Well, most of my best rally friends are getting close to kicking off pretty extensive season championship campaigns in the near future with Sno-Drift and some other early season rallies, and here I am with really nothing of consequence planned until mid-summer other than local rallycross. I'm feeling a bit of a lack of motivation for rally recently, honestly, as most of the teams I've enjoyed running against (and fairly close to) for the last few years have all really gone all-in, while my finances aren't going to let that happen any time soon (especially with the absolute annihilation I'm taking in the stock market right now......). So I'm kind of hoping to build this car to let me participate more on a non-competition aspect doing course car duties and other stuff like that in between the fairly infrequent rallies (probably 2 in 2022, plus a couple sprints and rallycross), which should get me motivated again.
Now, with that bit of mid-winter doldrums whining out of the way, the E36 M3-show that this car is actually DOES motivate me, because I'm determined to actually make it excellent somehow and so charging on and finding more mess as I move to the back.
First order of business was to pull the rear bumper. Usually an easy take on e30s....either unbolt the bumper from the piston mounts or unbolt the mounts from the body and just take it off. Yup, not this car. After determining the nuts on the bumper bolts were totally destroyed from rust, decided to take it off from the body side, which meant taking four nuts off from the backside of the lower valance area. They came off easy enough (two of them with a nut remover socket) but even with them off, the pistons would NOT come out of the frame sleeves. They jiggle like they're going to come out but even after a number of heavy whacks with the BFH....nothing. All I can think of is that the "nub" at the back end is totally rusted to the little frame receptacle it kind of "plugs into." So I'll have to see what's up with that somehow. There's nothing to really lever against to try to pry them out, since that's just sheet metal around it, unfortunately.
Instead, figured I'd try to get the nuts off the bumper side. The bumper is aluminum and has captive bolts (held in with square heads). I got the two on the passenger side off without too much problem, but the ones on the passenger side wouldn't budge and instead twisted the bolts themselves out of the bumper aluminum brackets. berkeley.
Not a huge deal....getting a rear bumper is pretty easy since nobody ever wants them from part shells it seems, but still annoying. And I still can't get the pistons out, even hitting it with my mini-sledge....
So the main reason to get the bumper off was to access the rusty areas behind it, but in the end, there's really none except the corner that I already knew about, which should be a pretty easy cut and patch since it's not visible when the bumper is on so it can be ugly (my specialty).
I also pulled out all that fuel expansion/vapor tank crap and the hoses that goe through the wheel well from the tank, which was very dirty and had many spiders behind it...and also pulled the shock (which has a brand-new top hat mount, so that's nice I guess).
I just did this stuff on the rally car, so not much to it, but on this car as noted I plan to re-route all these hoses through the trunk, not out in the wheel well.
However, having all that off let me see the full extent of the rust, and there's quite a bit in that area. Again, not a huge deal since access is easy and I can just cut it all out and plate it, but there's certainly plenty to do. The hole on the right is where the hose comes through, which I'll eliminate.
Also found another small hole up on top of the wheel well where the expansion tank braket attaches so I'll ahve to patch and build a new bracket there, which is a bit *less* convenient since I'll have to weld under the trunk overhang or up into the wheel well, but whatever.
Oh and one other hidden rust hole behind the bumper side spats.....
So.....there we are
On the upside, got a package today from our friends at Condor Speed Shop, who have supported our rally effort from the start. Inside are some of their new "VIP" engine and transmission mounts for the M42, which are about 30% stiffer than stock (and pink). On the old M42 in the rally car I used both hard urethan and Condor's solid UHMW mounts, but the M42 is a pretty buzzy engine and while that was fine for the rally car it's not what I want for a non-race car. So, hopefully these will be just right.
(side note: since I'm recording budget here, I'll mark these down as full-price items even though I did not pay full price for them)
They also sent a couple delrin bushings for the throttle pedal (to keep it nice and tight), which I won't count in the budget since I could have just used the OEM bushings that were still there either way
Also got a sticker for the tow rig's "destination window" (where I put stickers of places I've taken it). Of course, this is not a real place, but it amuses me....
The ROUS on this sticker does remind me that the car still stinks of mouse nest from under the gas tank cover. I suspect there must still be some mouse nest remnant/debris up above the tank someplace since I've cleaned up everything that's above the sheet metal over it. So this weekend if I'm feeling particularly motivated I may pull the entire rear suspension, subframe, diff, etc and drain the tank and drop it. We'll see, it's supposed to be cold and wintry all weekend.
Current budget to date: $1700, give or take a few bucks.