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  • Bry5on
    replied
    Update: the RTV goobering only lasted a few hundred miles. Heinz and I stumbled across a set of red 996 calipers at the local junkyard, so I’ll machine those and swap them so I can take my time on the repair work of these black calipers. A whopping $100 for the set, and they’ll be going to another forum member once I’m done temporarily using them.
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    Also got some leather from a natural brown e46 to finish trimming the isofix cover that I haven’t been able to find. Big score. Seen packed inside the inside-out armrest here
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    The reason I was there was to get a steering angle sensor harness. I made a jumper harness that brings CAN more permanently (but removable) to the OBD connector. Works great.
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    And I got back under the car again to do the shift pivot bushing that broke after 20k miles. Replaced the rubber bushing, cup, pivot and ultrasonically cleaned the shifter parts before also doing a flexdisc and center support bearing. Man a fresh set of factory shift parts feels great.
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  • Bry5on
    replied
    We hit a nice milestone lately, and I FINALLY got a photo like this. I've missed this opportunity in every other car I've owned. Not this time.
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    And you'll note that the car is running nice and cool. I did swap the faulty Nissens radiator for a "Modine" (NSF) and the datalogs are showing a steady state improvement of temperature across the radiator on the highway. I was seeing 5-10C on the highway at ~65F with the Nissens and I'm seeing 15-20C under similar conditions with the Modine. I'm hoping that I've finally licked this overheating issue.

    I do need to return this one as a core, so sadly we won't be able to open it up and see if there was internal blockage. Before returning it, I did get a chance to borescope it on the inlet side and didn't see anything unusual. That and I can confirm that the M3 radiators are single-pass radiators. Most online resources I could find seem to claim they are triple pass - not true.

    Enjoy this crappy photo of the fresh radiator installed:
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    I've also been having a very strange issue with my 996 calipers that I haven't found any documentation for online. The pins that retain the pads in place are LOOSE and vibrate/spin on the highway making an incredibly loud humming noise that goes away the instant you touch the brake pedal. Three of four of the top pins on my front brakes were loose - you could spin them by hand. This likely explains why Porsche killed the roll pin retainer design in favor of a bolted in pin design.

    In any case, I bond prepped and goobered some copper very high temp RTV to keep them from vibrating and this seems to have done the trick. If this doesn't work, I'll pull them off, mill out the roll pins, then install the pad retainer pins with high temp epoxy and new roll pins. A pain in the ass to be sure, so I'm hoping I don't have to do that.

    Photos of the bandaid fix:
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    Otherwise, just doing the wagon things
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    Last edited by Bry5on; 11-10-2023, 08:20 AM. Reason: Spelling

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    Originally posted by Obioban View Post
    Do they make a smaller display that would fit in the SMG area? That would be pretty slick-- especially if it can be turned off when not in use (I kind of get OCDed about cluster asymmetry).
    Yep, there’s a 1.54” display that uses the same chip and resolution. And yes again the display can be dimmed or turned off completely. I’m working on this next with my spare cluster. Display is already en route.

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  • George Hill
    replied
    I would think 5* is not enough of a delta. I feel like when we were last logging this info and chasing a bad radiator (CSF), we ultimately found after putting a OE BMW rad in it that we had a 10-15+/-*c delta. I think on that car we were seeing 94 at the engine and then 82 at the rad outlet, I don't think it ever got into the 70s.

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  • Obioban
    replied
    Do they make a smaller display that would fit in the SMG area? That would be pretty slick-- especially if it can be turned off when not in use (I kind of get OCDed about cluster asymmetry).

    Leave a comment:


  • Bry5on
    replied
    So I bought a Nissens radiator during the great Modine stock-out of 2022, and it turns out I paid the price. This radiator will be going back under warranty, and I’ll see if I can get away with keeping it to dissect for science. All cooling problem signs are pointing to the radiator as it’s failing on the inlet seam. Likely internal blockage.
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    Last edited by Bry5on; 10-15-2023, 05:41 PM.

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    I've spent the week datalogging and mapping some of the CAN parameters, learned a bunch!

    On my cooling system: I'm seeing anywhere from 5-10 degrees C between coolant temp and radiator outlet temp on 65F (18C) days here in CA while driving. This seems rather low, although I have nothing to compare against. Has anyone got any information on what I should be seeing here? Ironically, cooling performance seems best at idle, where I see about 15C delta. Maybe this triple pass radiator from Nissens is acting more like a single pass radiator? George Hill ?

    So far, in k-bus/CAN and now my datalogs, I've mapped:

    K-bus
    * Engine speed (RPM)
    * Engine load (mg fuel/stroke)
    * Mass Air flow (kg/hr)
    * TPS position (%)
    * TPS target position (%)
    * Air intake temp (C)
    * Coolant Temp (C)
    * Radiator Temp (C)
    * Oil Temp (C)
    * Ambient Temp (C)
    * Exhaust Gas Temp (C) ------- Anyone know the correct scalar for this on the k-bus??
    * Battery Voltage (V)
    * ECU Master and Slave voltages (V)
    * Ambient pressure (mbar)
    * Relative open throttle cross section (%)
    * Throttle pedal positions 1 & 2 (%)
    * Analog input configured for Wideband O2

    CAN bus
    * Cruise control buttons (to control the Gauge.S interface)
    * Cruise control status (to inert the buttons while cruise is on)
    * Speedometer (kph/mph)
    * Engine speed (RPM)
    * Engine theoretical torque (%, includes torque going to accessories)
    * Engine torque (%, just motive torque)
    * Steering Angle (degrees)
    * Brake pedal status (1/0)
    * Clutch pedal status (1/0)
    * DSC off (1/0)
    * DSC actively in control of car (1/0)
    * MSR/Ignition cut DSC torque reduction (%)
    * Throttle cut DSC torque reduction (%)

    Calculated parameters
    * Gear (1-6, 0)
    * Smoothed G acceleration, average of last 5 datapoints (currently using Gauge.S built-in accelerometers)

    CAN bus still in work
    * Lateral DSC acceleration (G or m/s^2)
    * Longitudinal DSC acceleration (G or m/s^2)
    * Yaw
    * Individual wheel speeds

    Since I made a harness to connect this to the OBD port, this device can be plugged into any e46 to log k-bus parameters, and if you wire CAN Hi and CAN Lo from the steering angle sensor to your OBD2 plug, can log everything above, just by plugging in the device. Temporarily I have it adhered in front of the cluster, but I'm looking into getting a smaller 1.54" display that will fit everything into the SMG/automatic insert section of the instrument cluster. Really impressed with this! Hard to grab good photos because the camera catches the refresh rate, here are a few examples:
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    General update on the car, it's doing its job as a car just great, and I'm reminded that it's an s54 because I've started to smell a faint burning oil smell from the cabin again. Guessing it'll be the valve cover gasket this time.
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    Plus the view out the back with a big bike:
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  • nuc1
    replied
    Originally posted by Bry5on View Post
    More updates on the steering shaft later - in the meantime, I've been busy working on improving datalogging by using Gauge.S. I've successfully brought CAN to the OBD port and am now using the CAN cruise control buttons to operate the device that logs parameters on the CAN bus and the K-bus. Really cool piece of kit, I might go so far as to permanently install it somewhere hidden, like in the ash tray or something.

    Lots of logs with lots of data available, here are a few:


    https://datazap.me/u/bry5on/gauges-8...ta=4-25&solo=2
    That is really cool. Defintiely going to look into this.

    Mike

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    More updates on the steering shaft later - in the meantime, I've been busy working on improving datalogging by using Gauge.S. I've successfully brought CAN to the OBD port and am now using the CAN cruise control buttons to operate the device that logs parameters on the CAN bus and the K-bus. Really cool piece of kit, I might go so far as to permanently install it somewhere hidden, like in the ash tray or something.

    Lots of logs with lots of data available, here are a few:


    https://datazap.me/u/bry5on/gauges-8...ta=4-25&solo=2
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    In the data plot above, you can see how much faster the data rate is over CAN than the k-bus. RPM long is over CAN and the others are k-bus. If you look close you can also see DSC intervening there

    And some photos of the setup (screen looks normal in person):
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    Last edited by Bry5on; 10-08-2023, 07:58 PM. Reason: More data

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  • stephen
    replied
    Originally posted by Bry5on View Post
    I am also giving up on my u-joint replacement as I ordered one of these, which just simplifies everything:
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    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!
    I also recently placed an order for one of these, fingers crossed it's a quality product; E34 u-joint in my E36 is one of my favorite mods. Really sharpens up the steering.

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  • usdmej
    replied
    great build and wow what an excellent attention to detail!

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  • 0-60motorsports
    replied
    I have the wide angle e90 side mirror glass and love them. Auto dimming would be cool too as I love the ones on my E70 X5M and the M3 can benefit from that function.

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    I am also giving up on my u-joint replacement as I ordered one of these, which just simplifies everything:
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    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!

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    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:
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    The late e46 insulated foot well cover that replaced my cracking non-insulated one:
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    A late e46 HVAC control panel, cleaned thoroughly before installing:
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    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!
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    Last edited by Bry5on; 09-24-2023, 04:10 PM.

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    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:
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    Last edited by Bry5on; 09-10-2023, 11:59 AM.

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