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  • Jean
    replied
    Originally posted by nando View Post
    I'd say whatever you'll be comfortable with. there's a ton of options - if you give up VANOS control, just about anything could run it. But who'd want to do that? :p

    I'd be interested to know if anyone who's bashed MS3 has used one personally, or if it's just internet hearsay. I'm guessing the latter.
    Since this is commonly done on pure race cars, does the engine lose a lot of torque w/o vanos? I mean enough that it's worth the trouble in terms of tuning?

    It can't be THAT much, can it? On the m62tu with vanos disconnected it's noticable at in stop and go, but once you are going no difference and this is a 4.4l v8...so how big of a difference is there on s54 or the euro b32?

    Leave a comment:


  • Wanganstyle
    replied
    to each his own-

    I feel the Factory designed the E36 and E28 with 160-170mph speed ranges in mind. its easily within range of STOCK s38b35, and I'm sure a stock S50b32 can do it also.

    The expressway system here was designed with high speeds in mind, there are quite a few sections where a pedestrian e39 or even e34/e32 can turn in to high speed esses and stay perfectly planted in its own lane at 140-150mph speed zone. Socal "freeways" are a different story. You would fly off the road at these speeds on some sections of I-405 etc...

    e36M/28M feel pretty stable in 160-170's


    Originally posted by phreshkid View Post
    189 in a modded e39 m5 was enough for me. But then again, the s62 is a bit of a jump from your average s38/s54. I wouldn't do it in an e30. The e30 is fun around a corner, a mountain, and a cone. And plus, torque is the best feeling ever. I choose torque/low end over hp/top end power.

    sounds like fun :)

    uncorked s62 sound is Great!!
    Last edited by Wanganstyle; 09-01-2011, 11:08 PM.

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  • phreshkid
    replied
    189 in a modded e39 m5 was enough for me. But then again, the s62 is a bit of a jump from your average s38/s54. I wouldn't do it in an e30. The e30 is fun around a corner, a mountain, and a cone. And plus, torque is the best feeling ever. I choose torque/low end over hp/top end power.

    Leave a comment:


  • e30polak
    replied
    Originally posted by Wanganstyle View Post
    dyno mapping won't nearly be useful at 170mph over as road mapping, there are not that many roads stateside where you can do a fully loaded uphill climb through esses at 150-170mph speeds. Even some reputable local dyno tuners are afraid of serious wangan speeds/stress and tuning (i.e. 150++ mph over, they often keep top speed limiters)
    Originally posted by Wanganstyle View Post
    175mph ++ is lovely in the E36 ALL MOTOR :)

    I don't know how gutsy you are but e30 to 170mph over...hmmm. I will investigate e30+ Wangan speeds (140mph over) once mine is appropriately equipped :P

    I've topped 175mph in a e28M but that was a little longer wheelbase/ wider track / less direct front suspension (can take big compression hits well)
    :stupid:

    You are retarded for taking an e36 and an e28 at those speeds, let alone wanting to try in an e30! Just because the car has the power to do so, doesn't mean it was engineered to do so. Won't be so funny if something fails at those speeds because the factory didn't design it to handle the stress of those speeds. :down:

    I don't care how set-up you car is, it's not a good idea. It wont be so funny if you lose control and kill yourself or other innocent people now will it? :roll:

    Also road tuning at 150+? Npo matter how late at night/early in the morning, you're never truly alone on public roads! :loco:

    Leave a comment:


  • Wanganstyle
    replied
    175mph ++ is lovely in the E36 ALL MOTOR :)

    S54 howls at those speeds just like the S38 does........comes into a magical floating feeling zone of its own that only a NA built pure racing engine can deliver :D

    Very haunting similar feeling to a S38 at full wind out...

    I don't know how gutsy you are but e30 to 170mph over...hmmm. I will investigate e30+ Wangan speeds (140mph over) once mine is appropriately equipped :P

    I've topped 175mph in a e28M but that was a little longer wheelbase/ wider track / less direct front suspension (can take big compression hits well)
    Last edited by Wanganstyle; 09-01-2011, 06:35 PM.

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  • Dean
    replied
    Ok been doing ALOT of research on the subject, and here is my findings...this information is based on GBP rather than USD (united states dollars)...and this is how much the project will cost me...all I need is a 3 litre euro M3 prop and the 3.2 Evo (the 321bhp euro model) rear axle and I'll be able to do the project. anyway if anyone reads PBMW magazine, its the same company who built the first UK S54 E36 I've been talking to from april 2008 issue!

    Here is a cost of parts...in UK

    Engine+loom and Ancillaries £2500
    Loom Adaptor £250
    Exhaust £800
    ECU £1200
    Wideband Lambdas £200
    Swap labour £1200 - (thats not timed as it'll take 1-2 months to get all parts made up, sourced and job completed.)
    Sundries £1000 (hoses, clamps, expansion tank and varios etc)
    Oils £150
    Mapping £600

    A custom loom is avaiable for 1200 but that wouldn't be running the above costs and may cost less but won't have the engine running to its full.

    This is what the tuner I may potentially use has said about the ECU electronics...

    ''We do not use the standard ECU as it is looking for too many other systems to ever work correctly. We use a MBE ECU which will happily run the vanos and the fly-by-wire, as I type this we are developing launch and traction control for it. It also allows full throttle gear change etc, but the wiring etc will be at extra cost.''



    I've never broke down the cost but thats what it'll cost me, and what a 25th birthday present to myself if I can get it done by april next year. The tuner has assured me that me that on their rolling road the average S54 makes around 310bhp. BUT with this set up they can achieve 350bhp (the last e36 swap with this very set up got 348bhp!!!)...meaning that the BMW will hit the other side of 185 mph!!!

    I've also been speaking elsewhere about looms and bits that can be done to get the project moving. I'm really thinking about giving it a go...but unsure whether 350bhp in the E30 will be wise and considering running it in my E36 as its OBD2 and makes the swap easier and also I'd feel better at 185mph in the E36 than E30!

    Don't know which car to choose, but I'm saving up for the swap. It may take until the summer 2012 but I'm sure I can do it


    @Wanganstyle got your PM's writing a reply in next few days, also seen your wiring harness for sale on the bay too.
    Last edited by Dean; 09-01-2011, 01:26 PM.

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  • Wanganstyle
    replied
    Originally posted by samiam3356 View Post
    Yes ALL of you should move to Atlanta! lol
    would be quite a bash on weekends......any one want to send a donation to the local PD to lax the hwy patrol before I show up lol

    Leave a comment:


  • matt
    replied
    Originally posted by M3 euro ltw View Post
    Matt....

    First off, nothing but the highest respect for what you and your company do. Stuff of legends and rightfully so.

    But, to be fair, and I believe you'd agree, while its fair to say that the factory bmw computer is capable of far more refinement and stability and even perhaps some safety (not going to lie) than affordable standalones, there are many, many limitations to going that route for people that are enthusiasts who like to tinker.

    For you personally, or for financially secure people in your back-yard geographically, there may be unlimited ability and access to re-tune the factory dme whenever you want to in order to take advantage of new cams, intake, headers, exhaust etc..... but for the rest of us that can not personally hack a bmw dme and adjust maps, take away EWS or emissions or needed interactions with ASC/ABS systems etc.... its very limiting.

    For people who like to tinker, or have a map for a restrictor in one class of racing, unrestricted in another, one for race gas, one for street gas, perhaps one for different pulleys on a SC system or to re-tune themselves to take advantage of new changes like cams, intake, filters, headers etc... the independence of a standalone is a huge benefit.

    No one should expect to EASILY get a standalone with a handful of maps to match the smoothness of the MSS54 with many, many maps, HFM, and the restrictions imposed by having to keep cats alive, emissions in place, and such......but you can get darn close and have a enormous advantage with new features as mentioned earlier.

    If you don't like to tinker, upgrade, fine tune, have different maps available, go with a reflashed factory computer, but be aware, it may not be simple or easy to upgrade and affordably re-tune locally.

    Imagine a situation where a custom re-tune or re-flash is $500 each time you wanted one. Very quickly you could pay for a standalone.

    I know I personally can never satisfy the itch for upgrades to go faster... I lie awake wondering how to justify a set of SS headers for the race car...I'm itching to put them on and retune the DTA for those. I'm dying to build an engine with cams, retune for those. I'm insanely curious how much more power I can tune for with ram effect using the CSL clone intake...Ram effect with an HFM? good luck on that! We have dyno proof of real gains by ditching 3.5 inch intake systems and opening it up, and we did the tuning locally and with simple rental of a dyno, just with a lap-top.

    But, its not for everyone... truth is, I get a couple hiccups when its the dead of winter and below freezing. Takes some time to play with tables and get cold start routines perfected etc...Factory DME will come out of the box, ready to handle that stuff. But at the same time its intoxicating to be the one in control of the engine....

    Alex.
    Oh, I absolutely agree. Standalones make a lot of sense for a lot of people.

    And certainly computing power is not high on the list of what people are looking for in an ECU (especially given the info available out there in public) but it's an interesting yardstick to me.

    Matt

    Leave a comment:


  • samiam3356
    replied
    Yes ALL of you should move to Atlanta! lol

    Leave a comment:


  • Wanganstyle
    replied
    Originally posted by M3 euro ltw View Post

    Imagine a situation where a custom re-tune or re-flash is $500 each time you wanted one. Very quickly you could pay for a standalone.
    I have heard this said by West coast heavy duty users for boosted m50 family about the remote ness of TRM OBD2 tuning, not easily within time constraints/expense for constant fine tuning. They would love to be local to TRM, but cannot afford the proximity :(

    I have also seen (around the globe) VERY successful remote mapping for high power turbo cars by TRM.

    hell, I would love to be close to TRM so I could be a local customer!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • hoveringuy
    replied
    Alex,
    You will need to excuse me if I missed this somewhere else, but does your DTA S100 come with a tune or is that the customer's responsibility? If it came pre-loaded with a generic tune for a street S54 I would say that is a compelling reason to get one, particularly if you had a library of tunes for different configurations.

    What I don't like about the standalones is that everyone seems to be on their own for the tunes.

    Leave a comment:


  • M3 euro ltw
    replied
    RE: well.......

    Originally posted by matt View Post
    For the record, the DTA S100 has a single ST10 (16 bit) CPU in it. The MSS54 has two 32bit CPUs. Much more powerful.
    Matt....

    First off, nothing but the highest respect for what you and your company do. Stuff of legends and rightfully so.

    But, to be fair, and I believe you'd agree, while its fair to say that the factory bmw computer is capable of far more refinement and stability and even perhaps some safety (not going to lie) than affordable standalones, there are many, many limitations to going that route for people that are enthusiasts who like to tinker.

    For you personally, or for financially secure people in your back-yard geographically, there may be unlimited ability and access to re-tune the factory dme whenever you want to in order to take advantage of new cams, intake, headers, exhaust etc..... but for the rest of us that can not personally hack a bmw dme and adjust maps, take away EWS or emissions or needed interactions with ASC/ABS systems etc.... its very limiting.

    For people who like to tinker, or have a map for a restrictor in one class of racing, unrestricted in another, one for race gas, one for street gas, perhaps one for different pulleys on a SC system or to re-tune themselves to take advantage of new changes like cams, intake, filters, headers etc... the independence of a standalone is a huge benefit.

    No one should expect to EASILY get a standalone with a handful of maps to match the smoothness of the MSS54 with many, many maps, HFM, and the restrictions imposed by having to keep cats alive, emissions in place, and such......but you can get darn close and have a enormous advantage with new features as mentioned earlier.

    If you don't like to tinker, upgrade, fine tune, have different maps available, go with a reflashed factory computer, but be aware, it may not be simple or easy to upgrade and affordably re-tune locally.

    Imagine a situation where a custom re-tune or re-flash is $500 each time you wanted one. Very quickly you could pay for a standalone.

    I know I personally can never satisfy the itch for upgrades to go faster... I lie awake wondering how to justify a set of SS headers for the race car...I'm itching to put them on and retune the DTA for those. I'm dying to build an engine with cams, retune for those. I'm insanely curious how much more power I can tune for with ram effect using the CSL clone intake...Ram effect with an HFM? good luck on that! We have dyno proof of real gains by ditching 3.5 inch intake systems and opening it up, and we did the tuning locally and with simple rental of a dyno, just with a lap-top.

    But, its not for everyone... truth is, I get a couple hiccups when its the dead of winter and below freezing. Takes some time to play with tables and get cold start routines perfected etc...Factory DME will come out of the box, ready to handle that stuff. But at the same time its intoxicating to be the one in control of the engine....

    Alex.
    Last edited by M3 euro ltw; 08-23-2011, 07:04 PM. Reason: typo

    Leave a comment:


  • nando
    replied
    Originally posted by samiam3356 View Post
    If you guys were going to dig into a stand alone and really try to grasp it, which one would you pick? Was looking at digging into MS3 but have seen some bash the hell out of it. Also is MS3 capable of running an s54 (the only reason I would want to do the work?)
    I'd say whatever you'll be comfortable with. there's a ton of options - if you give up VANOS control, just about anything could run it. But who'd want to do that? :p

    I'd be interested to know if anyone who's bashed MS3 has used one personally, or if it's just internet hearsay. I'm guessing the latter.

    Leave a comment:


  • matt
    replied
    Originally posted by nando View Post
    I guess it's not truely "32" bit, but I think we should know better from the days of 8-16-32-64 bit video games that a wider bus width doesn't neccesarily mean better.

    DIY says it's dual core. I don't really think it matters - it's definitely capable.

    from a wiki link:
    That is a nice chip. Thanks for the info.

    Leave a comment:


  • samiam3356
    replied
    If you guys were going to dig into a stand alone and really try to grasp it, which one would you pick? Was looking at digging into MS3 but have seen some bash the hell out of it. Also is MS3 capable of running an s54 (the only reason I would want to do the work?)

    Leave a comment:

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