muttley
03-01-2006, 01:43 AM
http://Img232.Imageshack.us/Img232/5555/bmw535andcatd7g42ov.jpg
I use the '76 Caterpillar D7G bulldozer to excavate catfish-rearing ponds down in the swamps, and my newly bought '90 BMW 535i with manual 5-speed to travel the mostly washboard roads in these parts. I photographed the two vehicles together because I was tickled to note from the spec sheets that the turbo-charged Cat 3306 tractor engine puts out 200 Hp, which is 8 horses less than the 208 HP rating of the E34's stock M30 Bix Six power plant. Hats off to German engineering. Cost me about 5 grand USD for this beauty, and she runs like new, knock on wood.
I sure wish stick-shift E34 535i's were as easy to find in Southern California where I spend part of the year as they are in sub-Saharan Africa where I work. Soon as I learned from this forum that the most trouble-free E34 would be the 535i / M30 / manual 5-speed setup, I had a choice of three cars to look over within an hour's drive of home. They are shipped over grey market from Europe where stick-shifts are the rule rather than the exception. But for my doubts about such an import passing Southern California's tough smog regulations, I'd have been tempted to check a few used car lots in Belgium on the way back to ship my choice E34 535i 5-Speed to So Cal so as to save myself the trouble that four-leaf clover search stateside. Anyone ever heard of someone going the grey market import route for this vintage vehicle ?
Also, can enyone recommend a source of slightly taller than stock springs to give the pictured E34 a hair more ground clearance for the rougher roads it will ply here in the third world ? Looking though the archives I've seen discussions in lowering the suspension of an E34, but nothing so far on increasing ride height for rough road driving. If taller springs do exist for E34s would there be any other suspension components that would need to be modified or replaced as part of the subtle body lift ?
Ps I tried several times to link the picture via Image Shack but...
I use the '76 Caterpillar D7G bulldozer to excavate catfish-rearing ponds down in the swamps, and my newly bought '90 BMW 535i with manual 5-speed to travel the mostly washboard roads in these parts. I photographed the two vehicles together because I was tickled to note from the spec sheets that the turbo-charged Cat 3306 tractor engine puts out 200 Hp, which is 8 horses less than the 208 HP rating of the E34's stock M30 Bix Six power plant. Hats off to German engineering. Cost me about 5 grand USD for this beauty, and she runs like new, knock on wood.
I sure wish stick-shift E34 535i's were as easy to find in Southern California where I spend part of the year as they are in sub-Saharan Africa where I work. Soon as I learned from this forum that the most trouble-free E34 would be the 535i / M30 / manual 5-speed setup, I had a choice of three cars to look over within an hour's drive of home. They are shipped over grey market from Europe where stick-shifts are the rule rather than the exception. But for my doubts about such an import passing Southern California's tough smog regulations, I'd have been tempted to check a few used car lots in Belgium on the way back to ship my choice E34 535i 5-Speed to So Cal so as to save myself the trouble that four-leaf clover search stateside. Anyone ever heard of someone going the grey market import route for this vintage vehicle ?
Also, can enyone recommend a source of slightly taller than stock springs to give the pictured E34 a hair more ground clearance for the rougher roads it will ply here in the third world ? Looking though the archives I've seen discussions in lowering the suspension of an E34, but nothing so far on increasing ride height for rough road driving. If taller springs do exist for E34s would there be any other suspension components that would need to be modified or replaced as part of the subtle body lift ?
Ps I tried several times to link the picture via Image Shack but...