Weston Matt said:
Thanks for the reply
I’m looking at doing the work myself, i will have a look at the strongflex. What areas would you advise Powerflex?
Powerflex definately on the front control arm bushings. the strongflex ones have a design flaw.
Maybe the strongflex eccentric ones are good (similar design to powerflex I think). But those are usually only used on the z4m (it is a z4m replacelent)
I think the rest is OK regarding strongflex suspension bushings. (motormounts may be different, they only have a shore80a mount, which is really stiff for a motor mount)
As for stifness, for the front control arms I'd go for the powerflex purple ones.
The rear trailing arm front bushing should be shore90a/95a (so powerflex black or strongflex yellow)
The outer lower rear trailing arm bushing, you can replace that with a balljoint (33326775551). The same balljoint that is fitted on the upper outer point.
That is the same config as the z4m has. Use the lemförder ones (lemförder=OEM)
As for stiffness on the rear axle: I have shore90A.
That's a little stiffer than OEM but not as stiff as... say... fitting coilovers.
I don't know if fitting shore80a in the rear trailing arms is a good idea. Powerflex only has those bushings in shore95a (black), and not in their shore80a (purple) compound. Maybe they know something that makes them decide not to make purple ones.
As for diffbushings and subframe bushings: I have shore80a. With stiffer bushings you risk diff whine, and I decided on shore80a for subframe bushings because that dampens peak forces on the car monocoque. I don't want to risk getting torn subframe beams etc in the monocoque.
I don't have a lot of personal hands on experience with a lot of bushings as they are made now.
I polybushed my car about 9 years ago and quite a few bushings have had a design change (some small, some big). Back then also not everything was available from all brands so I have a mix of powerflex and strongflex. Back then some bushings were only carried by the one brand or the other. I even had to modify a certain bushing on my lathe as fitment on 1 particular bushing was poor (luckily they changed that design).
After 9 years, over 30k miles (hard driven miles with 380bhp) I haven't had a single bushing failure.
I had 1 failure, but that was from another brand, that was first on the market with a specific bushing. They had thought something out that clearly didn't work, at least not with the power of my engine :roll: .
Now that has been replaced by a powerflex one.
Nice thing about PU bushes is that they keep that "new car feeling" as PU doesnt age and get weak like normal rubber bushings do.
Haven’t got any specialist tools - I’ll see if I can hire or buy or get made by a friend
I can only advice this as a very necessary toolset:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/284354587584
for the rest you'll need in some instances to make ends meet with some large sockets and rings where the cups in that set are too bulky.
(the top outer balljoint in the rear trailing arm can be a bit difficult).
Also to get the bushings out of the subframe you might need to heat it up a bit with a burner (not burning them out, just soften them) as extraction cups are difficult to place on the subframe.
When you're doing the complete rear axle it's pretty much necessary to drop the rear axle, so having a lift and a transmission jack is pretty much necessary. (so you have to drop the exhaust too).
Dropping the rear axle ideally is a 2 man job (don't forget to disconnect the handbrake :wink: )
When I did my rear axle, once I dropped the rear axle, all bushings were extracted in about 3 hours with the toolkit above. so less than 15min per bushing.
Of course you can buy the specific BMW tool per bushing, but you'll probably be spending £500 or more on specific extractor tools doing that. (per bushing a specific extractor tool usually costs £30-80, and there are 9 different bushings in the rear axle alone...)
I also did a complete overhaul of the rear axle (beadblasting, painting etc). That takes waaay more time :lol: