ultramega said:My recently acquired 35i has aftermarket suspension, intercooler, chargepipe, downpipes, intake, a Quaife LSD and MHD 2+ maps. All in place when I bought the car, but it means this thread is quite interesting reading for me - I'm only up to page 8 at the mo though!
B21 said:Saved yourself a serious amount of cash there, assuming you wanted/happy with the mods..kerching!
ultramega said:B21 said:Saved yourself a serious amount of cash there, assuming you wanted/happy with the mods..kerching!
Very happy with them! I've knocked down to MHD Stage 1 until I get used to the car. My last few cars have been 4WD, so there's some adjustment and re-learning going on. At the moment it feels like... not so much that it wants to kill me every time I drive it, but it wants to let me know that it could kill me if it wanted to.
Nanu said:Should have given me a shout and we could have met up for a coffee. Was a couple o hundred yards around the corner this morning at my Fav garden centre.
Nanu said:Look forward to it, never driven or seen a yellow peril in the flesh![]()
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ultramega said:That difference in the V10 maps is amazing!
Do you do anything to your car before going for a dyno run? I don't mean to improve performance - more along the lines of safety/prep. I've never done a dyno run before, but can they be stressful on the engine/chassis?
Just need to know where the lunch stops are on which days and will be thereB21 said:Nanu said:Look forward to it, never driven or seen a yellow peril in the flesh![]()
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Well if you make the Northumberland weekend you can strap yourself in and take it for a spin ( maybe more of a spin than you thought)..probably safer than trying to max it out around the industrial estates of Sunderland!![]()
B21 said:Yes folks said that they felt V10 was stronger but some poo poohed it..hence a dyno run.
Actually rolling road dynos are the most benign of the three methods of measuring performance..brake dynos can hold an engine at a particular rpm for hours at a time..the manufacturers use them for reliablity testing amongst other things..'pulls' which are accelerating hard through 2-3 gears on a road are more demanding and can show issues that a rolling road dyno doesn't see and maybe with ram air get better performance than a dyno..repeatablity is the big issue there..traction control, traffic, surfaces etc etc
Obviously you don't want to pay money only to find an issue appearing on the dyno..so fresh plugs and air filter are good ideas.
Depending on where you are going with it then coils if its a 35i and injectors and possibly HPFP
This is where 'pulls' show the car under more strain, the coils, HPFP, injectors tend to break down/collapse more through repeated shifts rather than on a RR dyno where the car is already spinning and its one crisp 'pull' and then coast down.
Obviously this all depends on a comptent operator..if they are data logging they then can see a lot more info and correlate that to give you more structured feedback![]()
Ooh, interesting. I remember reading a thread on the DCT (can't remember where) a while back. Came to the conclusion that servicing it had far more possibility for creating problems than any previous DCT I had owned.B21 said:Replacing the DCT plastic sump with a nice shallow alloy pan, with a bit more capacity that retains the heat shield. Fuchs DCT oil and new Vaico full DCT filter kit..does come with new bolts and drain..as does the alloy pan.
R.E92 said:I changed the Xenons on both my cars last year as I heard that Xenon bulbs decline in brightness as they age. I decided to go with Osram Nightbreakers on the Z4 and Phillips Xtreme Vision on the E92 just to see which was better as both get good reviews.
Both sets of bulbs promise higher light output, the Osram claimed 200% and the Philips 150%. In reality I can't tell the difference between the two sets. I'd say they offered a slight improvement over the stock 10yr old bulbs, maybe 10% more light at most and a slightly crisper colour.
Not what I expected for £250 of bulbs.
ultramega said:Ooh, interesting. I remember reading a thread on the DCT (can't remember where) a while back. Came to the conclusion that servicing it had far more possibility for creating problems than any previous DCT I had owned.B21 said:Replacing the DCT plastic sump with a nice shallow alloy pan, with a bit more capacity that retains the heat shield. Fuchs DCT oil and new Vaico full DCT filter kit..does come with new bolts and drain..as does the alloy pan.
How do you get round the lack of dipstick for filling with the correct amount of oil? I also remember reading that there are two sets of filters in different locations?
Yes, that makes it sound straight forward. It was the fill/run/fill-more part that seemed fraught with danger to me. This is the thread I read:B21 said:It doesn’t look that complicated..they all are variations of drain, new filters, new oil, move the trans through some gear shifts and reach certain temperatures and then ensure excess dribbles out through the relevant hole.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LpiRVOPVNf4
B21 said:R.E92 said:I changed the Xenons on both my cars last year as I heard that Xenon bulbs decline in brightness as they age. I decided to go with Osram Nightbreakers on the Z4 and Phillips Xtreme Vision on the E92 just to see which was better as both get good reviews.
Both sets of bulbs promise higher light output, the Osram claimed 200% and the Philips 150%. In reality I can't tell the difference between the two sets. I'd say they offered a slight improvement over the stock 10yr old bulbs, maybe 10% more light at most and a slightly crisper colour.
Not what I expected for £250 of bulbs.
Thanks for the heads up..I probably wouldn’t have decided to change them had it not been for the fact that it’s going for a headlight re-alignment and I’ve not really had the chance to evaluate the existing performance so since it’s a pain to change then I’d thought I’d let my local MOT man do them..
Not sure whether it’s an age thing but sitting low in the E89 at night the new super bright LED and Xenon discharge lights seem to be particularly dazzling…