At this point I figure, if I'm in for a penny, I'm in for a pound, so I set my sights on making some serious horsepower from this 2JZ swap. To do that, I purchased:
- a Link PnP ECU
- 86.5mm Wiseco pistons
- Manley rods
- ARP head and main studs
- GSC S1 cams
- BC valve springs/retainers/seats
- a FluiDamper crank pulley
- Radium fuel rail/FPR/pulse dampener
- Walbro 525 fuel pump
- and a bunch more bits that I'm probably forgetting
At this point, I'm into the motor for quite a bit more than I paid for the entire car , but cest la vie, right?
While the motor was away at the machine shop, I started looking the car over for issues, and it wasn't long until I found one; the P/S rack was leaking pretty badly. It would leave a red puddle wherever it was parked, so some seal was probably going bad on that rack.
Here's one of the "funnest" things about owning a car that was only ever sold inside Japan originally; OEM parts don't exist outside Japan for it. In this case, for a ~30 year old car, the parts to rebuild this rack straight up don't exist anymore at all; the rebuild kit was discontinued by Toyota long ago. I ended up ordering a used rack out of an Altezza from South Africa, of all places. The rack looked fine, the lengths looked close enough, and the mounting positions were identical. I slapped the "new" P/S rack on, and very quickly realized the folly of my ways.
For starters, the new rack is physically wider than the old rack by a couple of inches. The inner tie rods are also longer by an inch or two, each. So I pretty quickly realized that the outer tie rods were bottoming out on the inner tie rods, whilst I still had toe out on both wheels... E36 M3. Any normal person would've looked for different sized tie rods (or even considered swapping the ones from the old rack onto the "new" rack), but I'm not a smart man. I went searching the ole Google and decided that buying +25mm lower control arms was the solution to my problems.
Those new LCAs did resolve that problem, eventually, but getting the old LCAs off was an absolute nightmare. The driver's side came off without too much fuss, but the passenger sides's camber bolt was totally frozen to the metal collar inside the LCA's bushing. I ended up spending three straight hours, lying on my back, grinding and cutting at that bolt before I finally made it through one side. The funny part about all this is that the LCA didn't move until I spent another two hours cutting the other side of that bolt off.
If you've never had to cut an LCA off before... Trust me, you don't want to.