Another silver BMW - 2005 330i Touring

Another silver BMW - 2005 330i Touring

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JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Monday 14th June 2021
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d_a_n1979 said:
A good job well done I'd say thumbup

Always nice to make these fixes yourself etc smile
I agree. Saves having to do much more invasive work at a time I don’t want to. smile

Gallons Per Mile said:
Good job! You could double nut the side with no washer to lock it tight. No need for the grinder then thumbup
That’s a right plan! I might do that, for the sake of safety.

B'stard Child said:
Glad to return the favour - if your bolts don't have the ball head (and Mine don't) - blob of silicone inside the front face of the cover and the cover looks like it it fixed properly biggrin
Oh nice. I think I’ll do something like that. You’re welcome to my old bolts if you’d like them. biggrin

Court_S said:
I’m in no rush to do the gaskets. The car doesn’t appear to be using any oil and it doesn’t look any worse. It’s missing the little black cover too.

Week tomorrow that my car is in for diagnostics. I’m hoping it’s not too major because it seems to be running ok other than a slightly rough idle. When I’m not feeling so lazy I’ll take the engine cover off to check the electrical con to the motor and sensor.
No need to in that case. I probably left it a year before doing the one on my car. The Valvetronic fix is way higher on the list either way.


JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Monday 14th June 2021
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B'stard Child said:
They look a little worn so I'll pass - I'll settle for the part number for the ball headed ones - I can't find them on Real OEM and my local dealer can't order them without a part number wink
The number is 11427543327

My local BMW dealer wanted £19 for them. I just cancelled my order today, so there’s three about! smile

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Wednesday 23rd June 2021
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I think an E39 M5 would fit the bill brilliantly. A real last hurrah, and a pretty solid investment, too!

Thank you. I do plan to keep the car for some time, even if I’ve just bought an E36, too. smile

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Thursday 24th June 2021
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CB 987 said:
Nice one, what are the details on the E36? Have you still got the E46?
E46 is still here, I think about selling it but for what it’s worth I don’t want the hassle. E46s seem to attract the worst people when I've sold ones before. Lots of £800 that’s all I’m offering types.

E36 needs its own thread soon, it’s a nice low mileage (57k) 320i auto. Two keepers from new, always garage and very tidy. Stumbled upon it, and had to have it. Really original car now.






Batch 7.5R said:
What a lovely old bus, Jake. And really nice to see someone putting so much love into it!
Thank you. It’s a labour of love nowadays, and E90s are at that stage now where they need a diligent owner or they end up being drifted or on the weighbridge.


Edited by JakeT on Thursday 24th June 08:42

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Friday 25th June 2021
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Court_S said:
That E36 is in proper time warp condition, looking forward to the thread on it.
I’ll sort one out this weekend. There's some jobs to do, so there’s content! smile

CB 987 said:
That's looks like a great example, back in the late 1990's a neighbour had a very similar dark blue, K plate 325i coupe, it sounded lovely! I honestly can't remember the last time I saw an early E36 on the road.
My dad had one from new in 1994, until 2000 when an E46 330i touring replaced it. It really feels like it’s the 90s inside. Listening choices is limited to REM, and other 90s tastic bits.

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Wednesday 21st July 2021
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As posted in the 'What have you done to your BMW today' thread...

Hit a milestone last night:



Everything still works, and with the work I've done to it over the past 2 years, feels better than ever. Just need to have a spot of tidying up done for the paintwork and we'll keep on track to the big 200. smile

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Wednesday 6th October 2021
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MOT day


Nothing too exciting to report, bar the MOT today. A year ago to the day of the last one. Only 10,191 miles covered in that year, lots of work done but it went straight through with an advisory free pass.

Roll on another year of motoring. beer

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Tuesday 28th December 2021
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Braking News


Nothing all that exciting, although I had been musing how the car had given no trouble since my last update. A litre of oil was added...



Then the car went on a few trips, down to Cornwall, up to The Highlands and John O'Groats, and then again to Northumberland, and Edinburgh. Rougly 5,000 miles covered since October time, now. Some pictures from these trips, one even had a a big CB aerial on the car for some comms with mates we went with. a few miles of range is great vs two way radios we've used before.

Edinburgh:


Car in full trip mode, CB aerial included:



The Lochs:


Glasgow:


Snow in the hills near the borders, feeling smug with winter tyres on the untreated roads, and A68:


Due to use the car over the Christmas break for ferrying things (and people) around, I noticed the car was grabbing coming to a stop, and lo and behold, a warm rear wheel. a rear caliper was sticking. I last did one in 2019, and this time it's the other one. Fortunately I caught it in time so the pads hadn't worn unevenly, or taken the disc with them. I noticed this on the 23rd, and did a quick caliper swap on the 24th. Years of E46 ownership has meant a caliper swap is a common occurance, with no real gotchas. Some pictures of the job below.

Before...



During...



After (spot the shiny bit)...



Back to its usual self. Coming up on a service again now, current mileage is 177,800ish, and the last service was done at 168,990. I'll get some bits ordered up soon.

That's all for now. Hoping any readers of this peculiar (and not very interesting) blog have had a nice Christmas and have a nice New Year's

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Wednesday 29th December 2021
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Court_S said:
Good stuff.

I have the fun of the valve cover gasket and eccentric shaft sensor to look forward to on Thursday. The garage is cleaned / tidied so I don’t need to do it in the drive.

I need to change the rear callipers in her 125i because I’m 99% sure one is sticking slightly. I’ve been given some beardy new ones from another forum member which just need painting because they’re currently Phoenix yellow.
Good plan. I’m sure it takes quite a while knowing what the N52 is like to work on. Why do people always paint calipers yellow? hehe



CB 987 said:
Great update, how are you getting on with the fresher Birds suspension kit?

Do you fancy selling it back to me?! Joking aside, I’m currently on the look out for something similar to run and then keep for a while. I’ve just sold my F31 as we now need a larger family car. I have been craving something with 6 cylinders and a manual gearbox to run alongside the new family car.

Current favourites are an E81/E82 130i (always fancied trying one), another E91 330i/335i or another decent E46 330i touring (quite a challenge!)… just to make it difficult I’d much prefer a manual!

Cheers.
It feels just as good, and fresh as it should do. The knock on the front is gone, and the rear is more composed as the rear dampers had over 100,000 miles on them. I still have the bits I took off, I keep meaning to get Bilstein UK to refresh them now they birds aren’t doing the E90 kits anymore.

Ive just slimmed the fleet, and sold my E46 325ti, too! How was it selling the D3? Sometimes ALPINAs can be a bit of a pain to sell.

130is are great. I found one for a mate late last year. LE, with cruise, heated seats, logic7 and CIC nav retrofitted. Had the Bilstein B12 kit on it too, and it’s a really nice little thing.

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Monday 3rd January 2022
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CB 987 said:
The D3 actually sold really quickly, I think being a touring always helps. The market is just bonkers currently, which made my purchasing dilemma a challenge, but then it’s all relative. I actually achieved marginally more for the Alpina than I paid nearly 3 years and 25k miles ago, so no complaints.

As of today I’m back in an E91 for a bit, it’s a LCI N54 335i, sadly not a manual, but with approx. 20 manual LCI cars, it was always going to be a challenge! I actually like the auto more than I anticipated. It’s done just under 100k, Le Mans blue with a few extras, sadly no xenons. I might even start a quick build thread as I plan to tidy a few bits up, nothing major. Decent history with some of the common E91/N54 problems addressed already, it was under BMW warranty until 2018/2019. I need to stop myself looking at Bilstein kits now!

Cheers
Oh, excellent. How does it seem back in an older one? I really like the ZF 6HP, I think they have the right balance of speed of changes and the slush that makes an automatic good.

That’s no surprise, the market really is silly. But no depreciation in three years with the way things have gone on diesel is excellent.

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Monday 3rd January 2022
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helix402 said:
Afraid you need a Bilstein kit (or Birds). See my 335d thread for inspiration.
He knows. He’s the previous owner of my car which was Birds’d the whole time he had it. smile

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Wednesday 2nd March 2022
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Glad to hear. smile

The Birds kit is excellent, even though very costly. The oil filter and cooler gaskets aren’t all that difficult, and can be done leaving the manifold on fortunately.

I’ve been a little lazy in updating this thread recently. Service time came and went. Oil, pollen, air filter, and a new thermostat were fitted. Lovely picture of some parts in the boot is below. As usual, the electric pump makes bleeding and leak checking so easy, one of the best features of it.



Mileage is up to 179,500 miles now.

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Friday 10th June 2022
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A large trip, this time

N.b In order to keep this post from taking up too much space on your display, I've spoiler'd the pictures of lots of places.

I recently moved jobs, and due to the job that I am moving in to, needing background checks that could take over a month, I ended up having some time between jobs. With this in mind, the good lady and I decided to do one of the things we love most (stop it), go on a big European trip. We'd planned to do something similar in 2020, but we needn't talk about what happened there.

With this in mind, we booked everything quite last minute after a bit of a faff with the passport office, however compared to many I got off lucky. Our route was as follows:

  • West Berkshire
  • Liege
  • Stuttgart
  • Munich
  • Innsbruck
  • Konstanz
  • Lucerne
  • Freiburg
  • Nancy
  • Luxembourg
  • Ghent
  • West Berks
I last did any real work on the car in March, so gave it a good wash and checkover, pre trip. This consisted of:

An umweltplakette (German emission sticker. Needed for lots of cities now)

Checks of the various key fluids, and a poke under the bonnet to make sure there's been no new leaks

A check of the A/C system (even though it's on all year round)

A diagnostic run, to be sure there were no codes that would cause trouble


Putting all of the rammel needed in the boot. This namely consisted of the spare wheel kit, excellent little Wera tool kit, spare coolant, gloves, and cleaning supplies. The lack of spare provisions on these cars does make me sad. It encroaches on boot space a lot, but such is life.

Packed up, we managed to still pull the luggage cover over. I'm quite anal about this, to keep things away from prying eyes, and to keep us safe should the unthinkable happen.

With this being the Saturday, I finished work on the Tuesday and we went on the Wednesday. Starting mileage:

First stop was the chunnel, obviously. Did you even use the tunnel if you didn't take a picture?

From there we had a quick stop in northern Belgium (Oostende) before heading onwards to Liege, our first stop.
Oostende:

Liege is a lovely city, too. We chose it as a second to one of our favourites, Spa. Liege still has some great places to eat, architecture, and has the River Meuse flowing through it. It also has a very impressive set of steps, which I am not sure the camera conveyed very well. In 28 degrees, it was quite a walk up there. Nice view from the top, though.
Liege Pictures:

Resting underground after the first leg



It doesn't look that steep here...

No, it really is! Nice view though.


We only stayed a night, and then moved onwards, to Stuttgart. The scenery in Southern Belgium is great, and very hilly. The E42 takes a great route, and once you're in Germany, and see the best sign ever, you know what time it is. :biggrin:
Once in Stuttgart, we explored generally, had some dinner, and got caught in a huge thunderstorm. For those that don't know, on the continent there's really some magnificent shows in the sky. I did get totally drenched though. We also visited a museum. I know that they're the enemy of this thread, but I can't help but admire.
MB Museum pictures:

We started off staying next to some football team. Not that I knew.

Getting close, something feels off...

Something old, so I've been told


One for the barge thread

Complete with the requisite paraphernalia


Old commercials - Which I am strangely fond of

A combo of dreams

A working C Klasse

One of my all time favourite F1 safety cars

Where the boss sat (Who's that weirdo?)

The hall of motorsport




Stuttgart was also just a night stop, with us wanting to cover miles to get further south quickly. The drive on to Munich was fine, albeit a lot of traffic. My main memories of driving in Germany is the sublime and frustrating. Yes, you can go as fast as your car will go, but the chance to do so is getting rarer and rarer. The main things are road works, and traffic. An early morning run on a Sunday in summer is what you really need if you're going to do some proper speeds. With that over, and some more lovely scenery (and a spot of speeding) we found ourselves in Munich. One of my favourite cities. We just had to stop by the museum of the builder of the namesake of the thread, and did a lot of exploring. We also spent a lot of time in Biergartens. I'm back for Oktoberfest, so got the practice in.

Munich and BMW Museum pictures:





A piston and the engine that carried us here, one of BMWs best.


And another of BMWs best, that's also in the garage at home! They had an M20 and M30 in the engine room, too.









An ALPINA B3 on seasonal plates. Just lovely.

Could it be? The option UK buyers missed out on? Yes! The elusive 6 speed manual!





We stayed in Munich for three days, and took in various sites the city had. Then, it was off to Austria. More specifically, Innsbruck. On the way there, we stopped off at the Neuschwanstein. It's a fairytale castle in the foothills of The Alps, just inside of Germany. Some great views, and it's a tough walk up to the castle. Worth it though. You can take the bus if you don't fancy the walk, too.

Pictures of and from the Neuschwanstein:












This led us into Austria and Innsbruck, where we stayed for a few days. The aparthotel we were in had great views of the Alps, and the old town of Innsbruck, over the river. Suitably this is called the Inn.

Innsbruck pictures ahoy!







From there, we visited Konstanz. This is on the shores of Lake Constance (Bodensee to the Germans), which is where the German, Austrian, and Swiss borders meet. This was our highlight of the trip, and I would absolutely recommend visitng. Lots of Germans visit here on holiday too, and we were here for Ascension, which is a public holiday in Germany. On the way there, we stopped in Liechtenstein. They have a castle. It was closed.

Piccies of Liechtenstein and Konstanz
Nice views. Shame they weren't having visitors.



Konstanz





A two tone Volvo I enjoyed more than I should have

The Bodensee Steak. Delicious!

Followed by the amusing looking spaghetti ice cream



Following on from this, we headed into Switzerland, our stop being Lucerne. Switzerland is gorgeous, and jolly expensive! I'll let the pictures speak for themselves.
















I wasn't planning on subjecting the good lady to any more car related activities, but there happened to be the Swiss Classics World on near our hotel, so it would have been rude not to go! Some really fantastic classics there, and the admission price was worth it. Of course, I did take some pictures of the various cars I can't afford. biggrin





















Post Switzerland, we hopped back into Germany, where at the border I spent the MOST I have ever spent on fuel in my life. 98RON super? EUR2.57 per litre. I did not fill the tanks. Just a splash and fast dash. Freiburg is where we stopped next, for a night. In the heart of The Black Forest, it's a very quaint town/city, and has some great views. This was another hit, and I'd like some more time to visit the area next time we do such a trip.
You know the deal, pictures are right here







Post Freiburg, it was a hop into France, for a couple of days in Nancy. Nancy didn't wow us as much as the other areas, so much so I took just the one picture. The grand square is a UNESCO site, I believe.


After Nancy, we visited another tax haven. This time, in the form of Luxembourg. It's a nice place, in the same way Switzerland is. Also the same is the incredibly steep prices!


Some sort of posh car event, happening far below us

We did see the Grand Duke of Luxembourg. He's too important for number plates, just a crown on his Audi A8.




This leads us on to one of our favourite places, and our final stop. Ghent. A lovely old city, with lots of things to do as a tourist. It's also close enough to the tunnel for an easy weekend trip, for those so inclined. At this point in the trip we were savouring the experience, and wanting to not come home. Always the sign of a good holiday, in my eyes.





Someone decided a wave was a good ideas as it was being taken... smile




Which brings us to... The final day, coming home. The obligatory tunnel pic was taken...



And, our final ending mileage, and scores on the doors.




The car really was the unsung hero of this trip. 140MPH in 35 degree heat, and lots of time spent between 100-120 smashing some miles in comfort and style. No work performed beforehand, and nothing to even suggest it wouldn't complete the trip. We used roughly 1/2 of a litre of oil, but I can accept that with over 180,000 miles covered now, and the stick I gave it over quite a few miles. it continues to impress, and be as faithful as one could want a car to be. This car has now covered 45,000 miles with me in three years now, and I don't want it to go any time soon. I know that I could save money on fuel with something else, and go faster, but I can't do that to an old friend now. This one will see its days out with me, with regular exercise. smile

It needs another wash and hoover now, too.

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Tuesday 14th June 2022
quotequote all
Thank you all for the nice comments. Appreciate it. smile

The car was incredibly solid. That said I should hope so the amount of time, effort, and hard earned I’ve put into it now.

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Saturday 8th October 2022
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Since the summer trip, nothing exciting has happened. MOT has been, and we’re legal for another year. 13,000 miles covered. I’ll take that, as I work from home.

Recently, one headlight washed has been sticking out, and annoying me. Obviously that just won’t do. A used one on eBay is £20 vs £86 for a new one from BMW. Used it was.

Before:

Firstly, the washer nozzle and cover came off. They clip in, nice and easily.

Followed by a little clean…

Then, up in the air, off with the wheel and out with the front arch liner. One screw snapped. frown

I tried to clamp the hose with the Croydon socket set, but that didn’t work.

Old part out (from 2005), new one in.

Ignition on, sidelights on and check…


Success! Cleaning the old one still wouldn’t let it retract. One of those (very) minor niggles sorted.

Nearly at the magic 186,000 miles. 300,000km.

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Saturday 8th October 2022
quotequote all
I clamped the hose, as it leaked a good bit of fluid out. I wants to keep the garage floor semi clean.

I don’t even live near Croydon. They’re also known as the adjustable nut fkers to some too. hehe

Absolutely. I kind of like them too. Reminds me of old cavaliers and the ‘pecking order’. ‘It has headlight washers? Oh my god it’s a CDI or an SRI’. biggrin

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Tuesday 22nd November 2022
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An enjoyable trip to Belgium was had. Partly for some R&R and Spa activities, and partly to start stocking up on good things for Christmas. smile

Scores on the doors. Very agreeable economy this trip. The only time I’ve done a comfortable 500+ miles before needing to fill up:


2022, outside Franchimont castle:


2019, with an old friend. (Sniff)

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Wednesday 23rd November 2022
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B'stard Child said:
Bravo clapclapclap
It was unintentional, and surprising more than anything! I take it easy in Belgium, as well… Belgian drivers have their own style.

Swervin_Mervin said:
That's a good effort! Best I've ever managed was about 34-35mpg!
Normally this does similar, too. That said my long term average is 32ish. I live in the boonies, so no short runs and very little urban traffic, too.

MDMA . said:
New E91 owner here. Does the above only show on the last trip before switching the engine off or can you see what a previous trip did? Just wondering if I could see what mine did after picking it up from Dundee the other week.
There’s two. The standard OBC stuff, and this journey one (if the car has iDrive). They both need to be reset manually. Newer cars have them auto-reset every journey, but on these they have to be done yourself.

Court_S said:
That’s not a bad effort at all; they’re pretty good on fuel when covering distances.
Agreed! I’ve never thought the fuel economy all that bad, and after adjustment the BC is bang on. Even a little pessimistic. One stop for fuel was done with 508.3 miles showing on the trip, and it took 59.7 litres. With my maths that works out to around 38.6. Very agreeable, albeit rare. Usually the lure of using it as intended will bring it down a good amount. That said, even long distances at 100-140 I can just about eek 30MPG out of it.

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Wednesday 23rd November 2022
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bolidemichael said:
I've just caught up on your summer hols and it was a wonderful trip! I do agree about the autobahnen, hugely frustrating during the day with a massive speed disparity on congested roads and uber aggressive drivers. I've noticed that the speeds maintained in the restricted areas at +20kmh on top of the limits, too.

You and I have both been to Ghent recently; in my case, it was an overnighter at a Uni friend's, so effectively in and out again on this occassion!
From someone that posts such great trip reports, that’s most kind of you to say, thank you.

Agreed. While sometimes one can do some very wild speeds, I usually get the hammer down and then have to slow for traffic or works. As you mention, since I stick to limits then, the diesel golf I just blasted past overtakes again. hehe

Ghent is great. My brother lived there and in the Netherlands for a while, too. We stopped in Ghent on the way back on Monday, too. We had a long lunch and did a little more shopping, too. Being on the right side of Brussels for the Chunnel helps, too.

JakeT

Original Poster:

5,460 posts

121 months

Wednesday 23rd November 2022
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bolidemichael said:
Do you speak German or Liechtensteinoise then? It wouldn't often occur to me to take such an exotic tour through Europe.
I do, German.Not excellently but I can get by. My dad did his degree in German and French, lived in West Germany and speaks both fluently. I’m envious, my grasp of languages is nowhere near that.

I’m usually more comfortable in German speaking countries, because If things go tits up I can just about get my point across where needed.