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  • Bry5on
    replied
    Well it’s not yet bonded in, but I did assemble most pieces in situ and check hood clearance with play-doh. The Slon brace is in the same place as the factory brace, so I nipped off 1/4” of the non-m hood brace and hit the exposed metal with a coat of paint. The brace and filter housing are currently installed and working.

    The airbox is very certainly much louder at WOT, but low loads sound imperceptibly similar to me. You can hear a heavy throttle blip a bit more than before, but I don’t think any of this is a bad thing. It sounds rowdy only when you’re rowdily on the throttle.

    Fitment isn’t OEM good, but it’s impressive for a v1 of an aftermarket part that does this much. I did have to swap the left and rightmost air filter housing bolts with some fully threaded T30 bolts that I had lying around from Tesla battery modules. Slon provides spacers because the partially threaded factory ones would have shanked out. I preferred to eliminate the spacers and just use different fasteners.

    The vacuum line at the top of the airbox needs to be deformed as it routes directly through the bar. I used a hot air soldering iron setup and this made quick work of rerouting the hose, in a way that shouldn’t cause problems without the bar.

    Tape is on the bar to make sure I see any evidence of the hood impacting it before it starts to cut into any carbon or epoxy. Lots of pics:

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    Last edited by Bry5on; 04-09-2023, 05:06 PM.

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    So the Slon brace is pretty clever in the way it spreads load without putting the carbon in compression. I'll share a few pictures in a minute here.

    Some brief mocking up and measuring shows that this'll be a real close fit to the non-m hood. I already have a little bit of interference to a formed flange supporting the hood to the stock strut bar, which is fine with aluminum, but the carbon would wear through and this could cause a failure. The M3 has more clearance here due to the different hood design, so I might need to get creative. The strut slots look a bit longer than the stock ones, which is good, because this bar needs to be removed as one piece and the studs are at an angle, not vertical, so the slots will provide appropriate clearance here.

    The carbon filter housing is incredibly light, it doesn't damp knuckle noise as well as the stock pieces. I'll be paying close attention to whether or not this adds too much noise into the cabin, with the concern being particularly lifters and valve train at low loads. I can always add sound insulation to this later.

    There is a little bit of an air gap (<1/4" x 6" long) at the firewall to air filter housing interface where the strut brace attaches. My current plan is to fill this with Butyl to avoid pulling hot unfiltered air into the cabin.

    Here's how it all goes together, as I know many folks are curious (as was I):
    Carbon piece gets bonded to become the windshield support, firewall insert fits over two square bosses on the windshield support:
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    Strut brace to support adapter sits directly on the bosses in the windshield support:
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    Filter housing goes on top of Strut brace support adapter, two square washer/bosses fit through holes in the filter housing, two fasteners go through this whole stack. None of the carbon pieces are in compression:
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    Getting my hood height measurement datum set:
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  • Bry5on
    replied
    Originally posted by timmo View Post
    Ha, that level of mud... been there done that. Question is - how do you clean yourself off after, I guess there's probably a washroom nearby? Or get in the back of the wagon and use that as the changing room 🤣? I went to a gravel race with a friend and it was held after a lot of rain - we had a similar level of mud, the interior of his car got kinda dirty but he doesn't care and we used Lysol wipes to clean it after.
    Ha! You know the struggle. I always bring a change of clothes and I’m just not shy about parking lot changing. Anything to keep that leather nice and smooth!

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  • timmo
    replied
    Ha, that level of mud... been there done that. Question is - how do you clean yourself off after, I guess there's probably a washroom nearby? Or get in the back of the wagon and use that as the changing room 🤣? I went to a gravel race with a friend and it was held after a lot of rain - we had a similar level of mud, the interior of his car got kinda dirty but he doesn't care and we used Lysol wipes to clean it after.

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    I managed to coax a couple family members in town to help me install the shadowline trim today. Looks good!
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    while we were doing that, another package showed up..
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  • Bry5on
    replied
    A couple big things arrived in the mail today, looking like something good will get done this weekend

    1) Full set of shadowline touring trim, doors and window frames, from German eBay
    2) The wavetrac diff

    Along with the diff, I’ll be doing:
    1) ECS lower adjustable control arms for the adjustment range. I chickened out on the ball joint option due to 2)
    2) Solid subframe bushings (fingers crossed)
    3) Drilling & tapping holes for the vincebar
    4) Driveshaft & halfshaft CV joints
    5) Sway bar bushings

    At that point, I’ll be down to just six more things:
    1) Slon strut stiffening brace
    2) vincebar
    3) M3 subframe v-brace
    4) black headliner upholstering
    5) machining the adapter for the stealth hitches 2” hitch and installing
    6) OEM M3 washer fluid reservoir setup

    Going to be a nice setup!

    Diff still boxed away:
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    Weekend duty from last Sunday:​
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    Oh, and I nerded out with the correct coolant reservoir clamp and clamp cover, along with new harness and coolant line clips along the core support:
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    Last edited by Bry5on; 04-06-2023, 09:21 PM.

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    The rebuilt 712 steering rack went in this afternoon, so far so good, no evidence of leaks. There was some noticeable play on the pinion of the M3 rack I removed and zero play on the 712 I rebuilt that went in. I’d say the more noticeable thing (having already had a 712 in previously that leaked) than the ratio change was how precise the rack is after the rebuild. I’d certainly recommend doing this to anyone who’s noticing some vagueness on center or with mid-corner corrections. The rebuilt rack solved that for me.

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    While I was in there, I finally cleaned all the grime off the shear plate and undertray. Much more pleasant.

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    The Hotchkis front sway bar showed up earlier this week. I didn't want to install it using the urethane bushings that come with it (if you can't tell by now, NVH matters to me and I hate urethane), and since it's only .5mm smaller than the CSL bar, I decided to chance the install with CSL rubber bushings. The OEM bushings use a 1mm diametrical interference, so the CSL bushings with Hotchkis bar have a .5mm diametrical interference. I installed them as-is with .5mm interference and the test drive felt totally normal. While I was in there, I put in the steel sway bar bushing clamp that the non-m and CSL use and dumped the M3 aluminum ones.

    If you want to replicate this, and you're dead set on OEM 1mm interference, a ~1mm plate between the bushing and frame rail will deform the rubber to get you to an equivalent interference to stock.

    I set it to the soft setting, which is 11% stiffer than the 27mm cabrio bar that I had in there previously (I ran the numbers, Hotchkis seems to be quoting stiffness differences from the 27mm cabrio bar, not the 26mm coupe bar). After the first test drive, it definitely feels firmer, with more confident turn-in and like there might even be more front end grip? I was expecting a little less front grip and more understeer bias. Either way, it feels good, and I don't think I'll be installing the rear CSL bar that I have here + setting the front to the medium setting. I'm pretty happy with where it is.

    The Hotchkis bar, bushings and clamps come in at 4.2lb less than the 27mm cabrio bar, bushings and aluminum clamps that came out, which was a nice bonus surprise. Once I install the hitch, Slon brace and remove the roof rack, I'll be under 3400lb with 1/4 tank with no compromises. That brings me to the same weight as an e46 M3, but ~1% more rear biased B).

    Some pictures of the bar in the bushing, and yes I'm redoing the leaky power steering lines and reservoir soon..

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    Last edited by Bry5on; 03-23-2023, 07:15 PM.

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  • 0-60motorsports
    replied
    Originally posted by Bry5on View Post

    I’m using a kit made by Gates. It’s got everything including the little o-rings for the transfer pipes. I bought it a while ago, this looks like it: https://www.ecstuning.com/b-gates-pa...it/348654~gat/
    Awesome Thanks.

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    Well it was rainy all day today, so that means house and car work. The 6001 bearing at the bottom of the pinion shaft didn't feel so great, so I finished off the rack rebuild other than replacing this bearing (which arrives this week). I didn't bother replacing the PTFE seals as I don't have tapered tools to stretch/install them properly. Yet another concession that I hope I don't regret down the road..

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    I also got to painting the ground control lower control arm replacements. I haven't been able to get camber in spec on either side (maxing under 1.6 degrees on both sides), and I figured I'd try a set of arms with a ball joint a la CSL. The ground control arms are a nice shade of red, but I'm not exactly jazzed about having some red arms showing from underneath my car as folks follow me. It just screams 90's Honda Civic to me. I also found it a bit odd that the two arms are using what appear to be different brand ball joints.

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    Originally posted by 0-60motorsports View Post
    That's great. Where did you get parts to rebuild the steering rack?


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    I’m using a kit made by Gates. It’s got everything including the little o-rings for the transfer pipes. I bought it a while ago, this looks like it: https://www.ecstuning.com/b-gates-pa...it/348654~gat/

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  • 0-60motorsports
    replied
    That's great. Where did you get parts to rebuild the steering rack?


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    Spent a few hours today cleaning up the hitch and dropping the smaller parts in the ultrasonic, then started the rebuild process for the 712 steering rack that's been sitting for months. It's got a little etching, so I'll basically be crossing my fingers that it seals.
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  • Bry5on
    replied
    Aluminum BMW/Westfalia hitch showed up today - time to clean it up and adapt this to the US stealth hitches design we've got on the Macan

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  • Bry5on
    replied
    Slon just sent me these pics, I had the strut mounts anodized black to be a little more stealthy. Install coming soon!
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    Last edited by Bry5on; 03-10-2023, 01:21 PM.

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