






not sure about the door cards and the speakers digging right in my leg on the drive home
Moderator: martauto













do you think im best of trying a 325 inlet on the car wonder why he has fitted the 320?bss325i wrote:It's deffo a sport! I fitted the A/C, the suspension and sorted some other issues on it a couple of years ago. All the a/c pipes were brand new!
It did not have a 320i inlet on it back then! It had a Uni Q piggy back chip bodged in and Adam the then owner took its to sheps at circuit motors to map it.

i will go have a look now cheersBrianmoooore wrote:The most obvious reason for a 320 manifold being fitted is that it's attached to a 320 engine. What is the engine type number (on a flat machined area next to the LH engine mount)?
Might be an idea to check the number of bolts holding the diff. rear cover in place as well.
engine number is 256e2 22954356Brianmoooore wrote:The most obvious reason for a 320 manifold being fitted is that it's attached to a 320 engine. What is the engine type number (on a flat machined area next to the LH engine mount)?
Might be an idea to check the number of bolts holding the diff. rear cover in place as well.

im lost now so its the right engine with the wrong inlet on?Speedtouch wrote:Yes, that's the M20B25 'medium compression' engine - high compression, but not quite as high as that fitted to the pre-facelift 325i. It would originally have been around 9.4:1 CR.



me mate is a top fabricator and does stuff like that day in day out so he just done it the next day only took 2 hours i suppose its easy when you have a ramp and workshopTopblag wrote:If you picked it up yesterday, you managed to fix the rear battery tray section very quickly ( see previous pics on photo stream. What did you do to the rear towing eye ?
ThnaksSpeedtouch wrote:Yes, that's the M20B25 'medium compression' engine - high compression, but not quite as high as that fitted to the pre-facelift 325i. It would originally have been around 9.4:1 CR, but if it has a 2.8 crank and possibly different pistons fitted, who knows what it is now...
http://www.realoem.com/bmw/showparts.do ... g=11&fg=05
If you put the last 7 digits of the VIN into RealOEM, you can verify that the engine is correct for your car.
Fitting the correct M20B25 intake manifold should aid breathing.

right so take it that red thing is the new fuel regulator.Speedtouch wrote:The trouble is, if it has indeed been converted to a 2.8, then you will need a fuel pressure regulator suited to the engine. An OEM one from another 2.8-3.0 litre BMW should suffice.

