RE: BMW 325ti Compact (E46) | PH Fleet
RE: BMW 325ti Compact (E46) | PH Fleet
Monday 11th August

BMW 325ti Compact (E46) | PH Fleet

Mighty Compact makes it to the Nurburgring (and home again) in one piece


In hindsight, I needn’t have worried. But you know how it is when planning a big trip with an old car, overthinking every eventuality and swearing there are strange noises on the days leading up to departure that never used to be there. It was exactly the case with the Compact ahead of 800 miles or so in a weekend for the Nurburgring 24 Hours. There was no need to be concerned, really: the clutch was new, it had been recently serviced, the tyres were fresh. But I can’t deny more than a little anxiety as we set off for the Eurotunnel at 5am on the Friday of race weekend. 

As it transpired, the little red BMW was almost perfect throughout the whole weekend. It cruised quietly, comfortably and capably while crammed full of stuff, got itself going smartly when overtakes were required, kept climate-controlled air coming for hour after hour, and braked without drama when the Brussels ring road went a bit… Belgian. Indeed, the only problem was in Belgium, when an especially gnarly motorway bump threw up a warning light. By the time we’d stopped again in France, turned it off and on again, the light was gone, never to return. It was an encouragement to leave Belgium asap, seemingly. 

Neither my mate Joe in the passenger seat nor I complained about any back pains throughout the trip; in fact, I ended up sleeping in the Compact both nights, thanks to a newfound (and very inconvenient) aversion to tents. While I wouldn’t recommend it, sleeping in an old BMW wasn’t as bad as expected. Stephen in the Dacia definitely had the best bed, without doubt.

And of course, the whole escapade has just made me love the silly thing even more. I got my sticker from the shop, there are some fun pictures, and the response to the Compact in Europe really was the cherry on top. Turns out folk love a strange hatchback on the continent even more than here. The ‘325 ti’ badge felt worth every penny as passersby on the campsite wanted to ask about the 2.5-litre hatch. Nobody has ever been so proud of a car worth so little as me on N24 weekend - it was great.  

UGB didn’t escape the weekend entirely issue-free, though. I’d bought the car without the remote central locking working on the passenger door, but now it’s given up the ghost entirely. A battery replacement for the key didn’t sort it, so that’ll require investigation; having to open the driver’s door to unlock the boot is a bit annoying, if not yet the end of the world. 

For the moment, I’m happy enough making the most of a car that feels fitter than it ever has in the year I’ve had it, with the new clutch feeling having definitely not worn off and the old lump up front still a joy as 160,000 miles approaches. There will be a few jobs for the winter alongside the locking - a fresh coat of underseal is probably worthwhile, and perhaps a tidy up of the wheels - but with the weather playing ball, I’m enjoying the classic BMW experience more than ever. And already thinking about how good next year’s N24 trip might be… 


FACT SHEET 

Car: 2003 BMW 325ti Compact
Run by: Matt Bird
On fleet since: July 2024
Bought for: £2,999
Mileage: 158,603
Last month at a glance: Road trip!

Previous reports

Author
Discussion

Jon_S_Rally

Original Poster:

4,006 posts

105 months

Monday 11th August
quotequote all
I do like these. A friend had one and it always raised a smile.

I have to say though, if the wheels need refurbishing, I think I'd have to take the opportunity to replace them. While I understand why you might not want to fit anything enormous, the current ones look like castors! With the right BMW wheels on it, it would really take it up a notch.

GreatScott2016

1,945 posts

105 months

Monday 11th August
quotequote all
Agreed, great cars. A bit left field in the looks department for some, but I like them. Glad you managed some sleep in the Compact. I recall sleeping in an Impreza for several nights at Rally Wales GB, never again, but fond memories! smile

Turbobanana

7,395 posts

218 months

Monday 11th August
quotequote all
GreatScott2016 said:
Agreed, great cars. A bit left field in the looks department for some, but I like them. Glad you managed some sleep in the Compact. I recall sleeping in an Impreza for several nights at Rally Wales GB, never again, but fond memories! smile
Try sleeping in a FIAT X1/9 when your mate forgets he's offered you a bed for the night and has gone out on the lash.

But congrats on the trouble-free voyage. My own (smaller) one ended 12 miles into a 180 mile round trip yesterday when a seized calliper caused a rear brake to overheat. I thought I'd done my preparation well, but 50 year old Italian cars have a way of offering you little surprises.

GTRene

19,636 posts

241 months

Monday 11th August
quotequote all
great (compact) solid car for the money.

nismo48

5,525 posts

224 months

Monday 11th August
quotequote all
GTRene said:
great (compact) solid car for the money.
+1 thumbup

86wasagoodyear

772 posts

113 months

Monday 11th August
quotequote all
Jon_S_Rally said:
I have to say though, if the wheels need refurbishing, I think I'd have to take the opportunity to replace them. While I understand why you might not want to fit anything enormous, the current ones look like castors! With the right BMW wheels on it, it would really take it up a notch.
I have to disagree. I'd keep the current wheels. They're a great style that really suits the car. I am a fan of small wheels in principle though - they're just better for all reasons, some of which I reminded myself of yesterday.
I swapped the wheels front to rear on my Pug 205, for even tyre wear. Its wheels are 13" steelies, I've not taken any of them off for a while. They are SO much lighter than the 15" alloys of my daily Mazda3.
This difference in wheel size & mass (combined with the extra tyre sidewall height that the small wheels allow on the 205) is a big contributor to why, on my local rutted & potholed country lanes, the Pug rides much more comfortably than the 3, despite having much stiffer springs & dampers & far superior handling.
We used to have a Mini R56 with 2 sets of wheels - 17" with summer tyres & 16" with winters. The 16s were OK for ride & handling ; the 17s were appalling, crashy & unbearable. Small wheels good, big wheels bad.
Stick with the castors Matt !


Mr Tidy

27,468 posts

144 months

Tuesday 12th August
quotequote all
Jon_S_Rally said:
I do like these. A friend had one and it always raised a smile.

I have to say though, if the wheels need refurbishing, I think I'd have to take the opportunity to replace them. While I understand why you might not want to fit anything enormous, the current ones look like castors! With the right BMW wheels on it, it would really take it up a notch.
The 325ti SE came with 16" wheels and 205 tyres. I had a 325ti Sport and they only had 17s, although they were staggered with 225s on the front and 245s on the rear.

I'd keep those wheels as they look good and 16" tyres will be cheaper!


Leins

9,979 posts

165 months

Tuesday 12th August
quotequote all
Mr Tidy said:
The 325ti SE came with 16" wheels and 205 tyres. I had a 325ti Sport and they only had 17s, although they were staggered with 225s on the front and 245s on the rear.

I'd keep those wheels as they look good and 16" tyres will be cheaper!
18” MVs were also an option, my 325ti Sport had MV2s on it. Very tyre sensitive though, they really didn’t like brand mixing front/rear as I found out

gtidriver

3,611 posts

204 months

Tuesday 12th August
quotequote all
I had the old Topgear magazine lifer car RE02WPF.It was an awesome car, only missing item was a 6 speed. It was an option I believe and it wasn't fitted.

Jon_S_Rally

Original Poster:

4,006 posts

105 months

Tuesday 12th August
quotequote all
86wasagoodyear said:
I have to disagree. I'd keep the current wheels. They're a great style that really suits the car. I am a fan of small wheels in principle though - they're just better for all reasons, some of which I reminded myself of yesterday.
I swapped the wheels front to rear on my Pug 205, for even tyre wear. Its wheels are 13" steelies, I've not taken any of them off for a while. They are SO much lighter than the 15" alloys of my daily Mazda3.
This difference in wheel size & mass (combined with the extra tyre sidewall height that the small wheels allow on the 205) is a big contributor to why, on my local rutted & potholed country lanes, the Pug rides much more comfortably than the 3, despite having much stiffer springs & dampers & far superior handling.
We used to have a Mini R56 with 2 sets of wheels - 17" with summer tyres & 16" with winters. The 16s were OK for ride & handling ; the 17s were appalling, crashy & unbearable. Small wheels good, big wheels bad.
Stick with the castors Matt !
Mr Tidy said:
Jon_S_Rally said:
I do like these. A friend had one and it always raised a smile.

I have to say though, if the wheels need refurbishing, I think I'd have to take the opportunity to replace them. While I understand why you might not want to fit anything enormous, the current ones look like castors! With the right BMW wheels on it, it would really take it up a notch.
The 325ti SE came with 16" wheels and 205 tyres. I had a 325ti Sport and they only had 17s, although they were staggered with 225s on the front and 245s on the rear.

I'd keep those wheels as they look good and 16" tyres will be cheaper!
Sorry chaps, you're both nuts. I'm not advocating putting 19" badmanz nonsense on it, but a simple OEM upgrade would transform it, and you could still enjoy perfectly acceptable ride. My 208 has a 205/45 R17 tyre and rides infinitely better than the wife's Hyundai Kona, which has a 215/60 R17. Gone are the days where larger wheels has to mean poor ride.

No one is telling me the 16" look better than something like this...


86wasagoodyear

772 posts

113 months

Tuesday 12th August
quotequote all
Jon_S_Rally said:
[
Sorry chaps, you're both nuts. I'm not advocating putting 19" badmanz nonsense on it, but a simple OEM upgrade would transform it, and you could still enjoy perfectly acceptable ride. My 208 has a 205/45 R17 tyre and rides infinitely better than the wife's Hyundai Kona, which has a 215/60 R17. Gone are the days where larger wheels has to mean poor ride.

No one is telling me the 16" look better than something like this...

I may indeed be nuts (and fully accept that) and honestly I do prefer Matt's castors to your silver OEM option .. Looks like the wheel arches weren't cut big enough winkhehe

was8v

2,011 posts

212 months

Tuesday 12th August
quotequote all
I put 1 series 16" wheels on mine, a square setup makes the 325ti a lot of fun, and rides lovely.


Matt Bird

1,511 posts

222 months

PH Reportery Lad

Tuesday 12th August
quotequote all
was8v said:
I put 1 series 16" wheels on mine, a square setup makes the 325ti a lot of fun, and rides lovely.

That's smart! I think the problem I have is the Bilsteins have lowered the car a fair bit, even with spacers it makes the wheels look really small. I'll struggle to make a Compact ever look good, and it does drive so nicely on the 16s, so I'll stick with it for now. I think...

SiR Shizzle

40 posts

193 months

Tuesday 12th August
quotequote all
You can't put on a 'ring sticker if you've not been on the track.

Similarly, if you buy a car with a ring sticker and you haven't driven on it, then it needs to come off I'm afraid.

It's the law.

Glad you're trip went well though. I had a S2k throw a CEL en route once, but the morning of the day we were due to go on it had gone out so I sent it. I've only been twice, and the sense of relief once i've made it back in one piece dominates my memory of the experience lol

FNG

4,540 posts

241 months

Tuesday 12th August
quotequote all
Mione's on 17x7.5J with 225/45/17 tyres and feels like the right compromise. Think the tyres are a bit cheaper than 16s and the wheels aren't as heavy as 18s.

Certainly wouldn't thank you for any more wheel weight nor a wider rear tyre. It's already not that easy to loosen the rear, a 255 wouldn't improve it at all.

This is on -35mm Eibach springs, by the way.


Tony Ruane

4 posts

14 months

Tuesday 12th August
quotequote all
These cars are so underrated
BMW’s best kept secret
I had one up to late last year
E46, Imola red
57,000 miles
Alcantara seats and roof lining
3 owners from new

What a gorgeous sound

Shouldn’t have sold it but the price was good at £9,100

Tony


Tony Ruane

4 posts

14 months

Tuesday 12th August
quotequote all
These cars are so underrated
BMW’s best kept secret
I had one up to late last year
E46, Imola red
57,000 miles
Alcantara seats and roof lining
3 owners from new

What a gorgeous sound

Shouldn’t have sold it but the price was good at £9,100

Tony


chirurgus

344 posts

233 months

Tuesday 12th August
quotequote all
Matt Bird said:
…having to open the driver’s door to unlock the boot is a bit annoying, if not yet the end of the world.
I see your manual unlocking and I raise you manually unlocking the driver’s door, climbing into to the boot through the rear seat and using the emergency boot release located adjacent to the boot latch.
I had a Compact many years ago and it liked to eat its battery if left unused for a few days. When it did so, that was the only way to reach the battery to remove it for charging (my car was parked on the street in London, so no option to charge it in situ).
I suspect my parasitic drain related to the alarm bonnet sensor, it wasn’t the common hungry hedgehog heater resistor because it persisted after I replaced that.

Mr Tidy

27,468 posts

144 months

Tuesday 12th August
quotequote all
Leins said:
Mr Tidy said:
The 325ti SE came with 16" wheels and 205 tyres. I had a 325ti Sport and they only had 17s, although they were staggered with 225s on the front and 245s on the rear.

I'd keep those wheels as they look good and 16" tyres will be cheaper!
18” MVs were also an option, my 325ti Sport had MV2s on it. Very tyre sensitive though, they really didn’t like brand mixing front/rear as I found out
They were, which seems strange as I think MV2s were standard on all the other E46 Sport models.

My Sport had the standard Style 97 staggered 17s.





AFAIK there was never a 6 speed option, it just became standard fit on facelifts.

Jon_S_Rally

Original Poster:

4,006 posts

105 months

Wednesday 13th August
quotequote all
FNG said:
Mione's on 17x7.5J with 225/45/17 tyres and feels like the right compromise. Think the tyres are a bit cheaper than 16s and the wheels aren't as heavy as 18s.

Certainly wouldn't thank you for any more wheel weight nor a wider rear tyre. It's already not that easy to loosen the rear, a 255 wouldn't improve it at all.

This is on -35mm Eibach springs, by the way.

Mr Tidy said:
They were, which seems strange as I think MV2s were standard on all the other E46 Sport models.

My Sport had the standard Style 97 staggered 17s.





AFAIK there was never a 6 speed option, it just became standard fit on facelifts.
Both of these look great! 17-inche wheels are a nice compromise it seems. They fill the arches better, but I'm sure the ride is still fine. As said, 17-inch tyres are probably cheaper than 16-inch these days anyway, or you'd at least have plenty of options of different sizes/types.