Hey y'all,
I bought this 2000 BMW 540it (aka wagon) a little over a year ago. It's been my daily driver for most of that time and I figured I'd show what I've done to it here. This is what the car looks like at this point:
And now the story of how it got here. I like to write and I like to take pictures so this is gonna be pretty lengthy. Have a seat and enjoy the ride!
It all started in June 2016, when I was browsing Craigslist one night, as I am known to do. All good decisions come from that, right? I was looking for a new daily driver to replace my 2000 M5. While the M5's 400hp and 6-speed manual made it an excellent fun car, the manual transmission and 13mpg made it a pretty mediocre daily driver, especially since my commute was an hour of pure stop and go each way.
I then spotted this bright red BMW wagon, listed for $5800 with 174,000 miles. It looked great in the pictures and the owner said it was in good shape. This is what it looked like in the ad:
Not the greatest pictures (the seller loved angles), but it looked pretty good to me.
The car was located in Los Angeles, and I live in Phoenix. It was a Tuesday night when I saw the ad. So on Wednesday I bought a plane ticket to LA (back when Spirit used to fly Phoenix to LA for $35) and flew out in the evening. I stayed at a friend's place overnight, had a great breakfast of the House of Pies (awesome diner near Hollywood), and set out to see the car. I met up with the seller in Long Beach, and that's when I first saw the car.
It was absolutely stunning in person, like a red jewel. Granted, it wasn't perfect, but the engine sounded great and the interior was in pretty good shape. I took it on a test drive and everything seemed to be in order, aside from three issues. The first issue was that the AC ran at full blast with no other settings. The second issue was that the car kept almost dying at idle. The third issue was the transmission, which shifted pretty roughly from time to time. On the plus side, there were some service records, and the engine already had the timing chain guide problem taken care of by a previous owner (though I wasn't worried about that since I've done 10 chain guide rebuilds at this point). A lesser issue was that the ride was a little rough, but I attributed that to the terrible roads in LA (more on that later).
With the pros and cons in mind, I made the seller an offer, and we eventually settled on a price closer to $5000. Still a bit much considering the mileage and flaws, but when you're looking for a super specific color combination you don't get to be too picky. This car had most of what I wanted: a V8, bright red paint, premium sound system, sport package, and attractive M-Parallel wheels with good rubber.
Once the papers were signed and the cash was handed over, I had myself a 17 year old German V8 wagon in the middle of LA. Phoenix was about 350 miles away, and I had never really driven this car before. So I threw all caution to the wind and hit the road, figuring that if I broke down closer to home it would be a cheaper tow. In retrospect I probably should have checked the oil levels and tire pressure, but I was pretty confident in the car.
The ride was pretty uneventful, aside from hitting some awful traffic on the way out of LA and nearly freezing to death because of the full-blast AC. I actually wore a jacket to keep myself warm inside the car while driving through the desert, which I found to be quite humorous. I did have the foresight to bring a cassette deck aux adapter and a phone charger to keep some tunes going while I was driving, so that made the ride a lot more enjoyable. I stopped at an In N Out in the middle of nowhere and took a picture of the car. I was head over heels in love with this car.
Upon entering Arizona I took a picture during the last part of the sunset:
I made it home around 10pm that night, and I was ecstatic. I had zero issues and got around 20-21mpg the whole way. I started working on fixing stuff in the car pretty much the next day, which I'll cover in the next post.