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    Originally posted by Austin! View Post
    Have you confirmed that your front balancer is orientated properly? If you have fuel and spark, it sounds like a classic case of ignition timing out of sync.
    I agree, it totally feels like a timing issue. But as you know, that balancer pulley is indexed, and putting it in wrong would result in a big wobble which this doesn't have. And again, the timing marks for both the cam pulley and the balancer line up perfectly for top dead center both before and after installing the balancer.
    '91 325i

    Comment


      How about the distributor gear and the rotor itself?
      '70 911s | '72 2002 | '88 M5 | '89 330is | '89 M3 | '95 911 | '02 M5 | '04 RR HSE

      Comment


        So, Austin! is my new favorite person on the interwebs.

        Sure enough, I effed up the distributor rotor installation. I knew it was indexed with a peg-in-hole setup, and am pretty sure I installed it that way, but when I turned my back to get the Torx screw to fasten it into the cam, the plastic disc must have rotated before I cinched it down. Stupid. Here's the divot formed by the peg, tells you how many degrees it was off.

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        So pleased to hear this thing run. This pic shows exhaust steam, not smoke, thankfully. I wish I could give a driving report, but I somehow lost the heater blower motor and power windows in all this. So the windshield fogged up with my excited heavy breathing, and it got dark before I could pull out of the driveway. Thanks, daylight savings! This will have to wait until the morning.

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        Austin!, if you're ever up around Seattle, and you want it, you can have my old exhaust system. That's the deal I put out to the locals for anyone who could get my car running. Thanks, buddy! I may hit you up for help on the windows and heater if I can't figure it out myself (fuses look okay).
        Last edited by Nader393; 11-04-2018, 07:13 PM.
        '91 325i

        Comment


          Awesome! Glad it runs. Perhaps I will make it up that way for the exhaust stuff soon. Appreciate it!

          For your windows and blower motor, you need to check your starter connections (the small 4mm and 6mm ones). 99% of the time, that's the issue.

          The K7 unloader relay grounds through the starter. If you have a bad solenoid, or tightened the connections too tight (pulling the thread out of the solenoid and ensuring no contact), the ground won't make a contact and will not activate the K7 relay. I can't remember which one it is, but I think it's the 4mm one. You can ground it to the engine block to test my theory.
          '70 911s | '72 2002 | '88 M5 | '89 330is | '89 M3 | '95 911 | '02 M5 | '04 RR HSE

          Comment


            Thinking about it some more, I kind of thankful that my screw up was big enough to not let the engine run. Can you imagine the headache if the distributor rotor was off only few degrees, and the engine ran, but shittily? That might have really delayed the diagnosis.
            '91 325i

            Comment


              Originally posted by Austin! View Post
              Awesome! Glad it runs. Perhaps I will make it up that way for the exhaust stuff soon. Appreciate it!

              For your windows and blower motor, you need to check your starter connections (the small 4mm and 6mm ones). 99% of the time, that's the issue.

              The K7 unloader relay grounds through the starter. If you have a bad solenoid, or tightened the connections too tight (pulling the thread out of the solenoid and ensuring no contact), the ground won't make a contact and will not activate the K7 relay. I can't remember which one it is, but I think it's the 4mm one. You can ground it to the engine block to test my theory.
              Goddam! are you a pro?

              I'll hang on to the exhaust for you as long as you need. It's sitting in my basement.
              '91 325i

              Comment


                Originally posted by Nader393 View Post
                Goddam! are you a pro?

                I'll hang on to the exhaust for you as long as you need. It's sitting in my basement.
                Done this once or twice, you know :)

                Just glad you got it all going! little things can hang you up sometimes, but at least it was all easily solved.
                '70 911s | '72 2002 | '88 M5 | '89 330is | '89 M3 | '95 911 | '02 M5 | '04 RR HSE

                Comment


                  Thanks again to Austin!, replacing the starter gave me back my power windows and HVAC blower. Who'da thunk that? (Missourah speak)

                  Then I drove the car for a week. And it was painful. Erratic, surging idle between 1500-2000 RPM. Bucking ride when transitioning from off throttle to on at low speeds. Disappointing, and super annoying. After all that work and high hopes, I thought "What have I done?!"

                  On the other hand, over 3K RPM, engine felt strong and angry, like this could be a contender after further sorting. But the replacement exhaust is also louder. More growl and snarl than rumble and roar like the prior one. I won't let the ear/mind/butt dyno fool me again into believing false gains. This needs to go to a real dyno for verification.

                  To fix the idle and bucking ride, I first replaced the ICV (idle control valve) with a spare I already had. Easy to do, low hanging fruit. That didn't do it. So next I replaced the TPS (throttle position switch). Had to order it, and it took a week to arrive. A full week of me driving this car in that condition, which kinda sucked.

                  When I finally got it, I felt like this $50 small plastic box would be the answer to my problems. The old one was full of oil, so I drilled a small hole in the new one to drain whatever oil vapor drips down the throttle shaft into the switch box. Sure enough, this new switch fixed the problem. Idles smoothly at 900 RPM. Well, smooth as a 284 cam in a relatively low compression engine can idle. Car is driveable again. I want to believe it's significantly more powerful, but like I said, it needs the dyno to show that. Stay tuned...

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                  '91 325i

                  Comment


                    The old lump is mostly stripped and on a stand. My plans will require a visit to the machine shop...

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                    '91 325i

                    Comment


                      oh dayum... Are you going to stroke the motor too? I plan to go balls deep 2.9 build. Same 85mm pistons and M52 84mm crank

                      Have you driven the car yet?
                      Simon
                      Current Cars:
                      -1966 Lotus Elan
                      -1986 German Car
                      -2006 Volkswagen Jetta TDI

                      Make R3V Great Again -2020

                      Comment


                        Originally posted by 2mAn View Post
                        oh dayum... Are you going to stroke the motor too? I plan to go balls deep 2.9 build. Same 85mm pistons and M52 84mm crank

                        Have you driven the car yet?
                        Yes, and yes.

                        I do indeed have the M52 crank. (Thanks, Greg!)

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                        Car feels great since I fixed it, but I won't spew superlatives until it proves itself on the dyno. Not that it matters, because 2.9 (and stuff) is coming...
                        '91 325i

                        Comment


                          A 2.9 stroker huh? I still have my worn out original engine, I'm seriously considering doing an ITB 2.9 stroker in the future, but I wanna know how drivable it's gonna be with a 284 cam (or similar). I'd probably just follow this: https://adamsautosport.com/informati...ine-checklist/

                          Comment


                            So, Greg was selling, and I was buying. I cleared him out of the aforementioned crank, the Mahle 85mm 10.5:1 pistons, M52 connecting rods, Bimmerheads shaved 284 head (verified with stamping), and box full of bearings, seals, gaskets-n-stuff.

                            I now find myself buried in e30 parts, not that it's a bad thing. In fact, I'm tripping over heads. So I brought a couple back inside (sorry, wifey!) for further work. Like I said, the verified Bimmerheads unit is shaved. How does that affect the compression ratio? Let's measure heads! Stock is first, shaved Bimmerheads is second.

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                            '91 325i

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                              Oh Damn, you cleaned him out... well, I know he’s happy. Hopefully you are too
                              Simon
                              Current Cars:
                              -1966 Lotus Elan
                              -1986 German Car
                              -2006 Volkswagen Jetta TDI

                              Make R3V Great Again -2020

                              Comment


                                Now, let's cc the head. To do so, you need a buret. It's that miserable tool you used in college when you were a pre-med student struggling through Organic Chemistry. Used to have horrible memories associated with it. But I last used this piece of scientific glassware to cc the head of my Alfa's race engine about 5 years ago. So, gradually changing the buret's association to better memories.

                                I used ATF because it's easy to read, runny enough but won't seep through potentially leaky valves. Close off the chamber with a plastic plate sealed with grease.

                                Looks like a 1mm shave results in a 4.2cc reduction of combustion chamber volume in an e30 head. This information may be useful to a handful of engine builders in this country.

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                                '91 325i

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