22 April 2015

S50-Powered BMW E28 - The M Within


The term 'Q-Car' has fallen out of favour in current car-speak language, but it perfectly describes what you see here. The term derives from the Q-ships used by the Royal Navy in WWII, and were heavily armed merchant ships with concealed weaponry, designed to lure submarines into making surface attacks, which gave the Q-ships the chance to open fire and sink them. While comparing the E28 BMW 5-series to an old boat is a tad unfair, it is fair to say that looks-wise, the M1 and the E30 M3 took the honours for the BMW you were most likely to drop a double-take at. Even the E28 M5, with the M1's very own M88 twin-cam six, is near indistinguishable to a humble 518i, and as a result could be passed straight on by in the street. A Q-Car does have its advantages of course; the average supercar owner won't suspect that lil' ol' boxy saloon is hiding enough firepower to run it down up to 150 mph, nor will you attract the wrong kind of attention when all you want to do is kick back and cruise.


James Johnson, owner of BMW specialist JFI Classic Cars, wanted an E28 along those lines, but seeing as E28 M5 prices are stratospheric and cars hard to find (less than 2,200 were built), he decided to build something that was true to the nature of that first M5. He built the car for himself as he wanted a practical everyday sleeper and was a no expense spared build to the highest standard using BMW parts, a given seeing that it's his day job. 


The E28 chosen was a two owner 528i with 62,000 genuine miles that had been off the road for some time in dry storage and was in stunning condition, with all of the goodies you want with an 80's-era BMW; electric windows, sun roof, central locking, ABS and cruise control all adorn this shark-nose beauty. But that is only the start of this Bavarian tale, as the 5er has been on a muscle building workout that would make Arnie proud.


First, the engine; out went the M30 straight six in favour of  an S50B32  from a low mileage 3.2 litre E36 M3 Evo cabriolet, with the SMG gearbox. As not to take any chances, the engine has had all of the comestibles necessary for any engine's continued wellbeing; new shells and ARP rod bolts, new water and oil pumps, thermostat, crank seals, gaskets, plugs and belts. The oft-temperamental VANOS system  had been replaced just 8,000 miles previous by a BMW main dealer; and added bonus. But it isn't all OEM under the bonnet; a Walbro high pressure fuel pump replaced the original, while the ECU was remapped by Enda Tuning, with EWS deleted and an 8,000 RPM rev limit.


The E36 Evo usually has the SMG gearbox, but cleverly, James has had this converted to a true manual by Neil at All Gears a Getrag specialist. The newly 'manualised' transmission is backed up by a lightweight Driftworks billet flywheel, high performance clutch and a custom propshaft, necessary to mate to the fully rebuilt large case 3.64:1 LSD, so the mighty S50 can deliver its payload to the road with as little (or as much) fuss as desired.


With great power comes great restraint; the brakes are all new, the front calipers and discs are donated from an E34 M5 while the rears are from a late E34 M5 Nurburgring edition, both ends fitted with EBC red stuff pads.
The suspension was treated to the same scrutiny to ensure the E28 hustles corners with alacrity; Gaz Gold coilovers grace each corner, with RPM adjustable top mounts  running 1.5 degrees of negative camber, while the suspension and steering is either polybushed or replaced with new OEM items. The rear trailing arms have spherical slide bearings fitted, with all subrames and suspension components shotblasted and powder coated; James doesn't do thing by half. Those wheels aren't standard E28 fare either, being genuine 16 inch style 5s from an 8-series, fitted with new Toyo Proxes R1R tyres.


In true Q-Car fashion, the exterior is completely standard, bar some discreet repainting of some panels, while the interior is in perfect condition, with just some extra VDO gauges for oil temp, pressure and volts, a Nakamichi stereo and a gearknob that has six forward gears marked on it...
James reports that it drives superbly and feels quicker than an E36 M3 Evo, a feeing no doubt helped by the lighter weight and the lower gearing in the final drive. Its very useable as an everyday car, which is probably why James has clocked up 3000 miles in the last 5 months; and at a steady 80mph it gets around 32mpg, with 15-20 mpg still possible when being hooned around. And that S50's 8000rpm rev limit means that hooning time is never far away.

- Amazosan


NB - its for sale too; £15k seems a bargain to me.


Nakamichi stereo, auxiliary gauges...
...and a six-speed gearbox

The before: a lovely if standard 528i, before its dose of M-Spinach
6-speed SMG 'box needed notching to clear crossmember
Machined insert for SMG gearbox output shaft



Commercial Break: Dodge 1500 GT90, 1974 (ARG)


17 April 2015

Your Monday Wake-Up Call - On A Friday Afternoon

The title may appear to be a little nonsensical to some, but not those that follow our Facebook page. Whats that you say? We have a Facebook page that you're not aware of? Well, seeing as you ask yes, yes we do, and a doozy it is. It isn't just a copy of this fine blog though; as well as links to old articles on here, we post cool stuff that pops up on the many wonderful car-themes Facebook pages that we frequent on a daily basis. And we do some things that we don't do on here; The Monday Wake-Up Call is one of them. Basically, we post a video of some fine automobiles, usually being thrashed to within an inch of their lives, just so that you can clear away those pesky Monday morning cobwebs out of your system.
We post videos from all sorts of sources, but we are partial to content from a fellow called 19Bozzy92 on YouTube, a person that seems to be in the right place at the right time in Italy when some cool cars come out to play; historic racers, supercars, F1 cars, rally cars and many others are caught on his (her?) video camera. Check 'em out. But not before you check out our Facebook page of course. Wink.

- Amazosan 




Pipe Dream


15 April 2015

T.W.O.: Yamaha SR400 by Motor Rock - Clock Work


As much as I love the muscular lines of factory sport bikes such as the MV Agusta 1090RR, I still feel more drawn to the custom two wheelers, as you may have noticed from our two wheel articles. Bikes such as Motor Rock's Yamaha SR400 Custom 'Clock Work' really float our collective boats, with its brush chrome finish and an overall aesthetic that’s very unlike its original form. It's 400cc 'single' now sports a 89mm piston and 92mm stroke crankshaft, matched to a high performance Keihin CR Carburetor and K&N air filter. Other features include one-off handlebars and tail light, with Easyriders billet rear suspension mounting a Yamaha XS650 wheel at the rear, with a custom 16-inch wheel up front beneath the springer font end.
Star of the show is surely the custom one-piece seat and fuel tank, which no doubt took many hours of toil to produce, as all metalwork on any bike we've seen usually does. Unfortunately, Clock Work is not up for sale as yet but even if it is, it would be available only in Japan which is sure to disappoint many two-wheeled lovers. Then again, if you have a burgeoning bank account, a trip over to their HQ in Nagoya and throwing lots of Yen at them may just change their minds.

- Mr Fabulous



Porsche Curve


8 April 2015

Digging In The Crates - Riding The Astral Plane


Our crate digging, deep in the bowels of Amazo Plaza now brings us to our extensive collection of Cars and Car Conversions magazines. Triple C (as it was fondly known) was a tuning and motorsport magazine that ran from February 1965 to October 2003 and was only really rivalled by Hot Car magazine.
Its also a great reading; take this issue for example. the cover feature is a back-to-back shootout between a standard MKI Vauxhall Astra GTE (Vauxhall's press car) and a full-on Irmscher-modified one. While the extra add-on parts aren't to everyone's taste, the modifications to the mechanicals made this car a much more rounded hot hatchback, a considerable feat considering that the MKI GTE was a pretty great package when new.
However, it doesn't appear to be in the stars for many of the cars we see in these scans to survive; The Irmscher car (FEA 696Y) is untaxed since May 1991,  A478 LTM (the press car) is untaxed since December 1999, while the two Opel Kadetts on page 45 fare no better; WPP 901X last saw the road legally in October 1997 while MNK 895V seems to have bit the dust in May 1996. The fact that the records show on DVLA at least means that they haven't been scrapped does at least give some hope that they're holed up in various garages across the land, waiting to be discovered.
Enjoy the scans.

- Amazosan