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S14b23 Drivetrain overhaul and concours restoration.

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    S14b23 Drivetrain overhaul and concours restoration.

    A couple people asked for it after I mentioned the side project in my build thread.

    I have a complete ~40k more or less original S14b23 pull out from a 1987 M3 that belongs to my friend Shareif. He is carrying out a concours style restoration on his M3 and asked me if I would take on applying my flair for he extreme to the resurrection and restoration of his drivetrain.

    Can do.

    Shareif picked up this car after it had say neglected and derelict in a barn up in Maryland. Time and the client took their toll and the engine was worse for the wear visually. Beyond that the engine was effectively seized, only turning +- 20 degrees from its resting place. Even the spark plugs were heavily seized to the cylinder head and wouldn't break loose.


    A few photos of it in the car before it was delivered to me.





    The first order of business for me was to pull the valve cover and see what lie within. All told not as bad as I was expecting, the oil film on everything was still reasonably present and did its job to protect from corrosion setting in.



    I then tried to remove the plugs to get some lubricant down in the cylinders with no luck. Hmm... I mixed up some ATF/Acetone and heated it up before filling each sparkplug bore with a few ounces of the liquid mix.

    Then I went ahead and pulled the cams, lifter buckets and camtrays off and away revealing the head and valve train.



    By that time the ATF/Acetone mix I'd put on the spark plugs had done its work and I was able to crack them all free, mmm.... nasty.



    I went ahead and dumped a bit more in each now open cylinder and let it do its thing while I proceeded to get the cylinder head off.





    Once it sat for a few hours and got down into the rings the bottom end eventually freed up and started moving full revolutions with minimal effort. I dried the piston tops off and flipped it over.




    Pulled the lower oil pan to see what we see. Lots of thick oil sludge mixed with condensation.





    Went ahead and pulled the oil pump, upper oil pan and exposed the rotating assembly. Everything looked fine so I pulled the rod end caps and kicked the pistons out the top one at a time. Cylinder #4 was our chief offender causing the engine to not want to turn....




    Every one of the rod bearings was smoked.



    $1500 in timing components pictured here fit for the trash. Sucks, these wear so poorly.



    Wiped the big chunks off the pistons and laid them on the bench, then blew the assemblies apart.





    Moving back to the cylinder head each chamber looked OK save for the filth.



    Mmm cylinder #4 had water sitting on those valves for sometime.




    All torn down.




    Time to blow apart the throttle assemblies.




    Box of aluminum castings ready to take to the shop and clean up a bit.



    Most of the loose aluminum castings cleaned, devoid of grease at least, so they can be further refined, bead blasted and then vapor honed.



    Valvetrain removed and laid out.



    Lets clean up these nasty valves.





    Seats on the exhaust valves are a bit pitted, but those will get cut back when the head is gone through by the machinist.

    All clean!





    Since this is a concours style restoration its important to retain the original parts wherever possible, all aluminum castings have production date stampings so this means blowing apart the starter, alternator and power steering pump to restore them.





    Starter motor after some restoration worn, waiting on new brushes and bushings to arrive.



    Shifter was really notchy as presented so I took a look at the transmission, found the detent spring, roller were wasted. How this happened I'm not sure.




    Seized broken bolt in the bellhousing on crankshaft position sensor A... fun to remove.



    Disassembled the differential to prepare the seal covers and hardware to be plated.




    Differential looks great inside, and break away torque measured well inside spec so it'll be left alone for now.

    Hardware stripped with hydroflouric acid and ran for 24 hours in my vibratory tumbler to debur and polish, all prepared to send off for fresh yellow zinc chromate plating.




    Vapor honed alternator case




    Along side its growing pile of friends, the power steering pump housing, oil pump housing, and engine parts.




    Thats all for now. Thank you and check back periodically for updates :-)
    Last edited by Jordan; 11-29-2018, 05:54 PM.


    E30 ABS Pump Refurbishment Service
    https://mtechniqueauto.com/

    #2
    The picture of the box of clean bolts is orgasmic.

    Comment


      #3
      Your work is incredible! I would hate to think what all of this would cost. Time of this quality is expensive.

      Can't wait to see the finished product
      sigpic

      (clicky on piccy to get to thread)

      Comment


        #4
        Wow what a mess.

        [IMG]https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/my350z.com-vbulletin/550x225/80-parkerbsig_5096690e71d912ec1addc4a84e99c374685fc03 8.jpg[/IMG

        Comment


          #5
          This is fantastic!
          1991 318iC
          1989 325i Field Rescue

          Comment


            #6
            You don't disappoint. Cant wait to see more of this soon!
            Steve • Toronto
            1991 318is • Brillantrot
            Build Thread

            Comment


              #7
              The freshly cleaned parts are pure sex. Sub'd!

              Comment


                #8
                Looking forward to watching the rest of this. I have the same task ahead of me.
                2006 GMC Sierra 2500HD 4WD LBZ/Allison
                2002 BMW M3 Alpinweiß/Black
                1999 323i GTS2 Alpinweiß
                1995 M3 Dakargelb/Black
                - S50B32/S6S420G/3.91
                1990 325is Brilliantrot/Tan
                1989 M3 Alpinweiß/Black

                Hers: 1996 Porsche 911 Turbo Black/Black
                Hers: 1988 325iX Coupe Diamantschwartz/Black 5spd

                sigpic

                Comment


                  #9
                  This is exactly what my Wednesday morning needed. Amazing inspiration as always! I can't wait to see the finished product & end result. Thanks for sharing all these photos and progress with us.
                  1988 325 Lachs Sedan SOLD

                  1989 325i Bronzit Beige 2 Door
                  SOLD

                  2018 Volkswagen Alltrack SE DSG
                  Past:1988 325iS Lachs 5 Speed

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Awesome!

                    I can see the top two pics, but nothing else. Anybody else having that same issue?


                    Edit: I can now see the pics, not sure why I couldn't before.
                    Last edited by TeXJ; 12-01-2018, 08:19 AM.
                    1990 325is
                    m52b28
                    3.73lsd
                    g260 (1987 325is 5spd tranny)

                    Comment


                      #11
                      vapor HOOOOONE

                      is your throttle body linkage (the dogbone piece) sloppy? any solution in mind? I am struggling to find a replacement one for a set of E28 ITBs I'm sitting on. Moosehead used to make a replacement with bearings, but they're out of production.

                      edit: actually, nevermind, looks like they're back now: https://mooseheadengineering.com/#!/...tegory=1401064
                      cars beep boop

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Wow the work going into this is meticulous.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          I do things.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Subscribed.
                            How to remove, install or convert to pop out windows
                            http://www.r3vlimited.com/board/showthread.php?t=297611


                            Could be better, could be worse.

                            Comment


                              #15

                              Comment

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