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  • Bry5on
    replied
    On to the next project - does anyone have a 3D scanner in the Bay Area so I can get these dimensions right?

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    Last edited by Bry5on; 01-27-2024, 10:11 PM.

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  • 0-60motorsports
    replied
    I have the same rear view mirror and love it. Dont even care where i threw the oval one LOL

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    I was home with a cold this weekend, so I made myself useful by tackling a couple little projects.
    1: I repaired my black 996 calipers with the same fix I did to the red ones by bonding in the loose pins
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    2: I disassembled my M3 mirrors and created a functional bench setup for auto-dimming, along with wire harnesses that will be trimmed to length
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    3: I pulled the roof rail trim off and double-stick taped it to mimic what the factory did. I used 1/8" (3.2mm) tape, where the factory looked like 2mm. It fit just fine as the land for the tape is 3-3.5mm, a wagon takes about 10 yards.
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  • Bry5on
    replied
    Originally posted by jrgatfh View Post

    I love following your progress man, it’s like watching a rocket scientist lol

    I really appreciate how skilled your are. Kudos.
    Thank you! I really enjoy the process of learning and this project really helps keep the skills sharp (enough) because you can dig into so many different disciplines.

    And I’ve got one more victory claim before the weekend is over. The front PDC retrofit is complete. It works great, but was a bit of a bear specifically to modify the bumper beam. Other than that, everything went together as planned with the wire harness routed down the passenger side of the car. Now I can give my back some rest.

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  • jrgatfh
    replied
    Originally posted by Bry5on View Post
    Another victory claim over here. I wired the Curt trailer module in between the car light signals and the trailer module input signals using the fused (factory slot) wire I’d just run for the euro powered trailer hitch plug. This device converts the separate brake/turn signals of euro cars into the shared brake/turn signals of US cars.

    I wired the park signals direct (skipped the curt module) to the license plate lights, wired the Curt left and right turn to the signals, and wired the Curt brake light to the black/yellow third brake light wire.

    Then I wired the Curt left and right turn signal outputs to the left and right turn inputs of the trailer module. I followed the X5 wiring for the park lights, which gangs together left park, right park and brake light inputs and outputs that wire to the park light trailer wire.

    Following that, I tested functions with a light tester and a load dummy. Both the light tester and the load dummy were detected as a trailer connected and appropriately disabled PDC upon connection. Light tester (LEDs) reported that all bulbs work correctly - park, brake, turns - but the turn signals started fast flashing as they detected a bulb out due to the low load of the LEDs. I then wired up a couple 6 ohm resistors to the turn signals ONLY and plugged that in. The turn signals and brake lights behaved normally after that and PDC was still disabled.

    This was the behavior that I was looking for!
    - US trailer light behavior
    - Trailer detection with automatic PDC disable
    - Trailer light failure detection
    - Dummy load reaction for disabling PDC with my bike rack

    So that’s the ticket, just gotta wire one of those Curt modules in series.

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    I also started work on a roller cart to hold my most used tools instead of fishing through the toolbox. I’ll take any suggestions or tips if anyone’s got some clever solutions.
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    I love following your progress man, it’s like watching a rocket scientist lol

    I really appreciate how skilled your are. Kudos.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bry5on
    replied
    Another victory claim over here. I wired the Curt trailer module in between the car light signals and the trailer module input signals using the fused (factory slot) wire I’d just run for the euro powered trailer hitch plug. This device converts the separate brake/turn signals of euro cars into the shared brake/turn signals of US cars.

    I wired the park signals direct (skipped the curt module) to the license plate lights, wired the Curt left and right turn to the signals, and wired the Curt brake light to the black/yellow third brake light wire.

    Then I wired the Curt left and right turn signal outputs to the left and right turn inputs of the trailer module. I followed the X5 wiring for the park lights, which gangs together left park, right park and brake light inputs and outputs that wire to the park light trailer wire.

    Following that, I tested functions with a light tester and a load dummy. Both the light tester and the load dummy were detected as a trailer connected and appropriately disabled PDC upon connection. Light tester (LEDs) reported that all bulbs work correctly - park, brake, turns - but the turn signals started fast flashing as they detected a bulb out due to the low load of the LEDs. I then wired up a couple 6 ohm resistors to the turn signals ONLY and plugged that in. The turn signals and brake lights behaved normally after that and PDC was still disabled.

    This was the behavior that I was looking for!
    - US trailer light behavior
    - Trailer detection with automatic PDC disable
    - Trailer light failure detection
    - Dummy load reaction for disabling PDC with my bike rack

    So that’s the ticket, just gotta wire one of those Curt modules in series.

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    I also started work on a roller cart to hold my most used tools instead of fishing through the toolbox. I’ll take any suggestions or tips if anyone’s got some clever solutions.
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  • Bry5on
    replied
    For you nerds out there, here's a very interesting interactive datalog that contains a cold start and warmup period, along with a couple WOT pulls.
    https://datazap.me/u/bry5on/aem-wide...olo=0-15-16-21

    Interesting things in the data:
    1) The warmup period of various parts of the engine, especially seeing the thermostat crack open and start regulating:​
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    2) How clearly you can see the torque curve of the engine in the datalogs, inverted here because longitudinal accel is negative (dyno? who needs a dyno. We've got detailed mass information and a good datalog):
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    I'm also going to add a little bit more fuel between 4600 and 7000 RPM to target a smooth ramp down to 12.5:1 instead of the ~13.5:1 it's at now
    Last edited by Bry5on; 01-01-2024, 10:46 PM.

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    Originally posted by 0-60motorsports View Post
    That's awesome work!
    Thank you! All in the quest for my perfect daily driver

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  • 0-60motorsports
    replied
    That's awesome work!

    Leave a comment:


  • Bry5on
    replied
    Ok, we left off Friday with a bunch of the rear end work done, but we hadn't started on anything forward of the rear seats bench. Yesterday was another productive day and I was able to get PDC fully functioning in the car, button and all. We also got on with a bonus of hardwiring in an AEM CAN-based Wideband O2 sensor, for automatic datalogging with Gauge.s whenever I plug the device into the OBD2 port. No more laptop with Testo and slow datalogging speeds (CAN is roughly 10x the data rate). On to some paraphrased play by play:

    Starting with wires routed to their destinations and some coffee, we get to work:
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    The e46 rear PC harness I bought looks like it was specific for the sedan/coupe and not the touring. I hadn't thought this one through ahead of time and was surprised in the moment that I was about 3' short of running the wires in the factory location behind the rear woofer. Fortunately, I'd grabbed some spare harnesses from an e53 X5 and I took a page out of the X5's book. The X5 has an intermediate harness between the rear PDC sensor harness and the PDC module harness. It uses the same pins as the e46 harness, so I depinned the e46 connector and swapped pins into the mating X5 connector to create an effective extension harness identical to the X5 setup without cutting any wires. Pleased with this workaround.
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    I'd also been building the harness and routing wires for the trailer module. I started with the X5 trunk harness and ran all the input wires to the bundle right above the battery. I also dropped the two rear fog out wires (run to the LCM pins 20 & 49) and the X5's 12 pin trailer-out plug into the same location, along with 4-pin trailer connector loose wiring, making all future junctions accessible in the same location (tail light harness is right there), as I'm sure there will be debugging to get this all working and I don't want to be tearing into a bunch of interior panels again.
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    I'll spare you all photos of the wire routing along the sill and up into the fuse/junction box area, but suffice to say it was all routed along factory routing paths, at the usual junctions, grounds, positives, etc. While I was there I added this AEM in-line CAN Wideband O2 and terminated that along the factory harness to a ground block and unused cabrio Fuse 13. It tucks nicely below the general module and the O2 sensor wires pass through the firewall grommet along with the front PDC harness for a clean install.
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    After the passenger side wiring was complete, I passed a whole bunch of wires behind the AC panel to the driver's side and terminated them in their respective locations, along the factory harnessing:
    - Gong power
    - Gong PDC signal
    - PDC button and light signals
    - Rear foglight wires (2x)
    - LCM -- AHM comms wire
    - AEM CAN comms wires

    The result is a fully functional PDC system, front+rear with button and reverse-trigger, a functional gong (I'd already run the wire to the cluster last time I was in there), and AFR now showing on the gauge.s dataloger at 100Hz. I have Gauge.s setup to datalog any time it's powered up, and I wired it to the OBD2 port, along with bringing the car+wideband CAN bus to the OBD2 port. To run a datalog, it's now painfully simple: Plug Gauge.s into my OBD2 port, drive, download to my laptop over WiFi.
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    At this point, I disabled front PDC and set rear PDC to e46-ish settings with PAsoft
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    So everything was working great, except the rear PDC was basically always lightly triggering. I used the AVIN's I-bus connection to see which sensors were triggering and it was the side-rears, both of them. Hmm. Well, it turns out that the sensors I stole from the X5 are oriented 90 degrees apart from the e46 sensors. So even though the sensor fits into the e46 bumper strip just fine, it's flipped sideways. This matters because the PDC sensors basically throw a rectangle of signal, wider than it is tall, so if you flip it 90 degrees it will pick up the ground, constantly. Well the e46 sensors are kinda ugly, I've got a whole bunch of modern sensors here, and I've got the plastic punch piece and two self adhesive PDC mounts that I didn't use. So I measured the factory PDC bumper strips and made my own that use the modern sensors. Voila, no false triggering from the ground anymore:
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    And we're done until 4 more adhesive PDC mounts arrive to do the front:
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  • Bry5on
    replied
    Good progress today, the car currently has lots of loose/bundled wires in prep to be run down the door sill, but the installation of the F10 PDC sensors with F10 adhesive mounts went very well. The mounts are slightly angled both upward and inward which puts them pretty close to level and pointing straight back, accounting for the curvature of the bumper. They look very inconspicuous, unlike the factory ones, and work just as well (I did test after install . Important to note that the newer sensors have Pin1: Ground, Pin2: Signal, and Pin3: Positive Supply. Don't go by wire colors as BMW changed the colors to mean different things across generations, in their infinite wisdom.

    All told the combined PDC and trailer retrofit adds under 5 lbs, and I added 1lb of sound deadening to the rear to continue to try to quiet the cabin down on the highway. I can stomach 6lbs, especially in the rear. If I ever feel motivated down the road, I'll have to pull the trunk panels, add deadener to the wheel wells, then replace the sound deadening that someone sadly cut a hole in for strut mount access. I'm running the studs that can be accessed from the wheel well so I'm happy to close that location out.

    Back to PDC. I marked the center locations thanks to some help from e46fanatics forum members, then used double stick tape to adhere a makeshift drill bushing to locate the PDC sensors in the factory spot. Then I punched the holes out using an 18mm punch kit. Following that I used the jigsaw to cut some rectangles in the bumper beam similar to what the factory did, then routed a trailer harness through the PDC grommet, tied the harness up to the factory studs with plastic harness ties, adhered the PDC mounts and slapped the bumper back on. I think it turned out pretty great:

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    Then a quick test with the rest of the bench top setup (works great):

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    And following that it was time to start the trunk and interior disassembly to run a whole bunch of wires. I'm running a PDC supply harness (for an e39), front PDC harness, making my own trailer harness, terminating at factory fuses, grounds, pins, etc. It's loads of fun, and that's where we are today:

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    Last edited by Bry5on; 12-29-2023, 09:26 PM.

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    Managed to do some multitasking while taking calls this evening - windowed out the rear bumper cover for the corner sensors (using original e46 sensors there for now) with a stepped drill bit and some flush wire cutters. The inner bumper support has a square hole, it's just a matter of matching the square for the sensor to pass through.

    The F10 adhesive mounts are angled just slightly upward, so I think they may just work out, hoping they don't point the sensors too far downward and pick up the ground.

    And so it begins.​
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  • Bry5on
    replied
    Dad happened to have not only the e53 AHM lying around, but found a factory 7-pin hitch harness as well. I snagged the body side AHM harness from an e53 already, so this will simply plug and play.
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  • Bry5on
    replied
    New seat bottom insulation showed up to replace the crumbled bits that came out. Hoping this will reduce some highway noise. Anyone have any experience quieting down a touring? I’m thinking the trunk/subframe/tailgate areas transmit some extra noise and it would be great to cut it down a bit. Those urethane subframe bushings probably don’t help now that I think about it.
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  • Obioban
    replied
    That's some dedication to an unusual task

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