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Nothing crazy but rust is the KILLER of E36s. Inspect the jacking points (Right under where the holes in the side of the side skirts are) if they have surface rust. Fine buy the car and fix them. But if they have crust. Run.
Rust and paint. Look for rust underneath, behind the front wheels. All over the trunk lid; by the plate, the lights, the emblem, the edge. The inside trunk edge where the rubber seal goes over the raised area. I always make sure that's dry after washing the car. Around the tail lights. Door edges, rear quarters. Under the spare, under the battery. Look for rust everywhere. Everywhere.
Other than that, they are very strong cars once refreshed. It's an easy car to work on. At least the suspension and cooling will probably need to be done. The engines are extremely reliable in my experience. Of the two I've owned over almost 100k miles, the engines needed the least amount of attention.
I think the RTAB reinforcement is only needed for a track car, but that debate is out there. Definitely inspect it.
It's comical a German manufacturer of cars would let all these basic issues plague their cars, most comical of course being a failed subfloor on one of their motorsport derived products.
It's comical a German manufacturer of cars would let all these basic issues plague their cars, most comical of course being a failed subfloor on one of their motorsport derived products.
The E36 has far fewer major problems than the 46. Actually, the E36 doesn't have any major issues. Nothing like Vanos, RACP, or bearings. i'd cut them some slack anyway, remember that this was a tumultuous time for the industry. Porsche almost went out of business, hence the cost cutting 996. Look at what we were making over here in America at the time...
As for latest build date, that applies only if you're not getting the much superior and more special 1995! I jest. Mostly. Fewer things to go wrong on the early cars, plus they are set up better from the factory.
It's comical a German manufacturer of cars would let all these basic issues plague their cars, most comical of course being a failed subfloor on one of their motorsport derived products.
Engineering has its limits, as does MSRP. These were what $60k cars in '06? My other '06 cost double that and then some new. Obviously, they didn't sell 85,000 of those. To do what this car does and keep it under $60k was quite a feat, actually IMO.
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