Maybe I'm missing something, but why can't you guys just use a Dakota Digital SGI-8? That's what I used with my m60 swap. Tell it how many cylinders your engine has, how many cylinders your tach is expecting, and you're done.
'88 325is M30 street car-->S54 -->S50 -->M54 Enduro Race car
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I haven't looked at a BMW coding plug yet, but I've recalibrated GM tachs. Those are just an RC oscillator (change R, C or both to change calibration) and a crystal oscillator as a reference. BMW being BMW, they may have used a timer chip to produce an extra clean calibration signal instead of the raw output of the RC oscillator.
So does the coding plug have an IC, a resistor and a capacitor in it?
Here's an outfit that claims to have a few in stock:
However, the link to the .PDF on that page goes to some other chip's datasheet.
There's a surprising amount of static on the google for that part number.
I've searched for hours on google. Those links are basically chinese spammer fronts.. :(
The m20 tach works as-is but as Will says the end of the range is too low. An S54 revs to 8,000 stock and can safely do 8200-8300.Comment
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I didn't know BMW tachs were digital that long ago. GM was DEFINITELY still analog in the '80's.Comment
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Oops, sorry, yeah I meant e30 trans crossmember. And yes, from what I've read the s54 starter will work with the e36 flywheel.
Picking up my engine this afternoon. My shipment took a while because of the weather up north the last couple weeks I guess. Time to send off my ecu and gather the last few parts I need to finish the swap. I still haven't painted my engine bay unfortunately, need to figure that out quickly.
Oh and I also bought some wheels I'm quite excited about, not going to run the M-systems on the e30 anymore. I bought a set of concave BBS RC302's- '88 m54 coupe
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