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09-12-2013, 11:36 PM | #21 |
S5 - Full Throttle
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Haywards Heath
Posts: 266
Casino cash: $7387 |
'You are right that there appears to be less acknowledgement of the problem in other countries compared to the UK'
Probably because our roads are so crap! I've heard a few people mention recently that they think its the bushes that are causing the cracks. That could be true of the crack at the front right rear subframe bush, but what about the cracked seam in the lower inner arch? Or the floor pan at the front of the spare wheel well area? I dont think so personally. I've used both the Turner motorsport repair kit, & the Reddish Motorsport kit. Reddish one a lot better. There is also the option of cutting open the chassis inside the car, just behind the rear seats. The spot welds are then visible which split, so these are welded. Unfortunately you do end up with a couple of welded plates in the boot, only visible if you lift the carpet. Sorry Alex, been very busy today and not had an M3 in. I may have some endoscope shots saved at work, I'll see if I can find them tomorrow. |
10-12-2013, 06:13 AM | #22 |
S5 - Full Throttle
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 487
Casino cash: $25206 |
Hi James,
No problem, thank you again for your help! I'm not really in a hurry, I was just wondering what I could do as a preventive work as this spoils the pleasure of ownership a bit. So before I make an irreparable mistake, like selling the CSL during the winter, I was wondering what I could do. Kind regards, Alex
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///Alex |
10-12-2013, 12:50 PM | #23 |
S5, Sport Off, DSC M-track
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 740
Casino cash: $14401 |
Hi,
Quote- '''You are right that there appears to be less acknowledgement of the problem in other countries compared to the UK' Perculiar statement given that it was a Multipile Class Action by owners in the States that kicked this all off. The problem is a piss poor design made worse by the fact that even the BMW remeadies are aimed at recitfying the symptoms not the cause. I would not be at all surprised to see some of the BMW ''fixes'' starting to unravel in a few more years, maybe sooner. The 10 year window has fuck all to do with fixing it, its BMW's way of saying, your car, your fucking problem, were now all done on that. Who ever thought that mounting a load bearing torque absorbing rear subframe, itself subjected to high loads and lateral forces, on four mount points all on the same plane without any chassis dowels into the securing bushes was a clever design, should never be allowed to design anything again, but to compound the issue by elongating one of the bush holes to facilatate subframe fixing, instead of moving complant bushes, to facilitate bolt fixing and assist with absorbing load, they should be shot. Christ even Merc 190's have chassis dowels fitting into the rear subframe bush to prevent 'sawing' stresses ripping at the mount points and surrounding sheet etc. All the laod and movement is absorbed by the bush, the bush wear out and are replaced, BUT the mounting points never move !!! They were designed in 1983 and BMW has just started to emulate that design in the E90 series etc. As for ripping out distorted boot floors and re-welding in new ones, well ye olde Roost monster will be having a field day, even more so with anything synthetic filling the boot floor skin voids, as any fucking retard knows that when a cold surface, the boot floor skin meets a warm surface, the expoxy filler or whatever, then hey presto, its called condensation and guess what its water, and water on internally welded metal makes for a loverly feeding ground for the Roost monster. And they reckon I am on drugs, fuck me, well at least mine in part are working some. The fact remains the E46 Rear subframe fixing design is kinder garten design at its very worst, its nothing to do with the boot floor not being strong enough, or to many launches in this gear or that gear, its the very basic fact that any rear subframe should have securing dowels as part of the chassis that fit into the bushes on the subframe, or the back rear Bushes should have been on a different plane to the front ones in the very least, to counter any subframe movement which ideally should be absorbed by the bush not by the the 4 H/T bolts ripping at the sheet metal ala the BMW design, made worse by the elongated hole. But hey as the AD says ''Joy''. Regards, The Gorilla. |
10-12-2013, 12:59 PM | #24 |
S6, Sport On, Traction Off
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Norwich
Posts: 1,585
Casino cash: $17591 |
Danny,
Do you know if the replacement floor sections have been redesigned with the dowels, or are they the exact same? Looking at the photos of the new section that Mark posted up, I am unsure of the differences?
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Mike R Sarcasm is just a free service I provide. Nordschleife, there's only two barriers to worry about - the ones on the left and the ones on the right . CSL number 044 |
10-12-2013, 01:25 PM | #25 | |
Driving it like I nicked it
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Manchester
Posts: 2,340
Casino cash: $19143 |
Quote:
This should have been rectified before continuing production as it was known to exist before 2003. Yet production remained unchanged, except for the CSL where if anything the likelihood of the defect occurring was enhanced. The term 'Professional Negligence' springs to mind!
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“With the CSL, BMW have achieved The Ultimate Driving Machine” SG CSL '051' |
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10-12-2013, 02:09 PM | #26 |
S6, Sport On, Traction Off
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Aberdeenshire
Posts: 1,947
Casino cash: $25387 |
So now that mine is cracked and sitting in my garage while I decide the best route for repair what's the thoughts?
I'm totally in agreement that the new floor fix and resin injection will come back in years to bite in one way or another. Would there Be a way to tie these mounts into some sort of rear strut brace to spread the load a little? Concern would be loosing all the boot space in place of steel tubes as for me part of the CSL's appeal is that it has a usuable boot (in the dry obviously) From the rear struts forward would be ok though. Then there is the repair plates. Again its into welding and heat, condensation, internal corrosion etc etc and at the end of the day will this actually stop it happening again or will it just rip out a bigger chunk of metal? I think the load / movement needs to be absorbed and spread through the car rather than just the boot floor. Just a case of how? I'm in a position now to try and only want to be doing this once. Discussions and opinions please? |
10-12-2013, 02:15 PM | #27 | |
S6, Sport On, Traction Off
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Norwich
Posts: 1,585
Casino cash: $17591 |
Quote:
I saw some pictures of the result of the strengthening, where it just did as you said and ripped even more of the floor apart, but I can't remember where I saw them. It was shocking how bad it was though !
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Mike R Sarcasm is just a free service I provide. Nordschleife, there's only two barriers to worry about - the ones on the left and the ones on the right . CSL number 044 |
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10-12-2013, 02:17 PM | #28 | |
S5 - Full Throttle
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Munich
Posts: 280
Casino cash: $5259 |
Given that we are where we are, i.e., love theses cars but the feckers keep cracking, and that BMW offer a "fix" that we either; can get but are sceptical of, don't want, or, as in the Swiss guys situation, can't get, what does someone like Alx do?
Is a reinforcement plate such as the Reddish kit a bearable (no pun intended) comprimise? I'd have thought yes, but only with a structural foam intection to distrubute the load more softly through the plates into the body. Structural foam in itself is a good idea, the sandwich structure formed offers excelent properties, but only an option if it lasts and does not promote corrosion. When used in OEM design from the onset, the car body gets properly dipped in for corrosion protection, something we don't have the benifit of. Quote:
Those who have had the BMW goodwill fix do have a life time guarentee, but I think we'd rather not ever have to use it. Last edited by JBird; 10-12-2013 at 02:20 PM. |
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10-12-2013, 02:35 PM | #29 |
S5 - Full Throttle
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 487
Casino cash: $25206 |
Hi,
I finally had aome information from my local BMW garage. Thet say that they can do the foam injection as a prevention, but they can't garantee that the cracks will not appear. The thing is I don't really trust them...
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///Alex |
10-12-2013, 02:46 PM | #30 |
S5 - Full Throttle
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Munich
Posts: 280
Casino cash: $5259 |
In that case alex, i'd also not trust their insp where they sait it wasn't cracked. If your going to get it foam filled, get a second opinion first. Foam filling a cracked floor then trying to fix / patch cracks afterwards would be a disaster. Best, check yourself. I was told mine was fine, then Gareth found a crack in 10 sec. Need to knowcwhere to look.
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