Along with that, the owner wanted to clean out the shelves—over a decade's worth of collected stuff—so my friend mentioned that he was giving away a bunch of E46 M3 interior parts.
This happened to be the same shop that stripped out my dad’s M3 years ago. So after helping them load up the (sketchy) alignment lift, I started digging around. The Find
I ended up uncovering:
- My dad’s old rear door cards
- His radio surround trim
- Front Grey ZCP door handles
- Three coupe door cards
- All of his old headliner A, B, and C pillar pieces
The blue bin ended up holding all of these neatly organized. I even found his name on old registration papers, a dealer inspection from 40K miles, and some cigar business cards—all tucked away in the armrest, which unfortunately had broken while in storage.
You can actually see his old headliner sitting up there:
Zcp trim by Sam DaJam, on Flickr
Untitled by Sam DaJam, on Flickr
Zcp trim by Sam DaJam, on Flickr
Zcp trim by Sam DaJam, on FlickrThe rear door cards were the ones I used to sit in when he dropped me off at elementary school. I’ve always preferred the ZCP trim, and since my own door cards had messed-up armrests, I was excited to swap everything over.
Zcp trim by Sam DaJam, on Flickr
Zcp trim by Sam DaJam, on Flickr
Zcp trim by Sam DaJam, on Flickr
Untitled by Sam DaJam, on FlickrOnly one broken clip on his old panel! Salvage Yard Run
The next day, I went to the yard. Out of all the Houston self-service salvage yards, there was only one coupe with a black interior that I knew of. It had been there since January 2nd, so I had low expectations. Sure enough, the manual swap and any decent black interior bits were already gone.
While working on my door cards, I noticed an issue: when it rains, my driver’s door card fills with water—usually a vapor barrier problem. Since I had everything apart, I was able to confirm that was the case.
Then, I looked up at the headliner of the car and realized it was a slicktop—super rare on a 330i with leather interior and electric seats.
I knew I had to grab it.
Zcp trim by Sam DaJam, on FlickrHauling It Home
I had to call my wife to bring the Montero because there was no way I was driving home with it in the E46.
With only a T20, 10mm, and two flatheads, I had to borrow a Phillips from someone at the yard. I originally packed light to avoid buying stuff I didn’t need—but when I saw this slicktop, there was no way I could pass it up.
Zcp trim by Sam DaJam, on Flickr





































































































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