A5 VRX said:
Alright Harry, the old car eh! I bought it off Pauly and the car was brilliant...couple things to sort but there always is on a used car...I’d be bored otherwise. The smoothness and noise of that engine was one of the high points.
I see the stance and wheel/wheel size always have people talking but it looks best sat low and wide with some slightly stretched rubber on 19’s but that’s how I like them to look...It’s all personal preference
To be honest I would of bought it back if I had known it was for sale even though the reason I sold it was due to having a little one, never did let me down
Anyway I pick my Mk5 R32 up tonight so will crack on with that, getting some 19’s and coilovers is a must
Will keep following this thread for sure

The engine is still brilliant! I'll be honest the CSL's really did grow on me especially after I wound the coilovers up just a bit - I think it was showing a bit more arch gap that got me - but I'd already bought and had the 216's refurbished so figured I might as well fit them! The CSL's are back in the garage now... Hope the R32 is good fun, always admired them - they sound fantastic.
As for this thread title...
So the last minute cancellation of an NC500 trip due to my friends dog having an operation lead to a questionable decision to Polybush some of the car. I ended up going for the SuperPro kit KIT5167K which consists of;
1 x SPF2146K REAR LOWER TRAILING ARM FRONT
1 x SPF2419K REAR SWAYBAR LINK BUSH KIT
1 x SPF2421K BMW R LOWER CONTROL ARM INNER
1 x SPF2422K BMW REAR UPPER CONTROL KIT
1 x SPF2556K FR/ LWR CTRL ARM R BUSH STD
1 x SPF2569-26K BMW FR SWAYBAR MOUNT BUSHING
1 x SPF2570-21.5K BMW REAR SWAYBAR MOUNT BUSHING
However I swapped in the adjustable camber version of the rear upper inner bush and also have some new front droplinks on the way (still).
Well this turned into a complete mission, thankfully my really rather generous friend stuck with it and pretty much carried me. Upon disassembly we discovered the flexi-solid-flexi run on the rear brake lines was a bit corroded on both sides, and the drivers side wheel bearing was shot (which was odd, as I'd not heard it!). So with the entire rear end in its component form, we did what any sensible idiot would do. Shot blast and paint it all! So the trailing arms, mount brackets, lower arms, hubs (rear face only), caliper hangers, brake line mounts and headlight level sensor bracket all got a seeing to. Quite a bit of effort especially with the masking and then tapping out/sanding back afterwards but worth it, I think. Made a huge difference to the appearance of the rear end of the car - I was thinking last week shame the trailing arm looks so rusty!
Really pleased with the result, got to replace a few of the cable clips (32p each, ouch!) yet but it's basically done now.
Quite a lot of work to remove the upper/lower arms, at least on the passenger side.
We struggled splitting the bushes out of the RARB drop links and managed to break both of the originals, 13 years and nearly 100k miles had welded those rubber bushes in the aluminium and so we had to order new ones only to immediately take the oxy torch to them!
Unfortunately the RARB D bushes were supplied the incorrect size, and looking at it part way through re-assembly the adjustable camber bush is possibly the least useful thing I've ever purchased. I have no idea how on earth you'd manage to adjust it without removing the wheel, unbolting the shock and removing the spring... Even then it would be tricky. Should have just bought an adjustable lower arm and been done with it.

Photo of the rear mostly back together with the freshly painted trailing arm and new section of brake line.
I also finally got around to ordering replacement headlight level sensors as my front one was snapped and the rear completely seized to it's bracket, so new ones all round. Sadly it had escaped my notice that probably the reason both had failed is that both of the link arms had seized in their ball joints! Yet to order those, I cannot wait for the expense!
Fitted the 216’s with a nice new set of Eagle Asymmetric 5’s which all balanced very nicely. Yet to see the car in daylight but looking forward to it tomorrow, hopefully. Wound the shocks up a bit more too, certainly noticeable with a slightly less harsh ride.
There was also time found to bolt up all of the freshly painted strut braces - again - waiting for daylight to have a proper look!
This was all finished in a last minute flog last night (finished at 01:51) to get the car to it's alignment today. Bartletts were not ‘happy’ with the results, although it was never going to pull into spec, however comparing it to the alignment it had after the coilovers were originally fitted the rear camber is reduced, and they’ve managed to get it all square. I’ll probably run it for a bit and see what they tyre wear looks like and get a feel for how it handles before doing anything further. First impressions are it's far more eager to change directions and I've a lot more feedback through the wheel, so I'm really pleased for now!
TLDR : Most polybushes fitted, arms and other bits painted, new wheel bearings and brake lines, still no headlight leveling! New wheels and tyres fitted, painted strut braces fitted. Early night required.