E36 M3 3.0
E36 M3 3.0
Author
Discussion

Icarus_

Original Poster:

3,402 posts

272 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
I'm after a fun car for summer and have always had a soft spot for the S50 engine.

I'd prefer a 3 litre car to the later 3.2 but all the ones appearing for sale seem to have dubious history or a fair bit of rust appearing.

Anyone have any tips for finding a clean, tidy, not badly modified one? PH Classifieds the obvious choice but even that is pretty sparse of decent cars.

Budget upto £5K for a nice one or £3K for one I'd have to put a bit of work into - mechanical issues only idealy!

Any major pitfalls to be aware of?

All input appreciated! :-)

Edited by Icarus_ on Sunday 14th June 00:12

swtmerce

213 posts

230 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
I think M3 prices have been through a bit of hell over the past year or so. Thankfully, a lot of pony cars have changed hands/died in this time and we're getting to a situation where there are proportionately more good cars left which are owned by people who take care of them properly and will not let them go for the silly prices the market has seen recently. For example, what car can you get of similar performance for a silly price of say £4,000? A similar age Impreza STi perhaps that could blow its engine at any moment?

M3 prices have strengthened and the best early ones, I see, are starting at over £5,500.

asbo

26,140 posts

237 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
Avoid the 3.0 IME.

It's a nice car, but let down by boat-like steering and performance that feels 'adequate' in 2009 rather than mind-blowing.

The 3.2 is a far better car and worth the additional outlay for a good one.

nottyash

4,671 posts

218 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
swtmerce said:
what car can you get of similar performance for a silly price of say £4,000? A similar age Impreza STi perhaps that could blow its engine at any moment?
.
WTF???
Subaru make good engines, they dont go bang at any moment.
A lot of the 280BHP+ jap stuff can be had for 4 grand, not just Imprezas.
Legacy GTB
GTO twin turbo
VR4
Skyline
To name but a few.

GTWayne

4,595 posts

240 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
I too would aim to acquire an Evo over a 3.0ltr as a road car yes

Icarus_

Original Poster:

3,402 posts

272 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
Any defining reason to? Power difference appears to be circa 30bhp so not a lot in it in that department. Do the later cars have different steering gear, suspension setup etc.?

To be honest I'm not after one as a massively fast car, at circa 200bhp/tonne they aren't much different in power to weight than a good hot hatch so performance at legal'ish speeds is never going to be earth moving. More a comfortable cruiser that isn't slow.

Very interested to hear the reasons to go 3.2 rather than 3.0.

oola

2,685 posts

246 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
Icarus_ said:
Any defining reason to? Power difference appears to be circa 30bhp so not a lot in it in that department. Do the later cars have different steering gear, suspension setup etc.?

To be honest I'm not after one as a massively fast car, at circa 200bhp/tonne they aren't much different in power to weight than a good hot hatch so performance at legal'ish speeds is never going to be earth moving. More a comfortable cruiser that isn't slow.

Very interested to hear the reasons to go 3.2 rather than 3.0.
Newer car (just), more torque so doesn't need the nuts revving off it, better steering - less lock-to-lock turns. Not hugely different in honesty but having had a 3.0 model 12 or so years ago and a 3.0GT more recently, I take the Evo over the 3.0. Forget the power part ... most 3.0 made around their quoted BHP where as the Evo's quoted 321BHP was optimistic to say the least ... if you have 300BHP then you're doing well.

Saying all this, buy on condition, which ever model you go for.

paoloh

8,617 posts

227 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
http://www.pistonheads.com/sales/1085375.htm

This one looks bloody good value to me

swtmerce

213 posts

230 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
nottyash said:
swtmerce said:
what car can you get of similar performance for a silly price of say £4,000? A similar age Impreza STi perhaps that could blow its engine at any moment?
.
WTF???
Subaru make good engines, they dont go bang at any moment.
A lot of the 280BHP+ jap stuff can be had for 4 grand, not just Imprezas.
Legacy GTB
GTO twin turbo
VR4
Skyline
To name but a few.
They don't go bang at any moment, but they are much more likely to go bang than N/A engines. I guess any turbo engine is.

I've owned 3 different Imprezas in the past. The two newer ones (2002 and 2003) were fine. The 1998 STi that I had for £5000 a couple of years ago blew its bottom end. Also, during the time I owned those 3 cars (about 2.5 years) I knew of six others from my own small club that had major engine issues. Most of them were older cars (the ones that slot into the £4000 bracket I'm referring to) but one of them was a 2004 WR1 so it's not an exclusive 'oldies' club.

asbo

26,140 posts

237 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
Icarus_ said:
Any defining reason to? Power difference appears to be circa 30bhp so not a lot in it in that department. Do the later cars have different steering gear, suspension setup etc.?

To be honest I'm not after one as a massively fast car, at circa 200bhp/tonne they aren't much different in power to weight than a good hot hatch so performance at legal'ish speeds is never going to be earth moving. More a comfortable cruiser that isn't slow.

Very interested to hear the reasons to go 3.2 rather than 3.0.
As above.

Plus, my Evo made over 170 mph on the Autobahn last year. Not sure I can think of many hot hatches that can do that.

In standard form with fresh suspension, the Evo is the consumate alrounder. Moreover, despite the relatively small on paper power differences, the it is by far the quicker car on the road and indeed a very quick car period.

I bought a 3.0 as a track car project at the beginning of the year and quickly wished I'd bought an Evo instead.

Icarus_

Original Poster:

3,402 posts

272 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
paoloh said:
http://www.pistonheads.com/sales/1085375.htm

This one looks bloody good value to me
Almost certainly but a convertible definately isn't what I'm after.

Asbo - hence why I said at legal'ish speeds. Similar power/weight ratios rarely mean similar top speeds but rates of acceleration at lower speeds can be very similar with a nigh on equal power/weight ratio. Somewhat of an over simplication but true none the less.

I'm certainly not ruling out a 3.2 but at the moment don't see why its worth passing up a good 3.0 in favour of a 3.2. As far as I can see they are a very similar cars but the concensous seems to be definately don't buy a 3.0? Is the steering comment purely based on rack ratio?



Edited by Icarus_ on Sunday 14th June 22:52

Icarus_

Original Poster:

3,402 posts

272 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
swtmerce said:
nottyash said:
swtmerce said:
what car can you get of similar performance for a silly price of say £4,000? A similar age Impreza STi perhaps that could blow its engine at any moment?
.
WTF???
Subaru make good engines, they dont go bang at any moment.
A lot of the 280BHP+ jap stuff can be had for 4 grand, not just Imprezas.
Legacy GTB
GTO twin turbo
VR4
Skyline
To name but a few.
They don't go bang at any moment, but they are much more likely to go bang than N/A engines. I guess any turbo engine is.

I've owned 3 different Imprezas in the past. The two newer ones (2002 and 2003) were fine. The 1998 STi that I had for £5000 a couple of years ago blew its bottom end. Also, during the time I owned those 3 cars (about 2.5 years) I knew of six others from my own small club that had major engine issues. Most of them were older cars (the ones that slot into the £4000 bracket I'm referring to) but one of them was a 2004 WR1 so it's not an exclusive 'oldies' club.
Having worked for a company which has a big interest in Subaru making up part of its business model (albeit a smaller part as of late) I think it speaks volumes that I don't own and wouldn't consider an Impreza!

Regarding the above on the older cars no 3 big end bearing failure by any chance and on the newer car oil starvation during track time, possibly after a change to 'stickier' tyres?

I'm a big fan of relatively unstressed, well engineered, fairly high specific output naturaly aspirated engines.

swtmerce

213 posts

230 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
Icarus_ said:
swtmerce said:
nottyash said:
swtmerce said:
what car can you get of similar performance for a silly price of say £4,000? A similar age Impreza STi perhaps that could blow its engine at any moment?
.
WTF???
Subaru make good engines, they dont go bang at any moment.
A lot of the 280BHP+ jap stuff can be had for 4 grand, not just Imprezas.
Legacy GTB
GTO twin turbo
VR4
Skyline
To name but a few.
They don't go bang at any moment, but they are much more likely to go bang than N/A engines. I guess any turbo engine is.

I've owned 3 different Imprezas in the past. The two newer ones (2002 and 2003) were fine. The 1998 STi that I had for £5000 a couple of years ago blew its bottom end. Also, during the time I owned those 3 cars (about 2.5 years) I knew of six others from my own small club that had major engine issues. Most of them were older cars (the ones that slot into the £4000 bracket I'm referring to) but one of them was a 2004 WR1 so it's not an exclusive 'oldies' club.
Having worked for a company which has a big interest in Subaru making up part of its business model (albeit a smaller part as of late) I think it speaks volumes that I don't own and wouldn't consider an Impreza!

Regarding the above on the older cars no 3 big end bearing failure by any chance and on the newer car oil starvation during track time, possibly after a change to 'stickier' tyres?

I'm a big fan of relatively unstressed, well engineered, fairly high specific output naturaly aspirated engines.
Spot on re my 98 car. The WR1 was just on road tyres though! lol wink

Vixpy1

42,697 posts

287 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
I prefer the drive of the Evo, but the gearbox in the 3.0 is much nicer, the 6 speed box is not one of BMW's finer moments

GTWayne

4,595 posts

240 months

Sunday 14th June 2009
quotequote all
Icarus_ said:
I'm certainly not ruling out a 3.2 but at the moment don't see why its worth passing up a good 3.0 in favour of a 3.2. As far as I can see they are a very similar cars but the concensous seems to be definately don't buy a 3.0? Is the steering comment purely based on rack ratio?
I would not say definitely don't buy a 3.0ltr, it is just that should you get the opportunity to buy an Evo for a similar price then you would be wise to go for the more developed of the two. I use a 3.0ltr as a track car and although I have just purchased a Z3 steering rack to install as this is a bolt on modification that addresses the supposed slow original rack fitted as standard, I have never had a problem with the standard rack and am only fitting said upgrade because I happened across one just last week.

Phugoid

521 posts

272 months

Monday 15th June 2009
quotequote all
I wouldn't necessarily pass up a mint 3.0, but the Evolution is the one to go for if you have the choice between two nice cars. The clue is in the name - evolved handling, power, drivetrain, fuel economy and levels of equipment. They are a good bit faster around a track than the 3.0 and close to the E46 M3 in terms of performance.

In favour of the 3.0, I'd say they sound marginally better and I personally prefer the flat dish sunflower alloys on the older cars.

bennyboysvuk

3,494 posts

271 months

Monday 15th June 2009
quotequote all
I never found that much difference between the two having tracked both. The 3.2 does have slightly more torque in the mid range which means that you can spin up the rears more easily coming out of a tight turn. The 3.0 will do this almost as easily though.

The steering of the 3.2 does feel sharper due to the slightly quicker rack, but again it's not like the 3.0 is undriveable.

As for outright pace, a friend of mine used to have a Clio Trophy and he used to keep up, up to about 75-80ish at which point the 3.0 M3 would steadily walk away. You can't do power oversteer in a Trophy though. wink

I would say go for the one in the best condition you can find, which isn't as easy as it sounds. frown

asbo

26,140 posts

237 months

Monday 15th June 2009
quotequote all
bennyboysvuk said:
I never found that much difference between the two having tracked both. The 3.2 does have slightly more torque in the mid range which means that you can spin up the rears more easily coming out of a tight turn. The 3.0 will do this almost as easily though.

The steering of the 3.2 does feel sharper due to the slightly quicker rack, but again it's not like the 3.0 is undriveable.

As for outright pace, a friend of mine used to have a Clio Trophy and he used to keep up, up to about 75-80ish at which point the 3.0 M3 would steadily walk away. You can't do power oversteer in a Trophy though. wink

I would say go for the one in the best condition you can find, which isn't as easy as it sounds. frown
But yet the performance stats for even the 3.0 are quicker than that for the Clio. Afterall, let us not forget that even the first E36 M3 was/is as quick as the Nissan 350Z is today.

Icarus_

Original Poster:

3,402 posts

272 months

Monday 15th June 2009
quotequote all
This:

http://www.pistonheads.co.uk/sales/1089446.htm

Looks fairly good to me! Pretty base spec but low mileage and appears very tidy. I don't mind trading some extras for a good condition car - afterall dual climate wasn't even an option on either of my TVR's ;-)

As for Clio's I've built a couple that consistantly beat M cars in 24hr endurance races, but they most definately don't go sideways under power LOL



Edited by Icarus_ on Monday 15th June 23:19

asbo

26,140 posts

237 months

Monday 15th June 2009
quotequote all
Icarus_ said:
As for Clio's I've built a couple that consistantly beat M cars in 24hr endurance races, but they most definately don't go sideways under power LOL
.

Slightly different non?