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New owner, BMW 325iX Touring

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  • D.Martijn
    replied
    Yesterday I got the inner sill and flange for the floor welded in.
    Today I finished the floor repair by welding the outer sill on and the little section of the A post.

    Inner sill with the little drain hole punched in; I ground the lower section down so that water can escape.


    Outer sill and a post, coated the outside in brunox. I'm still going to coat the inside with wax


    Ground the excess metal flush with the A post piece


    And finally welded a little stud on the floor where the heat shielding for the exhaust is secured


    Finally I discovered some more rust under the window washer bottle, when going over it with a wire wheel the metal just disintegrated in pieces resulting in a hole. Yay!
    Last edited by D.Martijn; 07-06-2017, 10:26 AM.

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  • D.Martijn
    replied
    Originally posted by Roadrunner View Post
    Amazing work! You sure are making the best of having to remove the interior. :p Weird how common it is to have rust holes in that spot in the corners of the foot wells. At least you'll have peace of mind knowing all the rust was fixed the right way once you're done all of this. Interested to hear how the dashboard re-install goes as well.

    The one benefit of having a serious coolant leak! ;) Are you planning to replace the sound insulation?
    Thank you! Yes, now that the interior is fully out I want to tackle all the rust spots so I'm 100% sure it's good for the year to come. Still a few left to cut out but it's getting there. Overall the removal of the dash wasn't too bad, you just have to remove everything basically

    Actually I'm glad I had the coolant leak. Weird right..? Otherwise I would have had no clue about the rust issues as on the outside of the car it looked pretty good.

    And yes I will. Before removing the original sound deadening I made a template of it. So when I get my new one for the local auto shop I can cut it roughly out like the original :)

    Originally posted by CorvallisBMW View Post
    So you can't really modify a daily driven car at all? That's too bad.

    No, we don't have any such system in the US. Some states have vehicle inspections for safety, some for emissions, some for both. But there's nothing like the CoC that I'm aware of.
    No, you can't but there are several people who still do it and once the annual inspection comes up they switch everything over to the original suspension etc.
    I'm not sure about coilovers but I'm 100% sure you can't (legally) use bags.

    Newer cars have a CoC, it's just a paper that basically states the car is stock, no modifications.
    So when I imported an older car without one, it had to be checked that it's still stock (eg. isn't lowered or has another motor)

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  • CorvallisBMW
    replied
    Originally posted by D.Martijn View Post
    Thank you! The car was pretty good but there are always a few things with these cars that needs changing.. and of course the usual rust :(

    Since this E30 was built before '96 it didn't receive a CoC in Germany (conformity certificate). I could import the car without one but this meant I can not use it as a daily driver (number plate 1-...-...) but only as a oldtimer/classic car (plate 0-...-...).When you have a classic car number plate you can't drive to school/work with said car. You can see the plates next to each other on page5 of my thread where my iX is pictured next to the one of my uncle.

    However, you can get a conformity certificate at your dealer or the main BMW dealer/import of Belgium. This only took a few hours.
    You can also do this at a local car inspection center but it can take up to a month or even longer.

    So when I have to get the car annually checked because it's registered as a daily (classic cars only have to get checked once when you register it)
    I have to give registration, insurance, conformity certificate. (I think that's it lol)

    I hope this explains it a bit more, if not feel free to ask questions :)
    Not sure if this is a bit the same in the US?
    So you can't really modify a daily driven car at all? That's too bad.

    No, we don't have any such system in the US. Some states have vehicle inspections for safety, some for emissions, some for both. But there's nothing like the CoC that I'm aware of.

    Leave a comment:


  • Roadrunner
    replied
    Amazing work! You sure are making the best of having to remove the interior. :p Weird how common it is to have rust holes in that spot in the corners of the foot wells. At least you'll have peace of mind knowing all the rust was fixed the right way once you're done all of this. Interested to hear how the dashboard re-install goes as well.

    Originally posted by D.Martijn View Post
    Yes, the dry ice trick does wonders, however the isolation came off pretty easy because it's soaked in coolant.
    The one benefit of having a serious coolant leak! ;) Are you planning to replace the sound insulation?

    Leave a comment:


  • D.Martijn
    replied
    Originally posted by CorvallisBMW View Post
    Wow, you're busy! Great work on keeping such a beautiful (and rare) e30 alive!

    I'm curious about the CoC process you mentioned in the beginning when you bought the car. Is that required only once when bringing the car in to Belgium? Or do you have to show it every time it's inspected/taxed?
    Thank you! The car was pretty good but there are always a few things with these cars that needs changing.. and of course the usual rust :(

    Since this E30 was built before '96 it didn't receive a CoC in Germany (conformity certificate). I could import the car without one but this meant I can not use it as a daily driver (number plate 1-...-...) but only as a oldtimer/classic car (plate 0-...-...).When you have a classic car number plate you can't drive to school/work with said car. You can see the plates next to each other on page5 of my thread where my iX is pictured next to the one of my uncle.

    However, you can get a conformity certificate at your dealer or the main BMW dealer/import of Belgium. This only took a few hours.
    You can also do this at a local car inspection center but it can take up to a month or even longer.

    So when I have to get the car annually checked because it's registered as a daily (classic cars only have to get checked once when you register it)
    I have to give registration, insurance, conformity certificate. (I think that's it lol)

    I hope this explains it a bit more, if not feel free to ask questions :)
    Not sure if this is a bit the same in the US?

    Leave a comment:

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