RE: BMW 325ti (E46) | PH Fleet

RE: BMW 325ti (E46) | PH Fleet

Tuesday 13th May

BMW 325ti (E46) | PH Fleet

Clutch changed, service sorted - bring on Nurburgring 24-Hour weekend


Recently, I haven’t had the best luck when it comes to clutches. Promise I’m not a car killer - at least I hope not. But having spent c. £1,500 having the clutch and flywheel changed on the Mini last year, it cooked a head gasket a matter of weeks later. I sold it for a third of that clutch change cost, which still hurts. 

Now I’ve spent the same again doing an identical job on the Compact. Sometimes it feels like I’d be able to afford a nice new car, all the money that’s been spent on keeping old crud going. Truth be told, it’s always been something that was on the to-do list for the car; even by rubbery, vague BMW manual standards, the shift was sloppy and the bite was high. There was no mention or record of a change, so it could well have been the original item. Or at least one that had seen better days. With ordinary use a few more miles could well have been eked out - there was no slipping, or failure to engage gears - but with a stag do trip to the Nurburgring 24 Hours not far off I was getting panicky. The thought of it giving up somewhere in Europe, having camped in the forest for a weekend and desperate to get home, filled me with dread. 

And while my credit card isn’t pleased, I’m so happy the work has now been done. Along with a big service, the Compact feels transformed: clutch bite is back where it should be, the straight six feels stronger, and the shift is only as bad as a modern BMW’s. So a noticeable improvement. Maybe I should have got the linkages and whatnot sorted while such a big job was being done, but quite frankly the thought of spending even more money in a wedding year wasn’t an appealing one. 

In fact, for the immediate future, I’d say the ti is sorted - from a driving perspective, at least. There are little cosmetic bits and bobs that could be done (make your jokes now about the major, unrectifiable cosmetic issues), but certainly nothing crucial. Right now I can focus on driving it at every given opportunity, because it feels absolutely bob on: no squeaks, rattles, groans or worries. If only the same could be said for the driver. 

I’m off to a car meet this week, and quite frankly am looking for any excuse to drive the BMW right now. I’ll take the long way to nursery, pick up the takeaway, or go out just for the fun of it. Particularly with the clutch done, I’m less worried than ever, which means there's ample opportunity to get on with simply enjoying a naturally aspirated engine, hydraulic steering and a manual gearbox. When so many new cars feel so overwrought, the little Compact is always the perfect palette cleanser. 

Certainly, the Compact being so sorted means I’ve been distracted for a little while by such silly ideas as an RX-8 or a later, similarly ugly small BMW. I’d really like to leave it at least a couple more years before having to do a clutch again, thanks very much. Fingers crossed, actually, that this is the last bit of old BMW fettling for a while. I’ll report back after it’s been to Germany…


FACT SHEET 

Car: 2003 BMW 325ti Compact
Run by: Matt Bird
On fleet since: July 2024
Bought for: £2,999
Mileage: 156,285
Last month at a glance: Classic Compact charmer clutch change

Previous reports

Author
Discussion

FaustF

Original Poster:

772 posts

168 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
A good task to get done and the mental relief of removing that nagging concern is worth a significant price itself.

A good car that ultimately still has an awful lot of life and enthusiasm for it left - manual 6cyl BMWs are a treat.

I'm sure it'll repay the favour in a good way during the stag! Enjoy!

Earthdweller

15,816 posts

140 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Looks really good, a great underrated car

GTEYE

2,238 posts

224 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Mr Tidy will be along shortly.

GreatScott2016

1,822 posts

102 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
The first 2 posts sum it up perfectly for me thumbup

Firebobby

810 posts

53 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
I've been through the same experience over the years with so many cars only in my case it was timing belts! Having had one let go on an E30 323i the very same day I was part exing it for a new car!!

Krikkit

27,364 posts

195 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Earthdweller said:
Looks really good, a great underrated car
They really are hugely underrated. Fantastic things.

RustyMX5

8,587 posts

231 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
When I first glanced at the article I thought it was a Rover 216 paperbag

Fishy Dave

1,105 posts

259 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Krikkit said:
Earthdweller said:
Looks really good, a great underrated car
They really are hugely underrated. Fantastic things.
I agree with you both, excellent cars. I missed mine when it went, my colleague bought a 325ti of her own, after driving mine.

GTRene

18,845 posts

238 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
I never owned a e46 Compact, although I've owned 4 e36 Compacts, most as in between cars and 1 with e36 M3 engine and more, that was a great car.

what I wonder though, how a E46 Compact say 1.8 compares with a e36 Compact 1.8

I mean, by driving and by drivers feel, the e36 compact always felt very good with such.

Krikkit

27,364 posts

195 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Fishy Dave said:
Krikkit said:
Earthdweller said:
Looks really good, a great underrated car
They really are hugely underrated. Fantastic things.
I agree with you both, excellent cars. I missed mine when it went, my colleague bought a 325ti of her own, after driving mine.
I sold mine and wish I hadn't!

s m

23,769 posts

217 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Krikkit said:
I sold mine and wish I hadn't!
Didn’t you get a 130 to replace it?

Max M4X WW

4,911 posts

196 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Have you fitted or thought about fitting a 545i shifter and 330i Clubsport gear knob? Massive improvement. Then there is also the removal of the CDV. All work well together.

Erast Fandorin

128 posts

37 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Cheap, fast, reliable. Pick any two........

I feel your pain; I spun the wheel and paid a similar amount for a 'tidy' E93. In 14 months I've spent 2x that getting the EML to stay out*, refreshing the suspension so it would not try to chuck me in a ditch on anything other that billiard table smooth tarmac (there's a single 500m stretch near by), and servicing plus a few bits and bobs.

While it hurts to spend ££££ on what was supposed to be a cheap car, it would have cost me a lot more to buy something younger that matches the brief, and I'd have spent as much on a £400pm PCP deal anyway.

*Thanks BMW for your DI fuel injector prices

MrC986

3,651 posts

205 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
I've a half share (to avoid domestic challenge on the number of cars I have) in an 2003 325ti M Sport manual for almost 7 yrs. We bought it at 148k miles and are just about to get the clutch replaced at 160k miles which isn't bad considering we do a few track days a year with it. It's interesting to see where the prices are now as we paid £875 which I think at the time was a bit of a bargain.

Edited by MrC986 on Tuesday 13th May 20:25

s m

23,769 posts

217 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
GTRene said:
I never owned a e46 Compact, although I've owned 4 e36 Compacts, most as in between cars and 1 with e36 M3 engine and more, that was a great car.

what I wonder though, how a E46 Compact say 1.8 compares with a e36 Compact 1.8

I mean, by driving and by drivers feel, the e36 compact always felt very good with such.
Seen a test where they compared an E36 323ti with an E46 325ti years ago. Occasionally an E36 323ti will pop up for sale in the Classic ads - I have tried one ( I didn’t dance it on the edge of adhesion Troy Queef style sadly as it was being sold by a garage dealing in classic cars so I can’t comment on how it was in extremis ) but I did prefer the E46 ( I didn’t have problems with throttle lag etc as many report ) overall to drive. At the time I had a modded E36 328i with Z3 rack, LSD etc

The Pistonsdead

5,122 posts

221 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
RustyMX5 said:
When I first glanced at the article I thought it was a Rover 216 paperbag
Hahaha I can see where you're coming from.
Looking good for those miles too thumbup

s m

23,769 posts

217 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
GTRene said:
I never owned a e46 Compact, although I've owned 4 e36 Compacts, most as in between cars and 1 with e36 M3 engine and more, that was a great car.

what I wonder though, how a E46 Compact say 1.8 compares with a e36 Compact 1.8

I mean, by driving and by drivers feel, the e36 compact always felt very good with such.

s m

23,769 posts

217 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
GTRene said:
I never owned a e46 Compact, although I've owned 4 e36 Compacts, most as in between cars and 1 with e36 M3 engine and more, that was a great car.

what I wonder though, how a E46 Compact say 1.8 compares with a e36 Compact 1.8

I mean, by driving and by drivers feel, the e36 compact always felt very good with such.

GTRene

18,845 posts

238 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
thanks S M thumbup

Mr Tidy

26,409 posts

141 months

Tuesday 13th May
quotequote all
Firebobby said:
I've been through the same experience over the years with so many cars only in my case it was timing belts! Having had one let go on an E30 323i the very same day I was part exing it for a new car!!
That's the beauty of later BMW sixes - they use chains. smile

Apologies to GTEYE for being a bit late in posting!