There are rhd ix's floating about. But both of my cars are lhd :)
I have a feeling the m3 rack will do the job. From what I remember of your Ix rack pix there was quite a lot of bulk to it. The m3 is much neater and skinnier than the e36/z3 rack that came off my car at least.
But going back to your question I think the only thing I might have a slight issue with is the auto v8 bell housing. The rest of it looks like it will bolt up fairly well. Since the getrag I'm using is a box designed to fit the e30 I'm hoping to using the original mountings as a guide for the drive line. Allbeit there may be some lowering involvolved engine side to clear the bonnet/hood.
Transmission wise I think it will be near perfect. I can see the tcase needing to be cut into the floor pan just in front of the drivers seat runner. I doubt this will effect driver as the tcase is angled down quite sharply.
My main concern now is diff/sump/rack clearances.
E30 M3 S62 Build - Loads of queries about 4x4 drivtrains
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The only rack other than the stock E30 iX rack I've looked at is the E46 Xi rack. There were too many little fit problems with the E46 rack for me to want to mess with it.
The E30 iX rack *should* work fine if the left mount ear on the end fitting is modified to enable rotating the spool valve closer to vertical. It needs to have about half its stock angle off vertical in order to work around the E53 diff, the engine mount bracket and the mount tower on the crossmember.
The primary complaint about the iX rack is that it's slow compared to an M3 rack. This can possibly be fixed with a steering quickener, if a multi-u-joint steering shaft can move said quickener far enough to vehicle left (LHD car) to clear the left bank exhaust.
E30 iX's weren't imported to the UK, were they? Having a RHD car would make the steering and diff *MUCH* easier to work together as they'd be on opposite sides of the engine! :)
Checked your pics... your M3 at least is LHD. :(
Do your measurements indicate that the transmission will be too high in the tunnel when the oil pan is as low as it can be over the crossmember?Leave a comment:
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Ok, I take your points.
Re the rack; what solution are you thinking of to reduce/eliminate bump steer?
which racks have you tried and how far off have they been?Leave a comment:
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Going back to the steering; My concern is more to do with the sump to rack to subframe spacing. Without changes to the one of the aforementioned i don't think it will fit.
Have you actually had your engine in the bay yet to measure your clearances?
However, this gives us a very good view of where drivelines etc will need to be, and what will need to be modified (floor pan). The blue thing you can see is in his footwell inside the car.
What are your thoughts?
http://i776.photobucket.com/albums/y...n/1281d666.jpg
I need to hound the guy who's providing my (*FREE*) FTP services to get my site back up and running so I can reference my mock-up pictures...
I had guessed that if the RWD pan will fit the RWD crossmember and allow the engine to sit low enough to clear, then the relationship of the AWD components would be the same. Of course there's zero basis for this assumption...
I'm not being negative, I'm being realistic :p
It's a big complex project, but it will be more complex than it has to be if you charge headlong into modifying thing without understanding the impacts.
For example, in excessively lowered cars, the bump steer is equal but opposite from one side to the other. On a pure two-wheel bump, there's no net effect because one wheel steers one direction and the other steers the other direction. The only result is a change in toe. The car only becomes unsettled when the suspension moves differently from side to side.
If the rack were offset to one side, then the bump steer would be equal and *ADDITIVE* between the sides... that is both wheels would steer the same direction. Thus a two wheel bump would always steer the car one way AND individual one-wheel bumps would steer the car also. Note that this is worse than the usual bump steer of a lowered car.Leave a comment:
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Will,
Neither of us embarked upon these projects with the hope they'd just bolt together mate.
Of course theres a shedload of fabricating and testing. But essentially we are building very expensive toys. I don't know about the US, but over here a bare metal resprayed and immaculate e30 m3 with S62 will push the £40000 mark. So who knows about AWD!!! So obviously a lot of thought, money and testing will need to go into it.
While I feel I and a few others are brainstorming solutions to these issues, it seems you are just knocking them back. Although I find the negatives you have discovered extremely useful, It would be great if you could throw in the solutions you think *may* work too.
Im sorry if I sound negative, but sometimes a positive step forward with an alternative suggestion may be better for us. U never know what other ideas your suggestion's might trigger in others.
Again, I'm not being negative, and I think there are some great ideas floating about, you obviously have a huge amount of knowledge and you are being very helpful. It would just be great if you were more constructive ;)
Going back to the steering; My concern is more to do with the sump to rack to subframe spacing. Without changes to the one of the aforementioned i don't think it will fit.
Have you actually had your engine in the bay yet to measure your clearances?
I was over a friends house today, he is building a standard s62 and managed to snap this picture. He has gone a little further regarding the bulkhead to enable him to remove the gearbox without the need to remove the engine.
However, this gives us a very good view of where drivelines etc will need to be, and what will need to be modified (floor pan). The blue thing you can see is in his footwell inside the car.
What are your thoughts?
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Yes, there always is, but every change involves more design, fabrication and testing... Eventually you get to a point at which you should have just built a clean sheet design from scratch.Leave a comment:
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ok, I appreciate what you are saying. But there is always a solution. Im sure something specific can be made up. or as said before move the rack in front and extend the steer arms. I wouldn't want to extend more the 5cm tbh but id definitely give it a go. maybe make something that bolts on so if it doesn't work just whip it off.
Lets talk more about steering boxes. Un assisted, quite basic and fairly compact. any know about these?Leave a comment:
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<sigh> here we go again...
As BMW built the car, it has a certain bump steer curve. The position of the rack is chosen so that bump steer is minimized at stock ride height. Lowering the car puts the suspension into a range of its travel where bump steer is greater than it was stock. Bump steer correction kits just space the steering arms back down to essentially stock ride height.
RWD bump steer correction spacers don't work on the AWD knuckles.
Moving the rack pivots relative to the inner ball joints for the control arms will change the *shape* of the bump steer curve. *UNLESS* you know the shape of the stock curve, you won't be able to predict how moving any given pivot will change the shape of the curve.
Yes, 2-3mm matters.
Spend a few minutes on Google looking up how to measure bump steer. It's a pain in the ass, but absolutely necessary in situations of altered front suspension geometry in order to end up with a car that will actually perform.Last edited by The Dark Side of Will; 04-06-2012, 01:58 PM.Leave a comment:
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would a bump steer correction kit not solve this? How many degrees will an inch of movement really effect the angle and parallelness between the drive shaft and tie rod? very little based on triangulation maths.
2-3mm increase one side, and 2-3 mm drop the other id imagine.
Also bear in mind the engine and subframe may (probably in fact) have to be lowered too. Just like the 300mm.de 20mm spacer kit does. So either way I think it will need a correction kitLeave a comment:
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yes, I understand that. the question is, how much and will it matter?
but if an E30/E36 rack is the same width, it might make more sense to use that if you could make mounts.Leave a comment:
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as u see it in the pic its just resting, but quite comfortably id say. It would be a case of welding a couple of bosses and the drilling and tapping them.
What would be the effects if I was to slide the rack across and inch or so to allow for the diff etc? I imagine id need to shorten one push rod and extend the other?
If you move the inner tie rod ends from their stock locations, you *WILL* create bump steer.Leave a comment:
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Ive been trying to find those pix of the diff bolted up to the sump showing the clearances, but lots of the pic links aren't working. Can u whack one or two up here for me?Leave a comment:
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as u see it in the pic its just resting, but quite comfortably id say. It would be a case of welding a couple of bosses and the drilling and tapping them.
What would be the effects if I was to slide the rack across and inch or so to allow for the diff etc? I imagine id need to shorten one push rod and extend the other?Leave a comment:
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an E46 XI rack may give you some room. but, there are other issues to deal with.
what does that M3 rack look like sitting on the ix subframe? any chance of it bolting up?Leave a comment:
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