Calipers arrived last night, so I swung in to the machine shop this morning for an hour to knock out the 5.5mm machining needed to make these fit the 345mm ZCP rotors. These calipers are nearly perfect, really pleased with the paint and seal condition! Looks like the pads in the rear calipers were still the ones from the factory! Fronts were replaced textars
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Black & Tan 332iT
Collapse
X
-
Front brakes went in and got bedded tonight. Rears will have to follow this weekend.
So far I’m pleased with the more immediate and confident pedal. The dead zone before pad bite is definitely reduced, and there’s less weird feedback on long downhill braking. Looking forward to doing the rears now.
The scales had these at exactly one pound less per front corner than the 325mm euro setup I had before. Not a bad tradeoff, although I swear I could feel the change in inertia from the bigger rotors. Probably just placebo..
‘02 332iT / 6 | ‘70 Jaguar XJ6 electric conversion
- Likes 3
Comment
-
Meet up mext weekend?
Suggesting next weekend cause mine won't be done until then2002 Topasblau M3 - Coupe - 6MT - Karbonius CSL Airbox - MSS54HP Conversion - Kassel MAP - SSV1 - HJS - PCS Tune - Beisan - MK60 Swap - ZCP Rack - Nogaros - AutoSolutions - 996 Brembos - Slon - CMP - VinceBar - Koni - Eibach - BlueBus - Journal
2012 Alpinweiss 128i - Coupe - 6AT - Slicktop - Manual Seats - Daily - Journal
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Two different welders came out today to knock out the last of the jobs that I was really not looking forward to. This am, I swung by Kevin’s place and had a friend who’s good with a torch weld in v-brace mounts for the OEM M3 underbody brace. This gave a nice increase in stiffness, but more noticeably removed a little post-bump vibration from the rear end. The rear is caught up with the front now
After a burrito, I decided to tackle the M3 header/AC line heat shield that’s on all M3s. This part is skipped on every single swap I’ve ever seen, and we’re not having that. Using factory BMW coarse thread studs, we successfully stud welded the missing three frame rail studs to attach that last missing heat shield, and I can rest easy. Since I had to evacuate the AC system to remove the lines for stud welder clearance, I took the opportunity to recharge the AC (evacuation reported it was only 70% full, missing 200 grams of R134).
Last edited by Bry5on; 09-02-2023, 11:48 PM.‘02 332iT / 6 | ‘70 Jaguar XJ6 electric conversion
- Likes 6
Comment
-
Alright, the parts for v2 of the solid steering coupler are on order. This time using 7 or 8 .030" 304 stainless steel flexures to replace the rubber bushing.
My first go at this using spherical bearings didn't end up to my liking once I'd finally assembled it all, and I like this solution better anyway. This one is simpler, cheaper and has no wear parts.
‘02 332iT / 6 | ‘70 Jaguar XJ6 electric conversion
- Likes 4
Comment
-
Now I've done the math and given this a bit more thought. Flexures have been thinned out a bit to .008", I'll be using 301 tempered stainless spring steel and can get away with anywhere between 4-8 flexures and still outperform the adjacent aluminum parts. That said, I still want a safety net for a part like this in the steering system, so three positions will get keepers in place of washers, clocked 90 degrees apart, which will keep the steering functional even in the event of catastrophic failure of all of the springs. Overall, it's over constrained, so we'll have to see how this works in practice. First four springs hidden for clarity:
Last edited by Bry5on; 09-10-2023, 12:59 PM.‘02 332iT / 6 | ‘70 Jaguar XJ6 electric conversion
- Likes 1
Comment
-
I was a little under the weather this weekend, so I decided that a nice leisurely activity would be to swing by the junk yard to look for auto dimming e90 sport mirrors for my M3 mirrors which will go on some day. Well, I found some, and also managed to find a bunch of little things that all made small improvements.
The auto-dimming mirror glass (I brought a battery and tested them both) that I paid a whopping $5 for, fitted into M3 mirrors:
The late e46 insulated foot well cover that replaced my cracking non-insulated one:
A late e46 HVAC control panel, cleaned thoroughly before installing:
And last, a driver's seat memory module, harness and motor. Lately I've been letting a few people drive my car and I was reminded that 1) the rocker switch is a little hard to find on the seat side and 2) I like having seat and mirror memory. At basically no cost or weight penalty, I tore this thing down, removed the seat tilt button, de-pinned and de-wired all of the no longer useful wiring and pins, then adhered the memory module to the side of the recaro seat base with double sided tape. Memory seats are nice to have again!
Last edited by Bry5on; 09-24-2023, 05:10 PM.‘02 332iT / 6 | ‘70 Jaguar XJ6 electric conversion
- Likes 4
Comment
-
I am also giving up on my u-joint replacement as I ordered one of these, which just simplifies everything:
https://www.steeringlpsr.com/product...column-linkage
And if that doesn't work well or seem legit, I'll order a RHD steering shaft and install a solid bushing replacement in it. I'm kicking myself for not thinking of that solution earlier. So simple!‘02 332iT / 6 | ‘70 Jaguar XJ6 electric conversion
- Likes 2
Comment
-
Originally posted by Bry5on View PostI am also giving up on my u-joint replacement as I ordered one of these, which just simplifies everything:
https://www.steeringlpsr.com/product...column-linkage
And if that doesn't work well or seem legit, I'll order a RHD steering shaft and install a solid bushing replacement in it. I'm kicking myself for not thinking of that solution earlier. So simple!
- Likes 1
Comment
Comment