New Coil Springs on E46 M3
New Coil Springs on E46 M3
Author
Discussion

RHY 11S

Original Poster:

78 posts

241 months

Tuesday 14th September 2010
quotequote all
Hi All, just a quick query. The garage has just dagnosed one broken coil spring on the front and one on the back. I have two questions:

1. Is it OK to replace with non-BMW springs on a car like this?
2. Should I replace both sides at the same time? ie: all 4?

Many thanks!

Rhys

dan101smith

17,012 posts

235 months

Tuesday 14th September 2010
quotequote all
1. Yes, as long as you get something decent
2. Yes

mmm-five

12,128 posts

308 months

Tuesday 14th September 2010
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But remember that if you go aftermarket (i.e. lowered, rather than pattern part) then you'll have to notify your insurance of a modification and possibly pay an increased premium.

See if you can find a cheaper source of OEM parts and you'll be fine, or do as the Z4M guys do and fit Eibach springs.

roofer

5,136 posts

235 months

Tuesday 14th September 2010
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Personally if its a road use car, i'd stick 4 OEM springs back on.

tjw110

506 posts

246 months

Tuesday 14th September 2010
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I've just had to replace both rear springs on my 2005 E46 M3 cab with 40k on the clock, it's such a comon fault on E36 and E46, the chances of it happening again a high, just stick on some Eibach Pro's and in place of the poor quality OEM

mat205125

17,790 posts

237 months

Tuesday 14th September 2010
quotequote all
tjw110 said:
I've just had to replace both rear springs on my 2005 E46 M3 cab with 40k on the clock, it's such a comon fault on E36 and E46, the chances of it happening again a high, just stick on some Eibach Pro's and in place of the poor quality OEM
How much do they lower the car?

Is there a noticable reduction in ride quality, or a tangible increase in handling performance?

Did you have your geometry reset after the swap?

Pics?