I've come to the conclusion that this build is cursed; I simply cannot get it to work. My failing is almost certainly due to not doing enough research before getting started! It has however been an interesting learning experience, and I'm now much more confident at spannering on my car. I am however this close
to just putting all the parts on Facebook marketplace and licking my wounds. If somehow, somebody can suggest how to make this work, I would certainly appreciate it!
Since I bought my yellow Z4, I've been wanting to update the aesthetic of the black MV2s with red calipers. The combo just doesn't work for me.

I loosely had the idea of "grey wheels and blue calipers" in my mind as the aesthetic to aim for. Step 1 was wheels; I put 400M F30 alloys on the car, retaining the stock wheel widths (and therefore my current tyres) and giving a more aggressive stance at the front. I was very pleased; they looked amazing;

With the idea that I would occasionally like to take this car on track, I wondered if I could upgrade to a beefier brake setup. I came across the notion of the 4 piston Brembo calipers from the F3x platform, combined with 340mm VW transporter discs (with enlarged centre bore), 1.5mm washers to shim the caliper outboard to centralise with respect to the disc, new braided HEL hoses. This is a modification that seemed to be tried and tested on the E46 platform, so I had the notion that it could also be made to work on the Z4.
I love the appearance of the brembo caliper and the blue they come in looks fantastic, so I bought a load of parts/tools and set to work. Starting with the driver's side, I bolted everything on and bled the new caliper. It looked great;

I popped the wheel back on....and it didn't turn. The spokes were fouling my freshly repainted caliper;

Having bashed away at the task for most of a day, I did not have the brainpower remaining to muddle through exactly where the root cause lay. So I spent a depressing evening returning everything to stock.
I had the notion that the magnitude of the issue was quite small, so I bought some 3mm spacers and tried again to mount the components (this time, tying the stock caliper to the strut and saving myself the pain of bleeding the system). Once again, the wheel didn't turn. I stacked 2 spacers taking me to 6mm, and yet again it wouldn't spin. Clearly the magnitude of the issue was actually quite large, but I was never getting to the stage of properly seating the wheel against the brake disc.
I decided that the dished nature of this new wheel was causing the problem (ET34 front offset). The sweep of the spoke from the centre bore to the outside is what was fouling against the caliper. What I needed was a slab faced wheel with more positive offset and less spoke angle, and to then use a larger, hub-centric spacer to clear the caliper. See below my finest Powerpoint engineering to illustrate my scheme;

Bye bye 400Ms, I will miss you. A good candidate would have been the MV2s that came off (front offset of ET47), but I'd already flogged them on Facebook Marketplace. Onwards and upwards! I found some Style 108s that came up for sale, and had my tyres moved across ready for my next attempt.

I decided on 15mm hub centric spacers for a few reasons;

At this stage I'm completely bamboozled; someone on a Pistonheads forum put this exact brake setup on their Z4 with Style 108s;
I stacked every spacer I had on to the hub, just to see how far I need to go. With the 15mm hub centric spacer, x2 3mm shims, and also removing the penny washers that space out the caliper, the wheel finally turned. At this moment, I'm spaced out by 21mm, the caliper is no longer centalised to the disc, and frankly the stance is a little too aggressive. The wheel is protruding beyond the fender;

As compared to stock

Though the wheel now turns, the clearance is about a hair's breadth. I shoved a piece of paper into the gap between the wheel + caliper, turned the wheel, and tore the paper. My options going forward are;
Since I bought my yellow Z4, I've been wanting to update the aesthetic of the black MV2s with red calipers. The combo just doesn't work for me.

I loosely had the idea of "grey wheels and blue calipers" in my mind as the aesthetic to aim for. Step 1 was wheels; I put 400M F30 alloys on the car, retaining the stock wheel widths (and therefore my current tyres) and giving a more aggressive stance at the front. I was very pleased; they looked amazing;

With the idea that I would occasionally like to take this car on track, I wondered if I could upgrade to a beefier brake setup. I came across the notion of the 4 piston Brembo calipers from the F3x platform, combined with 340mm VW transporter discs (with enlarged centre bore), 1.5mm washers to shim the caliper outboard to centralise with respect to the disc, new braided HEL hoses. This is a modification that seemed to be tried and tested on the E46 platform, so I had the notion that it could also be made to work on the Z4.
I love the appearance of the brembo caliper and the blue they come in looks fantastic, so I bought a load of parts/tools and set to work. Starting with the driver's side, I bolted everything on and bled the new caliper. It looked great;

I popped the wheel back on....and it didn't turn. The spokes were fouling my freshly repainted caliper;

Having bashed away at the task for most of a day, I did not have the brainpower remaining to muddle through exactly where the root cause lay. So I spent a depressing evening returning everything to stock.
I had the notion that the magnitude of the issue was quite small, so I bought some 3mm spacers and tried again to mount the components (this time, tying the stock caliper to the strut and saving myself the pain of bleeding the system). Once again, the wheel didn't turn. I stacked 2 spacers taking me to 6mm, and yet again it wouldn't spin. Clearly the magnitude of the issue was actually quite large, but I was never getting to the stage of properly seating the wheel against the brake disc.
I decided that the dished nature of this new wheel was causing the problem (ET34 front offset). The sweep of the spoke from the centre bore to the outside is what was fouling against the caliper. What I needed was a slab faced wheel with more positive offset and less spoke angle, and to then use a larger, hub-centric spacer to clear the caliper. See below my finest Powerpoint engineering to illustrate my scheme;

Bye bye 400Ms, I will miss you. A good candidate would have been the MV2s that came off (front offset of ET47), but I'd already flogged them on Facebook Marketplace. Onwards and upwards! I found some Style 108s that came up for sale, and had my tyres moved across ready for my next attempt.

I decided on 15mm hub centric spacers for a few reasons;
- There is a 13mm offset difference at the front between the 400M (ET34) and Style 108 (ET47) wheels.
- Occasionally, the front tyres would rub against the inner arch on max compression when I had the 400Ms.
- I wanted to space out the Style 108 to put me in no worse a situation than the 400M.
- I could either go down to a 12mm spacer, or go up to a 15mm spacer.
- To give myself the best possible chance, I purchased a pair of 15mm MTEC hub centre spacers.

At this stage I'm completely bamboozled; someone on a Pistonheads forum put this exact brake setup on their Z4 with Style 108s;
I stacked every spacer I had on to the hub, just to see how far I need to go. With the 15mm hub centric spacer, x2 3mm shims, and also removing the penny washers that space out the caliper, the wheel finally turned. At this moment, I'm spaced out by 21mm, the caliper is no longer centalised to the disc, and frankly the stance is a little too aggressive. The wheel is protruding beyond the fender;

As compared to stock

Though the wheel now turns, the clearance is about a hair's breadth. I shoved a piece of paper into the gap between the wheel + caliper, turned the wheel, and tore the paper. My options going forward are;
- More aggressive spacing? I need at least 21mm, so the only option without going custom is 25mm. I definitely should not go to 25mm.
- Talk to the person who wrote the Pistonheads forum post; clearly there's something different about our setups that allows theirs to fit.
- Try another set of wheels.
- Give up and sell the parts; this option is sounding quite attractive.





