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gjm

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Everything posted by gjm

  1. Thank heavens! I was toying with the idea of (yet another) financial shuffle...
  2. gjm

    e30 parts clear out

    I think this is for a M40?
  3. If I had the money I'd be all over it. It's the sort of price I'm looking to spend on Miss M's car, but her car is currently two bodyshells and a pile of bits! Great colour, looks to be in good condition, and the wheels really suit it (are they 15s?)
  4. The unmarked cars are getting sneakier too - I saw a blue/grey Holden wagon lit up like a Christmas tree a few days ago, when he'd pulled someone over. That one even had a towbar!
  5. I think this is a beautiful car. Given current prices for manual E30s, it very reasonably priced too.
  6. Sadly, I'd suggest your chances are nil, or worse. It may be worth trying the "car in front was doing 85 and sped up" line, but I doubt it'll wash. I've talked about officer discretion in issuing a ticket, but I get the impression they have been told they will not exercise any. If you're really lucky when you're pulled for 120+, you may get an officer who is prepared to reduce the figure you were stopped for. This will reduce the fine and number of demerits applied.
  7. It'll be an accounting statistical analysis that says the drivers of Remuera tractors (Chelsea tractors - insert location as relevant) feel more important when the name of their vehicle is less comprehensible. Besides, by splitting the designation into two parts, it opens a door for more parts, making the driver feel even more important. Roll on the X5 M50dTT Bavaria cabriolet.
  8. Fuel filters get overlooked all too often.
  9. gjm

    Clarkson Sacked

    Chris Evans is having problems... He had to stop filming during a piece on the Audi R8 V10. He got out of the car, and puked. Note smiley-faced lass with radio!
  10. gjm

    e46 car jack

    I've not had a problem using the car jack, and in fact prefer using it to lift the car into position on many occasions. It's easier than hauling the trolley jack out... And you're right - jacking the car from one end or the other does tend to result in the whole side of the car being lifted. It sounds like the foot of the jack wasn't exactly under the point that the lift pad connects to the car. Regardless, you shouldn't be working under the car supported by the jack. You should be using axle stands or similar.
  11. Sounds like a fuse... Perhaps your PO fitted some somewhere they shouldn't have? Had a very similar thing happen on my Mercedes - dash out, headlights out, and more. One fuse fixed the lot, but it wasn't one in the fuse box. There's another couple of fuses mounted in their own little box on the inner wing.
  12. Other than the logging trucks (there is significant logging in Sweden) everything you say is road user attitude which is, imo, one of the biggest failings in NZ. I don't know what the average 'size' of a person is in NZ, but there are stereotypes which aren't helped by squeezing four of the larger members of NZ society into a Mazda Familia, possibly with luggage in the boot. Now, the car I saw this morning may have been air-bagged and riding low, or it may have been massively overloaded which is why virtually the entire top of the tyres were in the wheel arch and hidden from view. It was wallowing all over the place and the driver was trying to maintain 100km/h or better. I've driven in many countries around the world, but it seems NZ has a significantly higher proportion of road users with a blasé attitude to what they are doing, be that unroadworthy vehicles, overloading, riding motorcycles without protection, using phones while driving, just generally not paying attention, or being unaware of anything going on around them. This approach is the result of long-term negligence on the part of authorities; it doesn't happen overnight, and (at present) nothing appears to be happening to turn this around.
  13. This sounds true. There is a 'formal' MB club, but they're pretty much into concours and fit the pipe and slippers stereotype. There's various groups on Facebook too, but chrome and airbags are fairly predominant there. I've been talking with some folk in Oz about the electrickery that goes on under the MB bonnet. There is a way to make it much, much better, without junking the entire system and starting again. BMW briefly flirted with K-Jet but moved on. Porsche, and others (including MB) stayed with K-Jet for much longer.
  14. Logically, it'll be the visitors who drive most. Chinese visit and holiday here, but generally travel in taxis and buses. Only a small percentage spend any significant time outside of urban centres while not in a significant group. So - who's the most common visitor? West Islanders, perhaps? Or one or another group of Europeans?
  15. The 1.8 and 2.0 engines aren't great... Good for pottering around but the 190 is too heavy a car for them to work. The 2.3-8V is better, and the 16v engines better still. The straight 6 (2.6, 160hp) is a much better and more suitable engine but does carry a weight penalty. It goes well; put a stiff roll bar in the back and it handles nicely too. To get it to sporty BMW handling levels you need to investigate shocks and springs (or buy the Sportline model, c.f. BMW M-Sport suspension) but these were intended to be comfy cars first, and sporty cars second.
  16. If you go the route of new 'box fluid and filter, use a cheaper fluid. If it works, run it 'round the block a couple of times and replace fluid and filter again, using good fluid this time. Fingers crossed it is that simple.
  17. Mercedes did the same thing. For instance, the 200CDi was exactly the same mechanical engine as the 220CDi with a 2148cc displacement, but the 220 got a different ECU. They then muddied the waters further by introducing a 280CDi which actually 2987cc (3 litres, in old money) and a 320CDi which was the same engine as the 280, but with different tuning. I'm sure it makes life easier for those poor fitter monkeys in the display workshops when they have less engines to work on, but I wonder what it does to resale values? Would you pay $000s more for a "320CDi" when the "280CDi" does the same thing after 30 seconds with a programmer?
  18. M20B23 had K- or L-Jetronic (an E30 would be L-Jetronic; the E21 used K-Jet). M20B25 had Motronic.
  19. Engine no: 20833619 2 - M20, M21 or M50 083 - serial number 3 - built in Munich 619 - production day (could it be 019?) Doesn't help with the B25 bit. Does the head have a number stamped on it? A B25 head has a number ending 885.
  20. I was talking to a European specialist yesterday. I quote: "It's a BMW. It's not like it's a real car." I did chuckle. The 190E is a nice car to drive. Different to a BMW definitely, but better or worse? Not in my opinion... Just different.
  21. Swedes start 'practicing' driving at 16, with a full license available from 18. Median salaries are comparable - NZ ~$51000, Sweden ~$53000 (equivalent). Swedish income tax is 29%, but taxation is a combination of local and national taxes, so this is an approximation based on median salary. Even alcohol consumption isn't that different: NZ 10.9l per year, Sweden 9.2l per year. (Pure alcohol, aged 15+. Source: Wikipedia.) Let's face it. We're pretty crap over here.
  22. They were originally aimed at very different markets, but Mercedes put a lot of effort into beating BMW on track. I'd not considered that aspect of this, and I'm in two minds about rising to the challenge! It'd feel like your two children going head-to-head in a competition. If it happens, it's a kind of 'because it's there' thing. Provided I can keep the balance right (and the M117 is actually a little lighter than the M103) it should be a lot of fun to drive.
  23. Swedish drivers are strictly advised to not drive with any alcohol in their bloodstream. You can be imprisoned for up to 6 months for having up to 0.02% alcohol in your blood; over 0.02% and up to 0.10% can see a 3 year sentence. Repeat offenders (who typically, worldwide, make up the majority of drink-drivers) are treated more harshly. Less than 0.25% of drivers breathalysed in Sweden return a positive result. Sweden has a population more than double that of NZ, yet has around the same number of road deaths. In 2012, just one person under the age of 7 died in road traffic accidents. The Swedish toll is dropping. Take into account the weather over there, and this becomes even more remarkable. However, driving standards are immeasurably higher than in NZ, and road construction carries a safety first, convenience second approach. Speed limits in Sweden are determined by a number of (sensible) factors. Main arterial multi-carriageway roads are 110 or 120km/h, and speed limits for other roads are assigned on a case by case basis, not arbitrarily as over here, and can be as low as 30km/h in populated areas. That said, there's not much attention to speed limits on motorways and police turn a blind eye provided you're not being dangerous, so you're unlikely to be stopped for 126 at 3 in the morning, for example. However, exceed a 30km/h limit and you will be stopped and fined. The speed limit and punishment fit the circumstances.
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