Re: E36 v2
What's the lump? 325? Tubby??
M52B28, same as whats in there now. Although, a steel lined block, not Nikasil. Unfortunately the amount of hassle the turbo conversions are (especially on RHD) it just does not interest me. If the exhaust manifold was on the other side it would make sense, but not with how it is. It would be easier to drop in a 6pot Jap engine with the turbo on the right side! More below..
So as mentioned previously in the thread, the engine likes to breathe oil quite a bit, and the compression is slightly down. If oil consumption wasn't increasing I would probably leave it and not bother, but it is slowly getting worse. The block in there at the moment has Nikasil bores (Aluminium cylinder coating) which were a known issue with these cars when they were released. The high sulphur content in fuel back then wore the bores out even quicker, and many were replaced under BMW warranty. The block was replaced with one which had steel liners.
I got hold of a low mileage steel lined M52B28, approx 70k miles, without any ancillaries. I could have just put it in 'as is', but decided for the cost of parts I may as well rebuild it so its the best a stock motor can be. It came with a few other useful bits, another set of coils, a metal thermostat housing, spare crank sensor, etc etc.
Removed the sump, oil pump and baffle so I could sit the block flat on some blocks of wood. Then removed the rocker cover..
In rather good condition with minimal wear..
Put the engine to TDC and locked the cams. Removed the Vanos unit (which was in good order with minimal play, not like the one I previously rebuilt)..
Then removed the upper chain and tensioner, de-tensioned the main chain and removed the pulleys. Removed the cams, carriers and tappets..
Finished by removing the 14 headbolts in order and lifting the head off the block.. for a simple task there are many parts compared to an F4R!
The head gasket looks to be in good condition, as do the bores with honing still visible..
Next job is to remove the valves from the head, then strip the bottom end down so both can go to the machine shop. More soon!