So here is the actual project after I sold Project Delco...
Build:
1990 325i
Bronzitbeige Metallic
Engine
15MAR2025 - Find, flight, road trip back
This car I found on the Facebook R3V group page (I know this is sacrilegious to some here). He sent me videos, and we talked on phone for a few hours. I got the whole back story of the car, and we also chatted about Project Delco I had at the time. After the talk he sent me even more videos and forum posts from here about the engine tuning at Markert Motorworks. I took a day, came back to him with an offer, he countered, and we agreed on a price. I later was able to do some sleuthing and figured out he had a R3V account based on certain information. He hasn’t been active for a few years, so he didn’t have a build thread of this car. (ATLe30)
The next step was figuring out logistics. So again, I took the most reasonable approach of immediately buying a plane ticket for two weekends out. I tried coaxing some friends and family to make the trip with me, but I couldn’t get anyone to make the weekend trip with me on short notice. The day came and my fiancé dropped me off at airport at 5am, Flight from Philly at 6am. I landed in ATL airport 3 hours later. I then took a train to a nearby town north of Atlanta, and walked from the train station to the bank. I proceeded to withdraw a wad of cash, and sat in the bank’s waiting area for 45 minutes.
On that waiting room couch I proceed to have a conversation with this young girl, who was waiting for her parents over in the next room talking to a banker. I spoke with her for 30 minutes. She did not know a single word of English. I know very little Spanish. It was amusing to say the least.
The time of inspecting and going for a test drive was all a blur. I knew I was buying the car, so there wasn’t any negotiations and I knew about all the minor issues. I ended up leaving these suburbs north of Atlanta around 3pm. Stopped for wiper blades and gas (gas gauge works intermittently) before getting on the highway.
After stopping for gas one time, the odometer gears stopped working (great). I didn’t even hit the trip reset button. I just noticed it stopped working when I looked down after getting on the highway and saw it wasn’t moving. It stopped working with 220 miles on the trip odometer reading. So I just estimated out miles with my phone since I didn’t trust the gas gauge.
Got stuck in traffic, and started hearing pulsing noises coming from rear brakes at low speeds, only when I wasn’t pressing them. I pulled over and examined. At the time I thought the calipers were seizing up, but I didn’t have the tools to start taking things apart. So I took the mentality of “if it breaks I will fix it”, and kept driving. This turned out later to be just a scored rotor due race pad material build up. It was fine for the trip, but I used a metal brush drill attachment to “resurface” the rotors when I changed to street pads.
The car was averaging 26 mpg (pretty good considering it has a 3.73 rear end) I was able to cruise at 80 mph at about 3500 rpm with the overdrive 6th gear. Driving through the night was made easier by listening to podcasts through one ear phone (car came with no radio because, race car). I did have heat though as it transitioned from 75 degrees in Georgia to 40 degrees once I got to the DC area and north home to Philly.
It took me 3 gas stops, and extra bathroom break, one stop for food, and in total 14.5 hours to get back from the Atlanta suburbs to my home in Philadelphia. (Every stop I checked the oil and inspected underneath the car for leaks/damage.) I went to sleep at 5 am, completing my 24 hours of E30 acquisition. I couldn't get it in my driveway since the car was so low. So I left it in the street, slept for 2 hours, and drove it out to the suburbs to my mom's house. There is sat until I could find time to raise up the coil overs and put some bigger tires on there.
This was also my first fly and drive home, and I think it was a success. Alas, this wraps up the first post. Much more to come withe my plans for the car.
Build:
1990 325i
Bronzitbeige Metallic
Engine
- Torn down and rebuilt S52 (claims 5,000 miles since the rebuild and cam install)
- new rings
- new main bearings
- new rod bearings
- crank machined
- Schrick cams
- block honed
- new timing chains and guides
- rebuilt VANOS
- new cylinder head
- VAC oil pump and oil pump nut lock
- VAC oil pan baffle
- M50 manifold
- Billet Turner Motorsport M50 manifold swap kit to retain factory self draining catch can
- KA motors sealed intake to high beam
- Turner shorty header replica exhaust manifold
- Bimmerworld Magnaflow 24v swap exhaust
- S54 oil filter housing
- AN oil cooler lines to kidney mounted oil cooler
- Condor Speedshop poly motor mounts
- E30 M3 5-Lug swap
- VAC E30 M3 bump steer correction kit
- BC Racing DS Coilovers (Upgraded to track spec internals by Redshift)
- Front E30 vert sway bar
- Rear UUC sway bar with trunk mount reinforcements
- Poly bushings front and rear
- New inner and outer tie rods
- New front aluminum E30 M3 control arms
- Condor treehouse style control arm mounts
- AKG motorsports rear shock mounts
- Reinforced rear subframe with eccentric bolts for adjustable toe/camber
- 217 Getrag 6-Speed pulled out of a 2011 E90 328i
- Poly bushings
- 3.73 Medium Case LSD
- Poly bushing
- E30 M3 Cluster (or maybe modified to look like one… I don’t know how to verify)
- E30 M3 370mm M Tech 2 wheel
- E30 M3 map light rear view mirror
- IS beige interior
- Turner Motorsport E30 M3 to E36 M3 front brake caliper and rotor adapters
- Rear E30 M3 Massive Lee brake kit
- Wilwood superlite 4 piston calipers
- Two piece rotors
- E90 brake booster and master cylinder
- Stainless Steel brake lines
- 16x8 Style 5 wheels with some Falken RT660s that had had like 50% of life left
- OBD2 ECU tuned by Markert Motorworks
- Thinned wiring harness that eliminated secondary O2 sensors. No catalytic converter.
- E46 ZHP purple tag steering rack
- Garagistic steering linkage slop elimination kit
- New fuel pump and housing assembly
15MAR2025 - Find, flight, road trip back
This car I found on the Facebook R3V group page (I know this is sacrilegious to some here). He sent me videos, and we talked on phone for a few hours. I got the whole back story of the car, and we also chatted about Project Delco I had at the time. After the talk he sent me even more videos and forum posts from here about the engine tuning at Markert Motorworks. I took a day, came back to him with an offer, he countered, and we agreed on a price. I later was able to do some sleuthing and figured out he had a R3V account based on certain information. He hasn’t been active for a few years, so he didn’t have a build thread of this car. (ATLe30)
The next step was figuring out logistics. So again, I took the most reasonable approach of immediately buying a plane ticket for two weekends out. I tried coaxing some friends and family to make the trip with me, but I couldn’t get anyone to make the weekend trip with me on short notice. The day came and my fiancé dropped me off at airport at 5am, Flight from Philly at 6am. I landed in ATL airport 3 hours later. I then took a train to a nearby town north of Atlanta, and walked from the train station to the bank. I proceeded to withdraw a wad of cash, and sat in the bank’s waiting area for 45 minutes.
On that waiting room couch I proceed to have a conversation with this young girl, who was waiting for her parents over in the next room talking to a banker. I spoke with her for 30 minutes. She did not know a single word of English. I know very little Spanish. It was amusing to say the least.
The time of inspecting and going for a test drive was all a blur. I knew I was buying the car, so there wasn’t any negotiations and I knew about all the minor issues. I ended up leaving these suburbs north of Atlanta around 3pm. Stopped for wiper blades and gas (gas gauge works intermittently) before getting on the highway.
After stopping for gas one time, the odometer gears stopped working (great). I didn’t even hit the trip reset button. I just noticed it stopped working when I looked down after getting on the highway and saw it wasn’t moving. It stopped working with 220 miles on the trip odometer reading. So I just estimated out miles with my phone since I didn’t trust the gas gauge.
Got stuck in traffic, and started hearing pulsing noises coming from rear brakes at low speeds, only when I wasn’t pressing them. I pulled over and examined. At the time I thought the calipers were seizing up, but I didn’t have the tools to start taking things apart. So I took the mentality of “if it breaks I will fix it”, and kept driving. This turned out later to be just a scored rotor due race pad material build up. It was fine for the trip, but I used a metal brush drill attachment to “resurface” the rotors when I changed to street pads.
The car was averaging 26 mpg (pretty good considering it has a 3.73 rear end) I was able to cruise at 80 mph at about 3500 rpm with the overdrive 6th gear. Driving through the night was made easier by listening to podcasts through one ear phone (car came with no radio because, race car). I did have heat though as it transitioned from 75 degrees in Georgia to 40 degrees once I got to the DC area and north home to Philly.
It took me 3 gas stops, and extra bathroom break, one stop for food, and in total 14.5 hours to get back from the Atlanta suburbs to my home in Philadelphia. (Every stop I checked the oil and inspected underneath the car for leaks/damage.) I went to sleep at 5 am, completing my 24 hours of E30 acquisition. I couldn't get it in my driveway since the car was so low. So I left it in the street, slept for 2 hours, and drove it out to the suburbs to my mom's house. There is sat until I could find time to raise up the coil overs and put some bigger tires on there.
This was also my first fly and drive home, and I think it was a success. Alas, this wraps up the first post. Much more to come withe my plans for the car.
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