Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Fun with a boroscope: installing structural foam in the rear subframe cavity

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #16
    Originally posted by ATB88 View Post

    One thing I've heard (I hope I'm remembering incorrectly): doing foam first somehow makes it harder to weld in plates and/or do a topside reinforcement later.. is this true? It's not clear to me why it would be.
    Few things - foam is flammable and can result in higher localized heat of the already thin metal you would be welding to on the subframe. Also, you have to cut into the cavity in several places when trying to prep the area and expose some of the popped spot welds and with foam there serving as an obstruction you don't have room so you would have to chisel the foam out.
    Youtube DIYs and more

    All jobs done as diy - clutch, rod bearings, rear subframe rebush, vanos, headers, cooling, suspension, etc.

    PM for help in NorCal. Have a lot of specialty tools - vanos, pilot bearing puller, bushing press kit, valve adjustment, fcab, wheel bearing, engine support bar, etc.

    Comment


      #17
      Originally posted by mrgizmo04 View Post
      The foam in the box - looks like it expanded quite a bit. I wonder what long term effect is if now due to expansion and curing it is actually pressing out on the racp panels.
      As it expands while curing the foam will move to the empty central part of the cavity. The rubber plugs on the bottom of the cavity would be forced out by the expansion if the expanded volume exceeded the capacity of the cavity. So there should not be any pressure after curing.

      Some good videos on the foam here by a UK company called Redish Motorsports:

      BMW Structural foam for use within internal chassis cavities - mainly the BMW E46 & E46 M3 Rear Axle Carrier Panel (aka Subframe).We've just taken delivery o...

      BMW Structural foam for use within internal chassis cavities - mainly the BMW E46 & E46 M3 Rear Axle Carrier Panel (aka Subframe).---------------------------...


      And just found this 5-year followup by the same company:

      ** REVISIT ** BMW Structural Foam Resin - 5 years 32,000 miles on.Like we say in this video, we're not claiming Structural Resin is/was the answer to the RAC...


      Car had 32k miles plus some track days since foam installation (and no plates) and has no cracks.
      Last edited by martin.oconnor; 04-21-2020, 01:20 PM.

      Comment


        #18
        Originally posted by mrgizmo04 View Post

        Few things - foam is flammable and can result in higher localized heat of the already thin metal you would be welding to on the subframe. Also, you have to cut into the cavity in several places when trying to prep the area and expose some of the popped spot welds and with foam there serving as an obstruction you don't have room so you would have to chisel the foam out.
        Right, thanks. A few followup questions:

        1. The first concern (flammability of the foam) would be mitigated if I did an epoxy based plate/brace install, right? But then what if, god forbid, cracks develop after the foam. From what I understand of the plate installation process, existing cracks need to be drilled and then welded before plates, regardless of the method used for installing the plates, is that right? So in that case foam would still get in the way of doing a correct repair? Or is there an epoxy solution for that as well?

        2. Would chiseling/drilling out this foam be extremely difficult? Is this prep only necessary if you actually have popped spot welds? If so, then assuming that there are no problems before and after the foam, would this problem be a non-issue for doing the prep for installing plates and/or a brace?

        Thanks for any insight for anyone can offer -- it would be good for myself and anyone else in my situation to fully understand the risks and problems that doing foam on a car that's currently in good shape might present for doing a full-on reinforcement later down the road. It seems very attractive as an easy and cheap bandaid solution for people with lower mileage lower risk cars, but if my car's definitely going to need plates/topside later and this is going to make that significantly harder, then it's probably not worth it. I just don't want to end up with a car that's a nightmare to deal with down the road because I foamed it.

        Comment


          #19
          Thanks for the great writeup and the pdf, very useful. The foam is hard to source, where did you get it? It also has a very short shelf life, did you use one past its expiration date? I wonder why the shelf life is so short on these products.

          Comment


            #20
            foam bad, makes things worse.. more welding more metal

            Comment


              #21
              Originally posted by E46m3zcp View Post
              Thanks for the great writeup and the pdf, very useful. The foam is hard to source, where did you get it? It also has a very short shelf life, did you use one past its expiration date? I wonder why the shelf life is so short on these products.
              Unfortunately, it appears to be discontinued, at least in its BMW branded incarnation

              TEROSON EP 1401 appears to be the equivalent (or more likely the BMW stuff was this product rebranded):

              Rigid-setting, slightly expanding, structural epoxy foam used in vehicle construction/repair for increasing the load bearing capacity of assemblies


              But I do not know how easy it is to source that.

              Despite conventional wisdom, structural foam works very well at strengthening the subframe mounting points.

              There is a theoretical case that strengthening those areas just moves the failure points to the RACP-to-wheel arch connection points and that those welds would eventually fail. I never saw enough evidence to convince me of that.

              Comment


                #22
                Yeah, I'm mostly worried about rust forming in the long term if the welding job is not done perfectly with the plates.

                Comment


                  #23
                  I found some Teroson Terocore 1401 (BMW rebranded this product as their structural foam, but that's the original stuff BMW used to distribute) online on Klium.com and I was able to get it delivered to Canada using forward2me.com

                  I will be doing the structural foam reinforcement soon.
                  Click image for larger version

Name:	IMG_0839.jpg
Views:	445
Size:	76.4 KB
ID:	166506

                  Comment


                    #24
                    Interesting new video from Redish Motorsports on various changes BMW made to the reinforcement of the threaded bolt in the left rear subframe mount in the RACP:

                    Not many people know there were so many generations of the BMW E46 RACP.After all, they look identical from underneath.It's only because we have such vast kn...

                    Comment


                      #25
                      I am genuinely surprised that nobody talks about this plastic block insert before Redish made this video.

                      2002 M3 Coupe | 1988 320i Touring

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X