Well my thoughts so far.
Back end squeaks alot on certain roads etc, but generally I can live with it. I'll try fix it.
Tracking needs fixing, but trying to ignore that for now.
But generally, the car now feels RFT 'stiff' and sharp through the steering, but without the lateral jumps. So what non-rft take away in sharp feeling responses, the poly front bushes seem to bring back. I'll assume my OEM bushes were still in ok order but there is a good chance new OEM front bushes may have improved things.
There is some more NVH but no squeaks. The extra 'noise' in the steering and front end feel is accompanied by valuable feedback too. Push on and let the forces build and there is certainly more good info coming through!
You really notice the increased rigidity in the front when stopping. The lower wishbone can't rotate much at all about the wheels rotational axis, so when you finally stop after braking it is sharp and decisive. No 'softness' to the stop at all. It also means the response on braking is much faster and more instant, no loading up of the bush at all as the wishbone dives. Again, new OEM's may have brought this trait back a bit, but no doubt the poly bush has added another level of sharpness!
100% recommend. Cheap to buy, cheap to fit, no funny noises, and only positives if you at all into having the Z4 as a driving car.
Back end side to side jiggle on rough roads has been massively reduced too. Again, maybe new OEM bushes may have impacted this somewhat, but I think the new stiffness is evident in improved wheel control. Much better for car composure. My concern that rear camber was excessive still stands, but now it's controlled better by that more rigid bush, along it seems with better toe control, the whole car feels more planted.
I'm not sure how much new OEM's maybe have helped here, so I'm less inclined to recommend these. I wish I'd upgraded fronts, then back ones later. They are cheap, but costly to fit, and noisy it seems.
A few months ago I went for a hoon with some other people and I struggled a great deal on the bumpier roads. The car was just lagging and I wasn't comfortable. On similar bumpy roads now the suspension just seems to get what it needs to do done much faster, and you get the response in the chassis and get the confidence. It feels like a negative feedback loop of lag has been removed to the point you can work with the car.
It was interesting because a fellow on the day has a 2.5i Z4 (he was in a Ferrari that day though), and he said his Z4 drives wonderfully.
I put this down to the M-sport suspension. Evo magazine mentioned similar on their long term test car. The 2.5i was a better more fluent drive, and the 3.0i was ruined with the stiffer suspension.
Well, I'd say with the newer bushings and non-RFT tyres, the 3.0i M-sport suspension *starts* to make sense. The first time in a long time I hit a bumpy corner in 3rd and floored it and went with the flow of the bumps all the way through and it felt fine. I didn't worry I didn't know what the car was going to do, despite having gone through that corner many times over the time I've owned the car and kept backed off!
You do start to wonder if BMW just got it a bit wrong.
Now I just need to get the alignment checked/adjusted (might pick some of my own settings here), and then go for a decent drive out again to see how I feel with it. Oh, and try remove that bloody squeaky crunchy sound from the new back bushes
Cheers if you read this far!
Dave