems...they are somehow 'too smooth'. I love the violence of an SMG 1st to 2nd change at full speed....awesome!

Edited by M3CS on Thursday 25th December 18:28

darreni

4,432 posts

296 months

Thursday 25th December 2014
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I've got 91k on my CSL & no issues apart the gear position sensor last year.

Clutch was changed at 58k miles under warranty due to judder (probably just needed a teach in/ adaptation via GT1).

John Laverick

2,002 posts

240 months

Thursday 25th December 2014
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2003 SMG with FBMWSH and 105k miles. Faultless.

neutral 3

8,123 posts

196 months

Friday 26th December 2014
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172,000 And still pulls like an express train, manual box though 😃 Fantastic cars.....

TroubledSoul

Original Poster:

4,661 posts

220 months

Saturday 27th December 2014
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Cheers all, very reassuring. I'm a bit wary of buying a 100k+ car, and that it might be past its best, but the majority I'm finding do seem to be high miles.

e21Mark

17,369 posts

199 months

Saturday 27th December 2014
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Regular oil changes are key to long engine life, when it comes to BMW engines. As long as there's a good service history there's no reason why you shouldn't enjoy owning an awesome car.

I'm tempted to sell my classic 02 and one myself.