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My Hoopte30 Project Attempt #6 - the painless way to earn cash back every day
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Oof, what a pain. Time to pull out the dash and break out the hammer and dolly to make some replacement windshield channel pieces.
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Originally posted by e30austin View Posti had the same issue on my M3 (cam seal folded and leaked out of the distributor housing) after the engine rebuild - also an Elring seal. the replacement seal was a Victor Reinz. installed with Permatex on the outer race, gently tapped into the housing, and has been good ever since. always was able to count on Elring to be worth a shit back in the day. guess not now.
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After I replaced the leaking cam seal on the 4dr pre rust discovery I replaced the windshield with OG Hooptie's unbroken but frosted windshield since I wanted to replace that with new glass.
I then found the 4dr frame rust above, the second cam seal started leaking, the booster failed, and numerous other issues arose, so I am cutting my losses with that project and moving on.
With that project terminated, I shifted gears over to OG hooptie. Installed the MarkD 2.7 chip I bought, car seems to like it.
I got my new windshield and started installing it. Noticed the seal was torn so I removed it, revealing....... some nasty rust.
These cars have been unkind as of late. My long term goal was to reshell OG Hooptie into a nice shell at some point but can't take on that project at this time.
Not sure what I'm going to do yet as there is not enough of a lip to keep the seal from leaking into the cabin, making it hard to patch.
Untitled by bimmertown, on Flickr
Untitled by bimmertown, on Flickr
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i had the same issue on my M3 (cam seal folded and leaked out of the distributor housing) after the engine rebuild - also an Elring seal. the replacement seal was a Victor Reinz. installed with Permatex on the outer race, gently tapped into the housing, and has been good ever since. always was able to count on Elring to be worth a shit back in the day. guess not now.
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Originally posted by varg View PostI wonder if there's a quality issue with these seals. My E30's oil leak is the same thing, pretty bad and it runs down from behind the timing cover, I have replaced the valve cover gasket and rocker seals so that leaves only the cam seal and seal carrier o ring, both were professionally installed when I had the head rebuilt and new cam installed. Could also be the installer's fault though, my M50 stroker smoked like a 2 stroke from new and was honed and assembled by the same person.
Very carefully installed a new seal and oring in the same manner I’ve done the last 25. Checked to make sure the seal wasn’t bulging or sucked in anywhere after install.
Didn’t leak for 10mi and then started the same leak as before.
Both of these seals were bought around the same time and came from Elring HG kits.
Not saying I can’t mess something up but I’ve been doing these more than the average person since 2013 and have never had one fail. Now that I’ve had two of the same failures back to back it has me questioning the qualityLast edited by AWDBOB; 03-14-2025, 05:59 AM.
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I wonder if there's a quality issue with these seals. My E30's oil leak is the same thing, pretty bad and it runs down from behind the timing cover, I have replaced the valve cover gasket and rocker seals so that leaves only the cam seal and seal carrier o ring, both were professionally installed when I had the head rebuilt and new cam installed. Could also be the installer's fault though, my M50 stroker smoked like a 2 stroke from new and was honed and assembled by the same person.
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Originally posted by Reichart12 View PostWhere were you getting the oil coming out for that bad seal? I wonder if that could be some of my leak. I changed that seal last year and it helped but didn't 100% stop the leak.
When cam seals have failed on past E30s they’ve leaked pretty bad and drip down the passenger side of the block which is what this one did, although I’ve never had a seal fail after it was replaced until this time.
Most of the time it’s VC but the pesky cam seal will get ya
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Where were you getting the oil coming out for that bad seal? I wonder if that could be some of my leak. I changed that seal last year and it helped but didn't 100% stop the leak.
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Originally posted by mjweimer View PostBend up some sheet metal and rivet it in place? Could also do a combo of rivets and structural adhesive/panel bond or even zip screws to hold until it cures. I don't know how this thing made it down the road with all the Bluetooth drive-line mounts...but now she it looking fine. King of the Hoopte's rides again.
My buddy was on board to do the welding if I dropped the cradle and made the patch panels. I spent a long time at the shop yesterday checking it over to make a decision and really do think it's fine for now.
This car isn't as clean rust-wise as most of the other cars I've saved in this thread so I think it's a fools errand to start grinding.
Still far from a flinstone mobile, though.
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My cam seal groove theory was incorrect. I installed the seal very carefully and it flat spotted somehow, despite my efforts. I don't know if that's a seal failure or installer error, but I installed this the same way I have the last 27 and it felt the same going in.
Oh well, fixed. Fuel pump sounds happier after the fresh fuel filter. I need to string align and then drive to see what else fails.
Untitled by bimmertown, on Flickr
Untitled by bimmertown, on Flickr
Last edited by AWDBOB; 03-08-2025, 09:09 PM.
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Bend up some sheet metal and rivet it in place? Could also do a combo of rivets and structural adhesive/panel bond or even zip screws to hold until it cures. I don't know how this thing made it down the road with all the Bluetooth drive-line mounts...but now she it looking fine. King of the Hoopte's rides again.
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Originally posted by rjmcdermott81 View PostYikes! It's hard to tell how pervasive that rust is from the one photo, but I would imagine that doing a "good enough" fix wouldn't be terrible for someone with a welder and a shop. The hard work will be stripping the car down to make it easy... (pulling the engine, subframe, etc.).
Of course, I tend to think everything should be saved, so take my thoughts for what they are worth. Good reason to buy a welder?
I risked it all and pulled the subframe bolts and thankfully, they came out with ease and looked great. With the subframe dropped, I cleaned and encapsulated the surface rust that was there and bolted it all back up. I used the eastwood internal frame coating on all of the passages on the frame in an effort to slow it down a bit. I'll add a strut brace and call it good for now.
I think it'll be a while before the terrifying looking spot under the MC becomes problematic.
This car was already a charity mission so opening the can of worms that is dropping the cradle and plating the top section of that frame is out of the question, for now at least.
Untitled by bimmertown, on Flickr
Last edited by AWDBOB; 03-07-2025, 02:46 PM.
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Yikes! It's hard to tell how pervasive that rust is from the one photo, but I would imagine that doing a "good enough" fix wouldn't be terrible for someone with a welder and a shop. The hard work will be stripping the car down to make it easy... (pulling the engine, subframe, etc.).
Of course, I tend to think everything should be saved, so take my thoughts for what they are worth. Good reason to buy a welder?
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Well R3V. For those who have been following the most recent hooptie sedan chronicles…. I have been thrashing to get this car over the finish line, and last night I found something that no one wants to see on their E30, let alone one with this much time and effort invested.
My gut kept saying to check the inner tie rods, and thankfully I did, as the lock plate had failed on the passenger inner and was backing out. Thankfully I caught this before it backed all the way out. Minor issues.
“While I was in there” I started taking apart my new cam seal that is hemorrhaging oil. I always install cam seals in a new spot to avoid the old groove, but apparently I got super lucky and found the groove before this groove. Groovy.
Saw engine mounts had failed as well and threw a fresh set on.
While I was working under the car on the inner tie rods and engine mounts the light hit just right while I was looking up and revealed something rusty looking...... so I investigated and found that a leaky brake master had completely wiped out the top side of the frame rail under the MC.
The underside of the rail is fine-ish, but it is also crusty where the from subframe mounts to the frame on the drivers side, and anywhere else the brake fluid sat over the years.
'tiz the inevitable part of saving cars that probably should just be parts cars.
I am likely going to do nothing about it and pretend I didn't see it, but I definitely can't sell the car to someone in good faith with this rust.
Rolling parts car? Flower garden? Only time will tell.
Untitled by bimmertown, on Flickr
Untitled by bimmertown, on Flickr
Untitled by bimmertown, on Flickr
Untitled by bimmertown, on Flickr
Untitled by bimmertown, on Flickr
Last edited by AWDBOB; 03-07-2025, 09:36 AM.
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Originally posted by e30austin View Postthose trans mounts still had a couple miles left. shame on you for being so wasteful.
I kinda liked it, may do a trans mount delete next
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