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Obioban's 2005 IR/IR Coupe

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  • Obioban
    replied
    Did this garage mod last night. Should make rebuild the M5 a more pleasant experience (not that I've heard back yet if it's totaled or not).







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  • Obioban
    replied
    This is actually the second time I've had a set. I kind of wonder if they're actually the same set, since there's not that many total sets out there, and even less in gun metal.

    Previous set, with 285 square mounted up:





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  • Obioban
    replied
    Valve train continues to look awesomely clean at 144,000 miles. No valve clearances needed adjustment :roll:





    Awwww yeaaah.

    My new track wheels, and forth set of RACs. RS-110's in 9.5 et35 square



    8000 ton forged by the Champion Motorsport factory.

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  • Obioban
    replied
    Life is good.





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  • Obioban
    replied
    The clear bra that I had put on the car 12 years ago had started to really look bad.. so my wife and I spent all 3 days this weekend removing the clear bra, cleaning the adhesive left behind, claying and waxing the car. Miserable process... and would have taken twice as long I had to do it again.

    The clear bra served me well for the first ~8 years, but, in retrospect... better to do resprays as the car starts to look chipped up. This was WAY too much work to remove.



    On the plus side, the car looks awesome again...

    ... and by the time we were done tonight, it was too dark to take pictures.

    Mid project, after clear bra and adhesive removed, but before clay or wax:



    ^and according to that picture, there's a monster living in my fender :bugeye:

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  • Obioban
    replied
    Did lots of stupid small projects on the M3 this weekend that I've been putting off for way too long....


    Put a gasket between the fan and the radiator


    Tweaked the rear preload


    Installed the CSL rear sway (front went in a while back)


    Properly mounted my lithium ion battery


    Went to an intake duct for the CSL intake that isn't (literally) a piece of gutter)


    Replaced a brake line that showed a little surface marring


    Bled the brakes


    Replaced the clamps on the CSL airbox with ones that can expand (OE BMW) instead of the screw types, so the trumpets don't get damaged as the box heats up and expands.


    Ate my free bimmerworld gummy bears


    Replaced the shift knob with a new one (old one was showing signs of wear).


    Installed the homelink in the no sunroof headliner


    Put BMW center caps on the M5's just refinished in BMW Chrome shadow BBS RG-Rs (M5 is still at the body shop).

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  • Obioban
    replied
    I have (finally) addressed most of my complaints with the Ohlins. Still have front tire clearance to go, but I think I have a solution for that as well.

    The issue: The Ohlin R&Ts were optimized for the stock strut hats. Most camber plates (I believe all except maybe the TMS plates?) move the top shock mount point higher up. On lowered cars running stockish shocks, this restores bump travel lost by lowering the car, and doesn't have any negative side effects. On the Ohlins, which have shorter total shock travel but which are optimized to make the most out of the stock strut hat, this means you have too much bump travel (tire hits the fender liner under large compressions), very little droop travel, and a ton of preload assuming a reasonable ride height. The Ohlins only have 92.5mm of metal to metal stroke, so being off target can really screw up the setup.

    I didn't go into this looking to recreate the stock strut hat geometry. My goal was to have ~4mm of preload, 40% of the travel be droop travel, and 60% of the travel be bump travel. But, when I was done, I happened to have a stock strut hat and realized I had exactly recreated the dimensions of the stock strut had. So, apparently Ohlins had the same design goals as me when they made these things, just not with a camber plate in mind :roll:

    Anyway, made a delrin spacer and new rubber bushings for GC street camber plates that created that geometry, installed them this morning and HOLY HELL NOW THE OHLINS ARE WHAT I'VE ALWAYS WANTED THEM TO BE!

    They ride nicely (for what they are), the car isn't too low, and the handling is kickass. It's been a long time coming, but I feel like I finally got them to where I always wanted them to be in ride and handling.

    This also completely explains why other peoples experiences were so different from my own-- for those who were running them with the stock strut hats, this is what they have been experiencing all along!

    One more trick up my sleeve yet to go-- The Vogtland springs I'm running are more resistant to coil bind than your typical spring (because they have less coils). I notice that at my current ride height I have ~1" of threads above my ride height adjuster. So, I'm thinking I'm going to order a 1" shorter spring, move the adjuster up an inch, ride height will be unchanged and I believe that should move the springs/adjuster above the tire, letting me run wide front tires like the TCKs.

    I think. Need to throw her on the lift and verify the last bit before I order new springs.

    After that, when they need a rebuild (not that long term of a thing with 35,000 mile rebuild intervals) going to measure corner weights and calculate desired frequencies, change the spring rates and have the shocks revalved to match while they're being built. Most likely will be going the opposite direction of everyone else and end up going softer :roll:

    Anyway, I'm super excited already. Finally got the Ohlins to perform like I was always hoping they would/could!

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  • Obioban
    replied
    Found another half pound, though in an excellent location (all the way forward and above the COG).

    Removed the engine hoist hook from the thermostat housing and put in some alu spacer rings of the same height. In 142,000 miles, I've never used the hook once, so I don't think I'll miss it much. I'll put it in my specialty toolbox, in case I do.

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  • Obioban
    replied
    I stuck the car on the work shipping scale, as she currently sits (only driver seat, no headliner or pillar covers, CF roof, Lithium Ion battery, stock drivers seat.

    3062 lbs! (1/3 tank gas, no driver)

    I'm pretty psyched. With some light weight seats, I think she'll be under 3100 lbs with full interior/back seats back in.

    I am running out of places to take weight out of it, though (not willing to ruin civility or functionality)-- pretty much all I have left is front seats and cf driveshaft. I don't think I'll be making it under 3000.

    A light weight muffler (SS street is nearly stock weight) and back seat delete would put me to right ~3000. But, no.
    __________________

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  • Obioban
    replied
    Not having a car doesn't mean you can't mod it! :roll:

    Wrapping the non sunroof headliner in alcantara...



    Awwwwwwwwww yeeeaaaahhhh





    I should really use a better camera than iPhone for this, but...

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  • Obioban
    replied
    Looks like I haven't updated this for a while

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Obioban

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  • Obioban
    replied

    So, I ended up with a rather unique airbox by happenstance. I held off on the Evolve airbox because I wasn’t comfortable that, 50 years from now (at which time I still intend to own the car), it was certain that Evolve would still be around and I would still be able to source filters. A while back, Sal asked me if I would be interested in their development box, as it uses CSL filters. I said yes, and that’s what’s on my car. I had assumed till now that it was an Evolve airbox, just an earlier version, because it had the Evolve style ducting.

    Yesterday it was brought to my attention by a fellow forum member that the box I have is actually a (pretty unusual/rare) Die Wethje airbox (Die Wethje was the OE manufacturer of CSL airboxes for BMW. They made several variants including the P54 (racing variant of the S54) version, the CSL version, the version my car has, one that has a bit larger/beefier with the big inlet, and possibly the one where the filter that slides in from the top.

    I stopped by to visit my (still roofless) car, and sure enough it had the same stickers (this is not my airbox, just using the pictures as they’re the same stickers):





    Pretty excited! I have nothing bad to say about the Evolve airbox, but actually having an OEM one makes me pretty excited!

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  • Obioban
    replied
    CF roof project begins.





    Progress but ultimately frustration this evening.

    Glass out:






    Took the opportunity to key my car. Still amazingly painful to do, even when the panel is getting destroyed....




    Sheeted off to protect it from metal shavings




    Drill drill. Sometimes too far.






    And then, with only a couple to go... tool failure



    Couldn't find any locally. Ordered on amazon and will look more tomorrow over my lunch break. :banghead:







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  • Obioban
    replied


    Still get excited every time I toggle past the oil level display :P

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  • Obioban
    replied
    I picked up the M3 at the BMW performance center in South Carolina 10 years ago this month. Feeling old and sad the car isn't new anymore, but there's still nothing I'd rather be driving in the sub $150,000 range (and all of those come with compromises vs this)

    First look:



    These future winter beater wheels will never look this good again :P



    Bling blau



    The keys, give them to me



    low miles are low



    Well, might as well start modding. I'm going to need a hardwired iPod and V1 for the 10 hour drive home...



    Park in from of the performance center






    Then, two weeks later, first meet! Paint still looks stupidly good.










    Here's to the next 50 years with it

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