Originally posted by LSBNick
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This. I completed my interior swap in December of 2020 and cut my original grey carpet. As Ocean mentioned, just be patient and mindful of the wiring and you’ll be fine. My carpet looks like and feels like it came that way factory.Originally posted by oceansize View PostI cut my carpet and no one would ever know, and I mean it is absolutely impossible for anyone to have any idea it has been cut. There are wires under the carpet so be very very careful.
And if you’re worried about the carpet looking out of place, I doubt anyone will hop in your car and start tugging at it to verify if it’s been cut or not, lol.
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This must have been a post after a couple Friday night beers.Originally posted by Arith2 View PostPut red carpet on the dash. Problem solved.
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Exactly what I was thinking. Appreciate the heads up on this, I would have had wet AC, lol!!Originally posted by dutchhome View PostThe something special is to attach the receiver dryer last. You don’t want to leave it exposed to the atmosphere very long or you lose the drying effect.
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The something special is to attach the receiver dryer last. You don’t want to leave it exposed to the atmosphere very long or you lose the drying effect.
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Are you supposed to do anything special when you install a new one?Originally posted by liam821 View Post
Yeah, anytime it's depressurized and exposed to the outside air. The canister collects condensation from the system, once it's exposed to the outside air it basically goes bad.
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Yeah, anytime it's depressurized and exposed to the outside air. The canister collects condensation from the system, once it's exposed to the outside air it basically goes bad.Originally posted by Casa de Mesa View Post
Oh wow... that Receiver/Drier Canister has to be replaced if you pull the motor? (or rather, depressurize the refrigerant) I didn't realize that. I'm having someone come reclaim the refrigerant this weekend, actually.
Just hit FCP Euro. I saw the mahle-behr was only $35 while the factory BMW part is $270. GULP. 8x the price, it must really dry things well.
Thanks for the pro tip.
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Oh wow... that Receiver/Drier Canister has to be replaced if you pull the motor? (or rather, depressurize the refrigerant) I didn't realize that. I'm having someone come reclaim the refrigerant this weekend, actually.Originally posted by liam821 View Post
If you do want to pul it, it's not the end of the world. You just need to replace the Receiver/Drier Canister ($30 for a mahle-behr) and recharge the system.
Just hit FCP Euro. I saw the mahle-behr was only $35 while the factory BMW part is $270. GULP. 8x the price, it must really dry things well.
Thanks for the pro tip.
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If you do want to pul it, it's not the end of the world. You just need to replace the Receiver/Drier Canister ($30 for a mahle-behr) and recharge the system.Originally posted by Casa de Mesa View Post
Awesome, thank you. This is very helpful. The motor is coming out (hopefully this coming weekend) so coolant will be out of the motor, but even with that happening, I'm hesitant to dive into the HVAC given the complexity and risk associated with it. If it doesn't need to be done to achieve the result I'm looking for, no sense in overcomplicating things! Which I'm famous for
Nearly every decision I make in the professional world balances risk vs. reward. I'm not sure the reward is worth the risk in this case.
Thanks again everyone.
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Awesome, thank you. This is very helpful. The motor is coming out (hopefully this coming weekend) so coolant will be out of the motor, but even with that happening, I'm hesitant to dive into the HVAC given the complexity and risk associated with it. If it doesn't need to be done to achieve the result I'm looking for, no sense in overcomplicating things! Which I'm famous forOriginally posted by liam821 View Post
Yeah, it stays there cut like everybody else mentioned above. I wanted to change out my hvac system anyway so it was a no-brainer for me. But if you don't have to, I'd recommend against it since you have to drain the A/C system and it's a general pain.
Nearly every decision I make in the professional world balances risk vs. reward. I'm not sure the reward is worth the risk in this case.
Thanks again everyone.
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Yeah, it stays there cut like everybody else mentioned above. I wanted to change out my hvac system anyway so it was a no-brainer for me. But if you don't have to, I'd recommend against it since you have to drain the A/C system and it's a general pain.Originally posted by Casa de Mesa View PostSo my questions are:- If the carpet is cut as show in liam821 's photos above, does that affect the carpet's ability to stay in place once you reinstall the carpet? It seems like cutting the carpet under the HVAC stack in the center of the dash (above the tranny) is a MUCH EASIER way to get the carpet out, but I'm worried that I'll run into sagging carpet down the road. I know the carpet has a bit of structure to it but... ?
- If it turns out cutting the carpet is a bad idea, what really has to be removed to pull the carpet? The HVAC and center dash support bars (the near-vertical bars framing the HVAC) I see have to come out for sure, but does the steering column have to come out as well?
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Hey thanks man. Agree! I'm changing the color of the CAR, not the CARpet.Originally posted by Daniel View PostIf you want to change the color of your carpet, just do it right and actually swap in the replacement color carpet. I can't imagine the dye looking or feeling very good. It's not hard to swap, just time consuming. I spent ~half a day doing mine & I was taking my time.
Carpet just needs to come out so I can paint the car correctly. See here:
In the early 2000s when the E46 M3s started hitting race tracks, I saw a Laguna Seca Blue M3 ripping around Road Atlanta. Shortly thereafter, another one was doing the same at Summit Point. And then another at VIR. For a stock car on street tires, it absolutely blew me away how fast it was on track. Although I wasn’t driving on
If you're talking about the OP, he posted that question about 1.5 years ago. Think he got his answer.
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