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Which is the preferred choice? Parts from the E30 M3 or from E36?
Rears are only from Z3 right?
Could someone who's actually done this let me know what ET wheels they are using.
Thanks!
E30 M3 stuff is the most straight forward approach to this.....everything bolts right up. The down side to this option is that E30 M3 parts are harder to come by....it was a limited production car so there simply isn't a bounty of used parts out there for one to use.
With the E36 parts, there's LOTS of good used cores of struts, brakes, etc. to do such a project. Eric Lukas did such a conversion on his E30. Run a search on it....there are several pages of info including a breakdown of parts Eric put together.
Jon
Rides...
1991 325i - sold :(
2004 2WD Frontier King Cab
both suspension swaps will likely come out to the same cost. There is a larger wheel selection for e36s, but e36 offset wheels will fit on e30 m3 suspension with spacers, not the other way around. Therefore, the e30 setup has a larger wheel choice.
Both swaps for the rear can be done using only the hubs from an e30m3, a z3 or a 318ti
the front of an e30m3 will bolt on and be ready to go
the front of an e36 m3.. you need camber plates (yes, NEED), offset control arms ($140 each at cost) and offset control arm bushings. If you are interested in centering your wheel, for a longer wheelbase and unbutchered look, you'll have to look into another alternative for offset CABs. The geometry isn't too jacked if you leave the wheels a little back in the wheel well and clearance isn't much of an issue.
Keep in mind that you're probably going to have to do lots of custom suspension shit, adjustable coilovers are almost necessary to get the ride height down (due to the stack height of camber plates for coil over setups) and an e36 m3 bilstein sport for the front costs $250
The hubs/brakes/spindles on an e36 M3 fetch a fair amount of money, so be prepared to pay for those, as regular e36 guys want them too.
Make sure you factor in the cost of wheels and tires before you do the swap, or you're fucked :D
hth
-Bryson
How much moe secure do you feel with e36 breakes than you would with e30 m3. I know that break fade is rare (meing you have to really be using the breaks) - but these is a "safe feeling" that comes with larger rotors. By feel, I mean petal feel.
Originally posted by Matt-B
hey does anyone know anyone who gets upset and makes electronics?
my pedal takes a little bit more modulation to stop than an e30 m3, this is comparing my car with superblue and braided steel brake lines to my brother's stock m3 with old rubber lines and standard brake fluid.
My car will outstop the hell out of his car though :D Due pretty much solely to tire size
Also -- brake bias is a little bit off, not too bad now that I'm not running staggered wheels anymore though
the front of an e36 m3.. you need camber plates (yes, NEED),
bryson -
nice summary. i used the e36m3 bearing caps and modified them. ground off the studs and welded on new bolts at desired location. no camber plates needed. i have a good pic if someone is willing to host.
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