M10 power never sours

Do it. I love M10 cars. They go for days and you can toss them around like a go-kart. Handle moderate boost pretty well too, but you'd need to upgrade to Motronic 1.3 Fuel Injection over the carb; unless of course you want to run a built N/A Carb'd M10, which being in AUS, you might have to do to reffing. I've seen some 2002 guys get ~160CHP/140RWHP off of just bolt-ons, chip, and a tune (that's around $2-3k spent on upgrades though)
At that point you're looking at M20 power with half the weight and double the fuel economy
Keep in mind, the M10 block was the backbone to the M12 engine BMW was running in F1 back in the 90s: 1100HP (Yes, that is One Thousand, One Hundred Horsepower) off of an M10 block with a high flowing head and a huge turbo

Do it. I love M10 cars. They go for days and you can toss them around like a go-kart. Handle moderate boost pretty well too, but you'd need to upgrade to Motronic 1.3 Fuel Injection over the carb; unless of course you want to run a built N/A Carb'd M10, which being in AUS, you might have to do to reffing. I've seen some 2002 guys get ~160CHP/140RWHP off of just bolt-ons, chip, and a tune (that's around $2-3k spent on upgrades though)
At that point you're looking at M20 power with half the weight and double the fuel economy
Keep in mind, the M10 block was the backbone to the M12 engine BMW was running in F1 back in the 90s: 1100HP (Yes, that is One Thousand, One Hundred Horsepower) off of an M10 block with a high flowing head and a huge turbo
Comment