Detail Info for: 1987 BMW 3-Series BMW E30 325 2.8L Stroker

Transaction Info
Sold On:
05/20/2017
Price:
$ 3800.00
Condition:
Mileage:
146080
Location:
Westfield, New Jersey, 07090
Seller Type:
Private Seller
Vehicle Specification
Year Make Model:
1987 BMW 3-Series
Submodel Body Type:
N/A Coupe
Engine:
M20B25
Transmission:
Manual
VIN:
WBAAB5405H9805521
Vehicle Title:
Clear
Drive Train:
Fuel Type:
Gasoline
Standard Equipment:
Optional Equipment:
Vehicle Detail
Up for sale is my 2.8L M20 E30. This was my daily driver for many years, and was almost all highway miles under my ownership. I spent a lot of time driving to my work in Clinton, NJ (45 minutes) or to School (30 minutes) or a combination of the two. It has also taken a few trips to and from Vermont, Connecticut, as well as North Carolina. This has been a very fun car and everything I’ve changed to this car has been for the sole purpose of making it a better driving experience, if you test drive it you will understand. Smooth shifts, no clunking, predictable weight transfer, and power at all RPMs, good gas mileage, comfortable. The body is not in the best of condition. I’m not taking it to concours d’elegance. My philosophy is if you have a car with a purpose, it should be used for that purposed, if I had a Ferrari I would daily it. I did not baby this car and will make no such claim, but I did put a huge effort in upgrading and maintaining this car. Engine: The engine is a stroked 2.8L. This is a combination of a lot of different parts. I used a 2.8L crankshaft from an e36 328i, 130mm connecting rods from the original motor, and late model short skirt m20b25 pistons. Everything was balanced before installation. This idea for this stroker build came from an older article in the Roundel where it features a whole article on what parts fit and what don’t. I basically copied the recipe and then added an Ireland engineering billet 272 camshaft and SSquid tune to finish it off. You might be wondering what qualifies me for building an engine… 2 years of Vocational School (Auto Tech), Associates In Automotive Technology, 6 Years in BMW maintenance and Repair, 2 years of high performance engine building and custom installation at a performance shop, and 8 years of overall experience as in auto tech in various shops. Important things worth noting, all wear items were replaced when rebuilding, piston rings, journal bearings, rod bearings, piston wrist pins, piston wrist pin bushings, pistons wrist pin clips, head gasket, valve seals, head gasket bolts, intake/exhaust gaskets, water pump, fan clutch, crank seal, rear main seal, and everything else that would be a maintenance item in an engine rebuild. Have over 20,000 miles on the engine with no issues, I’ve driven it to and from Vermont and North Carolina and I wouldn’t hesitate to do it again. I always used Mobile One 10W-40 synthetic for every oil change except for the break in. All of the following have been added, modified or replaced in the last 30,000 miles: Engine: All seals, rings, head bolts etc. (as mentioned above in the engine build overview) Fluids: Engine: Mobile One 10W-40 Coolant: BMW OEM Coolant Transmission: Redline MTL Differential: Redline 75W-90 Synthetic Steering: Rack Doctor E36 M3 Steering Rack 3.2:1 Garagistic Swap Kit Lemforder e36 inner and outer tie rods Front Suspension Axle: E30 M3 Powder coated Springs FAG Front Wheel Bearings Bilstein Sport Shocks (All new hardware) Lemforder front shock mounts Lemforder Start Bar Links Lemforder Control Arms Power flex Offset CABs Powder Coated Red CAB housings Rear Suspension: E30 M3 Powder coated springs Bilstein Sport Shocks Ireland Engineering Rear Trailing Arm Bushings Rogue Engineering Rear Shock Mounts AKG 85A Sub frame Bushings Cooling System: Behr Radiator Rein Coolant Hoses Behr Thermostat Saleri Water Pump Engine/Drivetrain: Goetze Standard Size Piston Rings Victor Reinz Head Gasket Victor Reinz Head Bolts NGK Plugs Green Top Injectors (17.5 lb) Gates Kevlar Timing Belt Kit Beck/Arnley Fuel Injector Pressure Regulator GPS Powder coated intake manifold GPS Powder coated valve cover GPS Ceramic coated OEM headers Stock 325i Exhaust S2.93 LSD BMW OEM Engine Mounts BMW OEM Transmission Mounts BMW OEM Diff Bushing ECS Short Shift kit (Z3 1.9 Shifter with all new hardware) Lemforder Flex Disc Rogue Engineering Delrin Shift Knob Diff Cover Powder coated Red Brakes: Front Zimmerman Pads and Rotors Rear Power Stop Z23 Drilled and Slotted Rotors GPS Braided SS Brake and Clutch Line Wheels/Tires Set 1: Yokohama Avid Envigor 205/50/16 on ASA AR1 16X7 ET38 Set 2: Bridgestone Blizzaks on Bottle caps for snows Exterior: Shadow line Trim (Missing one piece so there is a chrome piece there in instead) Bumpers Tucked using convertible bumpers LED License Plate Lights Euro License Plate Filler Cow Catcher Lip US Ellipsoid Headlights Interior: Ox Blood Driver Seat, door cards, and one rear panel (the passenger seat is out of a cardinal vert and the other rear panel is from the original tan interior, I never got around to sourcing the rest of the interior pieces.) Alcantara Shift and E-brake boot with M-tech stitching Oil Temp, Oil Pressure, and Battery Voltage Gauges (Only battery voltage hooked up) Kenwood CD player Rockford Fosgate Prime R152-S 5.25 Component Speakers with Tweeters (Front) MBQuart RKM113 5.25” Reference Coax (Rear) Kenwood KSC SW11 Powered Enclosed Sub (Mounted on the ski pass behind seat) WeatherTech Floor Mats BMW pedals aluminum Pedal Set Alarm system with remote and other cool features Ares requiring attention: The paint is original and shot. Still shines up nice with some polish. Who cares, you can’t notice a thing when you’re standing 20 feet away. This is a go car NOT a show car. Car has some rust spots pictured. The spots on the fenders I just lightly sanded away the rust and sprayed with a sealer. The paint first started to peal on the fenders when I lightly rolled them, I used to have OEM Style 5’s 16x8 with 25mm adaptors which required just a hair of added clearance Body has some dents Someone keyed the car’s driver side when the previous owner had it I will say I loved having a car without a nice paint job because I never had to worry about someone scratching it or anything. I drive all over the place so not having to worry about those things helps you breathe easy.