Oh hawt damn, how crusty is this jam?
My Hoopte30 Project Attempt #6 - the painless way to earn cash back every day
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What front valance is that? Alpina?
'87 BMW E30 325is Turbo
'99 BMW E36 M3 - - - '98 BMW E36 328iComment
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bahaha I wish- it's in a fancy town towards Indy so it's out of the hoopty price range
It even runs! Hopefully a savable level of crust.
Honestly not sure- I sent it to my buddy who is a body kit savant and he couldn't tell from the photo. It looks pretty rad in person, whatever it is.
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I thought y'all would appreciate a screen grab of where all the cars sat when I first rolled up to this place. I was only ever supposed to absorb the three E30s and the E28 down in the field, but they ended up needing to sell the farm, so the opportunity grew over the course of a few years. Pretty crazy this was just 20 minutes south of me
Untitled by Bobbie Morrone, on Flickr
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Texas holdem is still coming along! I swapped in a new updated genuine AUX fan, bypassed the low speed relay, and swapped over to r134 orings "while I was in there".
I also washed the car for the first time and paid way too much for a front toe adjustment so I could jump down to Louisville to see the legendary e30austin who was randomly in town.
We got pizza with moatilliatta and 02faq pal #dasfrogger. WE SHALL KEEP THE SPIRIT OF THE FORUM ALIVE
Kinda shocked texas holdem is where it is today. A mechanically restored car drives.... quite well. Got 24mpg too grippin' and rippin' on my way down with an s4.10
Sold my last good AC compressor, some coilovers and an s3.73 on my way down so it wasn't all a loss
Untitled by Bobbie Morrone, on Flickr
Untitled by Bobbie Morrone, on Flickr
Untitled by Bobbie Morrone, on Flickr
Untitled by Bobbie Morrone, on Flickr
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E30 BROTHERS 4 Life.Comment
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hahahaha
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I have unturned the A/C stone on Texas Holdem... I told myself I wasn't going to do it, but that '91 I just parted was retrofitted already and I had some good parts on the shelf so here we go lol.
I'm using the stock condenser with the updated BMW aux fan with the low speed resistor bypassed.
I installed the r134 drier, single pressure switch, and wired the low pressure switch closed, as the new single pressure switch provides both high and low pressure safeties. I jumped the updated pressure switch wiring and hit snowflake to make sure I had 12v at the clutch wire (compressor grounds to the engine) and all was well.
The compressor I pulled off of the '91 is the later seiki unit. The wiring was cut to the compressor but the system had fresh oil in it, so I am hoping for the best. Worst case scenario, I scored a rebuilt seiki off of rockauto a while back I have been saving for something like this that I can install if this one is no good. It spins freely, builds pressure spinning by hand, and clutch engages/disengages smoothly.
The seiki lines are different than the bosch lines on the car (compressor to cabin and compressor to condenser), so I have them ready to go.
Under the dash I installed the evaporator from the '91 as well as a new r134 expansion valve I had on the shelf.
I wrote a note to the next guy, lol, hoping no one sees it.
Green orings all the way around. I'm going to pull vacuum on the system tomorrow and hope for the best!
I also installed cruise back onto the car tonight now that it's no longer a parts car. The cluster I refreshed for the car had a main board issue, so I have a tested main board going in that cluster so I finally get blinkers on the dash.
Untitled by Bobbie Morrone, on Flickr
Untitled by Bobbie Morrone, on Flickr
Untitled by Bobbie Morrone, on Flickr
Untitled by Bobbie Morrone, on Flickr
Untitled by Bobbie Morrone, on Flickr
Cruise back in bizz
Untitled by Bobbie Morrone, on Flickr
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That foam corner removal is also the secret to being able to get to the upper right evaporator cover bolt without a swivel. Definitely don't recommend it on a cream puff car, but once it's done and you have working A/C, it is quickly forgotten.Comment
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