Finally got my garage setup to a point where I decided to do the timing belt on the e30. By the time I got the coolant drained, the radiator pulled, and the harmonic balancer removed, I realized that I don't really want to start putting on old parts that I'm upgrading or replacing. I spent a couple days figuring out some details, and came to the following conclusion: I'm not putting this thing back together "quickly". Once I got in there, I realized that so much of the cooling system gets disassembled for the timing belt that I might as well do the upgrades now - new radiator, updating to the late-model coolant reservoir, electric fan conversion, etc. I also have a euro front bumper that just arrived.
In short: once I got halfway into the timing belt I realized I don't really want to fuck around with all this old shit I'm going to tear out in a couple months, and I'd rather just take my time to get everything sorted as I put it back together. This is kinda leading to option three for my rebuild plan.
Let's review:
Option 1: tear the whole damn thing apart and fix all the chassis, then slowly, piece by piece, put the car back together doing all the upgrades along the way. This was my original plan when I though the car was in completely non-functional condition
Option 2: Since I realized it actually ran and drove, I thought hey, maybe I'll do it piecemeal. A section at a time. Maybe get the car plated and cruise around in it between subsystem upgrades. Once I realized the rust situation is potentially unsafe, this option seems not viable
Option 3: Something of a hybrid of 1&2. I think I should put a bunch of energy into getting the engine bay "sorted out" while the car is still mostly together/running. This is where the biggest changes are happening, and I have the most work to do getting things figured out. So packaging and wiring are the big to-dos. Chassis rust, despite being the biggest hurdle on it's own, is also the "deepest" to get to. It will be best to get down to a bare or mostly bare chassis to do the rust repair, and I'm wary of taking a car apart and then putting it back together differently. In a lot of ways, despite possibly being more work in the long run, I think it might make sense to get it together the way I want it before I really take on the chassis rust. This option has always been in the back of my mind as what might make the most sense, but honestly I'm scared that once I start doing the rust repair I'll realize it's beyond what I want or can do and all the other effort will be for naught. Obviously that's a big of an extreme view: I'm very capable AND if I get all the subsystems done on this chassis and decide the chassis is too far gone, I'm pretty sure I can just source a new shell without too much difficulty. It's not like investing all the time and money in sorting everything else out is in vain. It just leads to weird priorities, like I need to buy the A/C components now, even though I'm not going charge the A/C system and drive the car for possibly years.
So with that in mind, my focus right now is front-end packaging. Here's the plan:
- New radiator. TBD which one. I see a lot of people run some e36 something (M-coupe rad?) but I haven't done hardly any research on this. Would like to avoid M-badged items if I can due to cost, but more research needed.
- Re-install all the A/C stuff. I have done research here, going to convert to r134a if for no other reason than the fact that everything but the evaporator and A/C wiring has been removed. Pretty easy for me to just swap in R134a stuff.
- Install the OEM oil cooler -my car didn't have one, but this will be good with the turbo build (especially if I do oil piston squirters).
- Package it all behind a Type 1 valance. My car is an early model, so it has the type-1 front end. Many people switch away from this because they like a more aggressive front airdam. For a variety of reasons, I'd like to keep the "older" or "less aggressive" look. It's more classic BMW. Early e30's with all the chrome bits look more like a car designed in the 70's. It's, IMHO, a significantly different looking car than late model, plastic bumper cars. Love it or hate it, it's different, and even with a heavily modified car, I kinda like the idea of maintaining it's original appearance as much as possible. Personally, I'm just not that interested in body kits or facelift swaps. Does a plastic bumper e30 look better? I dunno, maybe. But for me it's somewhat poetic to keep the car "true to form" or "period correct". Is that bullshit from a guy who's slapping a big turbo on an M20 and planning on running e85? Maybe. I guess I'm a resto-mod guy. Aesthetically I want it to look like it was originally designed - mostly - but mechanically I'm much more open to modernization.
- With that said. I used to like the idea of keeping the divingboards but... no. The euro bumpers look so much better, especially going for the older / classic look rather than the updated/facelifted look. It's clear to me that BMW wanted my car to have the original chrome "euro" bumpers.
- Finally of course I need to fit an IC in there somewhere, as big as practical.
- Which leads me to... Fans! I've been kicking this around in my mind and I think there's really only one feasible solution for my goals: I need to do the electric fan swap for the main fan, and use a low-profile fan for both the aux and main fans. When I did my turbo a while back, I just removed the aux fan entirely (along with the A/C condenser) and never had any issues. Now I live in a warmer area and will be adding not just the condenser back, but also a big IC. All of which is going to make the airflow much worse for the radiator. I know there are options to do this with the clutched fan, but I think the better setup might be...
- Relocating the radiators! Specifically I'm adding let's say a 3" core thickness IC. Let's assume I can get low-profile aux fan that's ~1" slimmer than the OEM one, which means I need to move the radiator ~2" closer to the engine. My understanding is that this should be possible IF I use an electric fan. My clutched fan has hit my radiator (and the radiator hose behind it) so clearly there's pretty much no space to move the radiator with the clutched setup, but a low-pro electric fan and a low-pro aux fan should both gain some space for the IC, and provide enough airflow to prevent the IC and condenser from heatsoaking. I'm not super worried about the car overheating at idle, because it should have a lot more cooling capacity when all's said and done.
Here are some of the latest pics:
The coolant was looking truly awful. Lots of sediment, presumably rust and/or maybe aluminum corrosion. Not good. Definitely needed to be drained:
Polyurethane motor mounts - perhaps they don't age well. These will be replaced soon. Trans mounts look similar. Kind of a bummer because I don't think they have many miles on them, in the grand scheme of things. (less than 20k?)
Euro bumper time! Still waiting on all the hardware from ECS Tuning. Hardware was easy to source - they had everything needed in stock. Used RealOEM.com and a 323i diagram to figure out the necessary hardware (see below). I got the euro bumper from a guy on this board for $450ish. I thought that was a little "fair" given the fact that it needs to be re-chromed, but then checking some other sources I realized that people are selling all this trim for an arm and a leg. So getting the full assembly for that price is good! Probably won't be refinishing this bumper for a few years - that will happen with the final tear down. Much to do before then:
And the bumper diagram and part numbers:

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