Materials to Maintain Your ZHP IIIII Hand Protection IIIII Tools to Maintain Your ZHP
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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Cleveland/Dayton
    Posts
    2,620

    M0nk3y's Official SCCA STX Build

    Well, the Z4M is officially retiring from track and autocross duty.

    However, the 128 is taking duty and charging ahead!

    I'm going to be starting to build the 128 to become a Nationally competitive SCCA STX car. This isn't going to happen within a year, however I hope this build continues throughout the next couple years as I transform the car from a daily driver to a dedicated STX car and NASA TTD car. Throughout the transition, the car will maintain DD status.

    Spec on the car:

    2012 BMW 128i
    N51 Engine
    Manual Transmission
    Manual Seats
    M Sport Package

    So, let me start with plans for this year:

    Wheels: APEX 17x8.5
    Tires: Hankook RS3s or Dunlop ZII in 245 or 255 size. Need to do further research
    Suspension: TCKline Dual Adjustable Coilovers, #400 front/#700 rear springs. M3 rear subframe bushings. M3 or similar front swaybar.

    This will start me out. For this year as I learn the car.

    Potential Upgrades: 2 Clutch LSD or similar, Exhaust.


    Questions/Comments? Lets have some fun

    Rules for STX:

    14. STREET TOURING® CATEGORY
    The Street Touring® category of vehicle modifi cations is meant to fit between the current Street and Street Prepared categories. This category provides a natural competition outlet for auto enthusiasts using affordable sports cars and sedans equipped with common suspension
    and engine modifi cations compatible with street use.

    Under the provisions of Section 1.1 of these rules, Regions are free to allow any other version of the Street Touring® concept which meets the local needs. In particular, some leeway in the area of bodywork allowances (e.g., wings/spoilers beyond those allowed in Section 14.2.F) is
    encouraged at Regional Solo® events.

    See Sections 3.8 and 8.3 for documentation requirements.

    14.1 AUTHORIZED MODIFICATIONS
    All Solo® Rules Street Category allowances, plus all allowances contained in Sections 14.1 through 14.10.

    14.2 BODYWORK
    A. Pedal cover kits and other interior cosmetic accessories may be added. “Dress-up” items such as chrome dipsticks and non-standard fi ller caps are permitted, provided they serve no other purpose.
    B. The driver and front passenger seats may be replaced with the following restrictions. The seating surface must be fully upholstered. The top of the seat, or an attached headrest, may not be below the center of the driver’s head. The seat, including mounting hardware,
    must weigh at least 25 pounds and must be attached using the OE body mounting holes/studs. Additional mounting points may be added.
    C. Factory rub strips, emblems, mud fl aps, bolt-on front valance lips/spoilers, and fog lights (except those integral to a headlight or turn signal) may be removed. Rear wings may be removed so long as the vehicle retains any federally-mandated third brake light.
    D. Alternate steering wheels are allowed except that steering wheels with an integral airbag may not be changed.
    E. Fenders may not be cut or fl ared but the inside lip may be rolled to gain additional tire clearance. (The outer fender contour may not be changed.) Plastic and rubber wheel well splash shields may be modified for tire clearance and to accommodate a rolled inside fender lip.
    The modifi cations may serve no other purpose (e.g., air intake, brake ducts, etc). No other changes to the standard fenders or wheel wells are permitted.
    F. Addition of spoilers, splitters, rear wings, bumper covers, valances, side skirts, and non-functional sccops/vents is allowed provided that either:
    1. It is a production part which is standard or optional equipment of a US model of the vehicle. (“Model” is defi ned in Section 12.3.)
    2. It is listed in the vehicle manufacturer’s US accessory catalog draft 80 — 2014 SCCA® NATIONAL SOLO® RULES

    14. STREET TOURING®
    for that vehicle for normal highway use. This does not allow for parts sold through a manufacturer’s performance catalog (e.g., Ford Racing, HPD, Mazdaspeed, Mopar Performance, Mugen,
    NISMO, SPT, TRD, etc). Parts must be installed as directed by the manufacturer. Exact
    replicas,including weight, from alternate sources are also permitted.
    G. Strut bars per Section 12 are permitted with all types of suspension, subject to the following constraints:
    1. A 2-point strut bar may be added, removed, modifi ed, or substituted, but only with another 2-point strut bar.
    2. A triangulated (3-point) strut bar may be removed, modifi ed, or substituted; substitution may be with either a triangulated or a 2-point strut bar. The connection to the chassis (e.g., fi rewall,
    bulkhead) must be in the standard location.
    3. Lower suspension braces must be attached to the lower suspension pickup point locations on the chassis within 2” (50.8mm) in any direction of the actual suspension attachment to the chassis.
    4. Except for standard parts, no connections to other components
    are permitted. Additional holes may be drilled for mounting bolts. Only “bolt-on” attachment
    is permitted. Interior trim panels may be modifi ed to allow installation of strut bars. Holes or slots may be no larger than necessary and may serve no other purpose. This does not permit any
    modifi cations to the frame or unibody beyond the allowed mounting holes.
    H. Longitudinal (fore-aft) subframe connectors (“SFCs”) are permitted
    with the following restrictions:
    1. They must only connect previously unconnected boxed frame rails on unibody vehicles.
    2. Each SFC must attach at no more than 3 points on the unibody
    (e.g., front, rear, and one point in between such as a seat mount
    brace or rocker box brace).
    3. SFCs must be bolted in place and not welded.
    4. No cutting of OE subframes or fl oorpan stampings is permitted. Drilling is permitted for mounting bolts only.
    5. No cross-car/lateral/triangulated connections directly between the driver’s side and passenger’s side SFCs are permitted. Connections to OE components such as tunnel braces or closure panels
    via bolts are allowed and count as the third point of attachment. No alteration to the OE components is permitted.
    6. SFCs may not be used to attach other components (including but not limited to torque arm front mounts or driveshaft loops) and may serve no other purpose.
    draft

    2014 SCCA® NATIONAL SOLO® RULES — 81

    14. STREET TOURING®
    14.3 TIRES
    Tires must meet the eligibility requirements of the Street category with the following additional restrictions:

    Tires shall have section widths up to and including the following:
    STF, STC, STS, STR (AWD) – 225 mm
    STX (AWD), STU (AWD) – 245 mm
    STR (2WD) – 255 mm
    STX (2WD) – 265 mm
    STU (2WD) – 285 mm
    14.4 WHEELS
    Any wheels are allowed with widths up to the following (OE wheels exceeding these maximums are not permitted):
    STF, STC, STS, STR (AWD) – 7.5”
    STX (AWD) – 8.0”
    STX (2WD), STR (2WD) – 9.0”
    STU – unlimited


    14.5 SHOCK ABSORBERS
    A. Shock absorber bump stops may be altered or removed.
    B. Any shock absorbers may be used. Shock absorber mounting brackets which serve no other purpose may be altered, added, or replaced, provided that the attachment points on the body/frame/subframe/ chassis/suspension member are not altered. This installation may
    incorporate an alternate upper spring perch/seat and/or mounting block (bearing mount). The system of attachment may be changed. The number of shock absorbers shall be the same as standard. No shock absorber may be capable of adjustment while the car is in motion,
    unless fi tted as original equipment. MacPherson strut equipped cars may substitute struts and/or may use any insert. This does not allow unauthorized changes in suspension geometry or changes in
    attachment points (e.g., affecting the position of the lower ball joint or spindle). It is intended to allow the strut length changes needed to accommodate permitted modifi cations which affect ride height and suspension travel.
    14.6 BRAKES
    A. Non-standard brake rotors may be used provided they are of equal or larger dimensions (diameter and thickness) and made of ferrous material (e.g., iron). Thickness includes the individual plates of a
    vented rotor, as well as the overall dimension. The diameter for replacement rotors is measured at the minimum outside dimension. Aluminum rotor hats are allowed. Cars originally equipped with solid
    (non-vented) rotors may utilize vented rotors. Cross-drilled and/or slotted brake rotors may be fi tted provided all such voids are within the disc area and comprise no more than 10% of that area. Brake
    calipers and mounting brackets may be replaced provided they bolt draft
    82 — 2014 SCCA® NATIONAL SOLO® RULES


    14. STREET TOURING®
    to the standard locations and the number of pistons is equal to or greater than standard. A functioning emergency brake of the same type, operation, and actuation as OE must be present. Drum brakes may be replaced with disc brakes of a diameter equal to or greater than the inside diameter of the standard drum. Such conversions must be bolted, not welded, to the axle/trailing arm/upright and must include an integral, redundant emergency brake. Changes to backing
    plates/dust shields/brake lines to accommodate these changes are permitted but may serve no other purpose.
    B. Brake lines may be substituted with alternate DOT-approved fl exible
    brake lines.
    C. Air ducts may be fi tted to the brakes provided that they extend in a forward direction only and that no changes are made in the body/ structure for their use. They may serve no other purpose.
    D. Original equipment ABS braking systems may be electrically disabled but may not be removed or altered in any other way.

    14.7 ANTI-ROLL (SWAY) BARS
    Substitution, addition, or removal of any anti-roll bar(s) is permitted. Bushing material, method of attachment, and locating points are unrestricted. This does not authorize the cutting of holes to route the bar(s) or links. Components such as anti-roll bars and strut housings that serve dual purposes by also functioning as suspension locators may not be modifi ed in ways that change the suspension geometry or steering geometry. Non-standard lateral members which connect between the brackets for the bar, including allowed strut bars per Section 14.2.G, are permitted.
    14.8 SUSPENSION
    A. Ride height may only be altered by suspension adjustments, the use of spacing blocks, leaf spring shackles, torsion bar levers, or change or modifi cation of springs or coil spring perches. This does not allow the use of spacers that alter suspension geometry, such as those between the hub carrier and lower suspension arm. Springs must be of the same type as the original (e.g., coil, leaf, torsion bar, bellows) and except as noted herein, must use the original spring attachment
    points. This permits multiple springs, as long as they use the original mount locations. Coil spring perches originally attached to struts or shock absorber bodies may be changed or altered and their position may be adjustable. Spacers are allowed above or below the spring. Coil springs may incorporate spring rubbers. Suspension bump stops may be altered or removed.
    B. Suspension bushings may be replaced with bushings of any materials (except metal) as long as they fi t in the original location. Offset bushings may be used. In a replacement bushing, the amount of metal relative to the amount of non-metallic material may not be increased.
    This does not authorize a change in type of bushing (e.g., ball and socket replacing a cylindrical bushing) or use of a bushing with an angled hole whose direction differs from that of the original
    draft

    2014 SCCA® NATIONAL SOLO® RULES — 83

    14. STREET TOURING®
    bushing. If the standard bushing accommodated multi-axis motion via compliance of the component material(s), the replacement bushing may not be changed to accommodate such motion via a change
    in bushing type, for example to a spherical bearing or similar component involving internal moving parts. Pins or keys may be used to prevent the rotation of alternate bushings but may serve no other
    purpose than that of retaining the bushing in the desired position. C. The following allowances apply to strut-type suspensions. Adjustable camber plates may be installed at the top of the strut and the original upper mounting holes may be slotted. The drilling of holes in order to
    perform the installation is permitted. The center clearance hole may not be modifi ed. Any type of bearing or bushing may be used in the adjustable camber plate attachment to the strut. The installation may incorporate an alternate upper spring perch/seat and/or mounting block (bearing mount). Any ride height change resulting from installation of camber plates is allowed. Caster changes resulting from the use of camber plates are permitted.
    D. Differential mount bushings may be replaced but must attach in the standard location(s) without additional modifi cation or changes. Differential position may not be changed. The amount of metal in a replacement bushing may not be increased relative to the amount of metal found in a standard bushing for the particular application. Solid metal bushings are specifi cally prohibited.
    E. Steering rack bushings may be replaced but must attach in the factory location(s) without additional modifi cation or changes. Steering rack position may not be changed. The amount of metal in a replacement bushing may not be increased relative to the amount of metal found in a standard bushing for the particular application. Solid metal bushings are specifi cally prohibited. This does NOT allow shimming or otherwise relocating the steering rack.
    F. Camber bolts may be installed providing these parts use the original, unmodifi ed mounting points and meet the restrictions specifi ed in Section 14.5.B. Caster changes resulting from the use of camber bolts are permitted.
    G. Solid axle rear wheel drive (RWD) suspension allowances:
    1. Addition or replacement of suspension stabilizers (linkage connecting the axle housing or DeDion to the chassis, which controls lateral suspension location) is permitted.
    2. Traction bars or torque arms may be added or replaced.
    3. A Panhard rod may be added or replaced.
    4. The upper arm(s) may be removed, replaced, or modifi ed and the upper pickup points on the rear axle housing may be relocated.
    5. The lower arms may not be altered, except as permitted under Section 14.8.B, or relocated. Methods of attachment and attachment points are unrestricted but may serve no other purpose (e.g.,
    chassis stiffening). This does not authorize removal of a welded

    84 — 2014 SCCA® NATIONAL SOLO® RULES
    14. STREET TOURING®
    on part of a subframe to accommodate the installation.

    6. Differential covers and attaching hardware may be replaced.
    7. Methods of attachment and attachment points are unrestricted but may serve no other purpose (e.g., chassis stiffening). This does not authorize removal of a welded on part of a subframe to accommodate the installation.
    H. Camber kits (also known as camber compensators) may be installed. These kits consist of either adjustable length arms or arm mounts (including ball joints) that provide a lateral adjustment to the effective length of a control arm. Alignment outside the factory specifi cations is allowed. The following restrictions apply:
    1. On double/unequal arm (e.g., wishbone, multi-link) suspensions, only the upper arms OR lower arms may be modifi ed or replaced, but not both. Non-integral longitudinal arms that primarily control
    fore/aft wheel movement (e.g., trailing arm(s) or link(s) of a multilink suspension) may not be replaced, changed, or modifi ed.
    2. On arm-and-strut (MacPherson/Chapman) suspensions, the lower arms may be modifi ed/replaced OR other methods of camber adjustment as allowed by Sections 14.8.B, C, or G may be used, but not both.
    3. On swing or trailing arm suspensions, the main arms may not be modifi ed or replaced, but lateral locating links/arms may be modified or replaced.
    4. Front wheel drive (FWD) cars with rear beam axles may use shims between the rear axle and hubs.
    4. The replacement arms or mounts must attach to the original standard mounting points. All bushings must meet the requirements of Section 14.8.B. Intermediate mounting points (e.g., shock/spring mounts) may not be moved or relocated on the arm, except as incidental to the camber adjustment. The knuckle/bearing housing/ spindle assembly cannot be modifi ed or replaced.
    5. Changes in suspension geometry are not allowed except as incidental to the effective arm length change.

    NOTE: Many modern suspension designs known by other names, actually function as double A-arm designs. These include the rear suspensions on 1988-on Honda Civic/Integra, Chrysler/Plymouth/
    Dodge Neon, BMW E36, and most “multi-link” and are covered by Section 14.8.I.1.
    I. On strut-equipped cars, the strut’s lower integral mounting bracket, for attachment to the upright or spindle, is unrestricted provided it attaches to the standard location. Any resulting change to the position of the strut centerline is allowed. Such brackets shall serve no other purpose. This does not allow for changes to the integral steering arm on cars that have the steering arm integrated with the strut body.
    J. Changes in alignment parameters that result directly from the use of the allowed components are permitted. For example, the dimendraft

    2014 SCCA® NATIONAL SOLO® RULES — 85
    14. STREET TOURING®


    sional changes resulting from the use of a cylindrical offset bushing that meets the restrictions of Section 14.8.B are allowed, including those resulting from a change in the pivoting action to:
    (1) about the mounting bolt, or
    (2) about the bushing itself.
    K. Subframe mount bushings may be replaced, but must attach in the standard location(s) without additional modifi cation or changes. Subframe position may not be changed. The amount of metal in a replacement bushing may not be increased relative to the amount of metal found in a standard bushing for the particular application. Solid metal bushings are specifi cally prohibited.

    14.9 ELECTRICAL SYSTEM
    A. The make, model number, and size of the battery may be changed but not its voltage. Relocation of the battery or batteries is permitted but not into the passenger compartment. If the battery is relocated and the original battery tray can be removed by simply unbolting it, the tray may be removed or relocated with the battery. Holes may be drilled for mounting or passage of cables. Longer cables may be substituted to permit relocation. The number of battery or batteries may not be changed from standard. The area behind the rearmost seat is not considered to be within the passenger compartment. The area under the rearmost seat is considered to be within the passenger
    compartment. Battery allowances do not apply to electric and hybrid-electric vehicles.
    B. The addition of electrical grounding cables and associated distribution blocks/terminals is permitted. Holes may be drilled for mounting only. This does not permit the use of electrical enhancement components such as condensers, voltage controllers, etc.

    14.10 ENGINE AND DRIVETRAIN
    A. Oil pans and pickups may be modifi ed or substituted. Addition or modifi cation of windage trays or crankshaft scrapers is not allowed.
    B. Original equipment traction control systems may be electrically disabled, but not removed or altered in any other way.
    C. The air intake system up to, but not including, the engine inlet may be modifi ed or replaced. The engine inlet is the throttle body, carburetor, compressor inlet, or intake manifold, whichever comes fi rst. The existing structure of the car may not be modifi ed for the passage of ducting from the air cleaner to the engine inlet. Holes may be drilled for mounting. Emissions or engine management components in the air intake system, such as a PCV valve or mass airfl ow sensor, may not be removed, modifi ed, or replaced, and must retain their original function along the fl ow path.
    D. Exhaust manifolds, headers, downpipes, and associated EGR tubes may be replaced with alternate units. Exhaust exit may be relocated provided it meets Section 3.3.3.B.15. Relocation of the oxygen sensor on the header is permitted. Exhaust heat shields which cover only, and attach solely to, these parts may also be replaced, removed, or modifi ed. All other exhaust heat shields may be modifi ed
    the minimum amount necessary to accommodate allowed alternate exhaust components. Mounting brackets/hardware which serve no other purpose are considered part of the exhaust components.
    E. Catalytic converters: Any catalytic converters are allowed, but must attach within 6” (152.4 mm) of the original unit. Multiple catalytic converters may be replaced by a single unit. The inlet of the single
    replacement converter may be located no further downstream than 6” (152.4 mm) along the piping fl ow path from the original exit of the fi nal OE converter. The extents of an OE converter are defi ned by the expansion chamber in which the catalyst is contained, regardless of placement within larger exhaust sections. Replacement converters must have a minimum catalyst density of 100 cells per inch and minimum substrate length of 3” (76.2 mm).
    F. The engine management system parameters and operation may be modifi ed only via the methods listed below. These allowances also apply to forced induction cars, except that no changes to standard boost levels, intercoolers, or boost controls are permitted. Boost changes indirectly resulting from allowed modifi cations are permissible but directly altering or modifying the boost or turbo controls, either mechanically or electronically, is strictly prohibited. Traction control parameters may not be altered. Any OE OBD2 or newer communications port functionality must remain. The Check Engine Light (CEL) or Malfunction Indicator Light (MIL) may be disabled via software. Alternate software maps which violate these restrictions may not be present during competition, regardless of activation. Only OE sensors may be used for engine management.
    1. Reprogrammed ECU/PCM (via hardware and/or software) may be used in the standard housing.
    2. Supplementary (“Piggyback”) ECU may be used subject to the following restrictions:
    a. Connects between the standard ECU/PCM and its wiring harness only.
    b. Must be plug-compatible with the standard ECU/PCM (no splices).
    3. Electronic components may be installed in-line between an engine’s sensors and ECU/PCM. These components may alter the signal coming from the sensor in order to affect the ECU/PCM operation of engine management system. Example: fuel controllers that modify the signal coming from an airfl ow sensor.
    4. Fuel pressure regulators may be replaced in lieu of electronic alterations to the fuel system. It is not permitted to electronically modify the fuel system AND replace a fuel pressure regulator.
    5. Ignition timing may be set at any point on factory adjustable distributor ignition systems.
    draft

    2014 SCCA® NATIONAL SOLO® RULES — 87
    14. STREET TOURING®


    6. VTEC controllers and other devices may be used which alter the timing of factory standard electronic variable valve timing systems.
    G. Any mechanical shift linkage may be used.
    H. Any accessory pulleys and belts of the same type (e.g., V-belt, serpentine) as standard may be used. This allowance applies to accessory pulleys only (e.g., alternator, water pump, power steering
    pump, and crankshaft drive pulleys). It does not allow replacement, modifi cation, or substitution of pulleys, cogs, gears, or belts which are part of cam, layshaft, or ignition drive or timing systems, etc.
    Any crankshaft damper or pulley may be used. SFI-rated dampers are recommended. Supercharged cars may not change the effective diameter of any pulley which drives the supercharger.
    I. Upper engine shields made of plastic material, the purpose of which is to hide mechanical components in the engine compartment, may be removed if they have a solely aesthetic and/or acoustic function.
    J. Any engine or transmission mount is allowed provided it attaches only to the original mounting points, does not relocate the engine/ transmission (other than incidental to changes in compliance material), and weighs no less than the OE mount. All components between the engine/transmission and the mounting structure are considered to be part of the mount assembly.

    K. Limited Slip Differentials
    STC, STS, STF – No limited slip differentials are permitted except for factory standard viscous coupler type units.

    STX, STU, STR – Only standard (as defi ned in Section 12.4) limited slip differentials (LSD) are allowed on AWD vehicles. For AWD vehicles that did not come with any type of limited slip differential
    (including center differential or transfer case), a single aftermarket mechanical LSD may be added. 2WD vehicles may use any mechanical
    LSD unit.
    Link: http://scca.cdn.racersites.com/prod/...%20reduced.pdf
    Last edited by M0nk3y; 01-15-2014 at 07:06 PM.


    Project STX: TCKline Racing l APEX l Vorshlag l Eibach l Hawk l Schroth l BMW Performance

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jun 2011
    Location
    VA/DC
    Posts
    14,445

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    San Francisco, CA
    Posts
    6,847
    This sounds like a fun build! Whats happening to the Z4M?

    I am running 17x8.5 245 tires on my E46 due to clearance with the 255 on my current suspension height. Looks like you might some regulations to follow though!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Huntsville, AL
    Posts
    4,400
    Hey Kyle, My son in Westlake has a 91 E30 318Is that he autocross for a few years with NORA. The car is just sitting with quite a few mods already done and is available if your interested.

    Dinan; Hign Flow Intake System, & Strut Tower Brace
    Turner Motorsports; Underdrive Power Pulleys
    Koni Sport, Bridgestone; Potenza RE-11, Coby Wheel
    Stewart High Performance Water Pump
    Hawk High Performance Street 5.0 Brake Pads
    Brembo Rotor

    The purposeful face of a formidable athlete:

    The spine-tingling 330i Performance Package.

    Purchased CPO on 12/23/2006 with 28,090 miles

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Southern California
    Posts
    18,064
    Awesome. Give em hell

    Sent from my DROID4 using Tapatalk 2
    Randeaux/Rando/John/jr - '06 Cic ZHP; Southern California
    "ZHP or not, I still like you"


    ZHP Performance Package, Cold Weather Package, Leather, Jet Black/Black/BlackCube, NAV, Anthracite Black "my individual" interior trim
    ESS Stage 1 Twin Screw Supercharger, Sprint Booster, BMW Perf Intake, Magnaflow Exhaust, Dinan TB & STEP S/W, UCC Sway Bars, Apex EC-7 18x8.5 ET38
    Suspension: AST 44100 dampers, Bimmerworld front adjustable end links, Swift springs (8K front, 10K rear), Vorshlag camber plates
    Dynavin D99+, Hardwire V1 (w/V1 Connection), BSW Stage 1 Speakers, Kicker Amp/Subwoofer
    BMW Performance Strut Brace, Orion V2 Angel Eyes, No-holes License Plate, SMG Paddle Shift Mod, Besian VANOS, Gold DISA, Fan Delete, M3 Side Mirrors
    Note: Actual car no longer resembles signature picture

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Liberty Township, OH
    Posts
    37,935
    Subscribed.
    Call Me Dane l 2/2004 330i ZHP l 18x8 ET45 BBS CK's wrapped with Michelin Pilot Sport AS3+ @ 245-40-18 l KW V1 Coilovers in front l KW V1 springs w/ Bilstein B8 dampeners in rear l BMW Performance Rotors l UUC StrutBarbarian l Racing Dynamics Rear Strut Bar l Jim Conforti Shark Injector l Light Birch Interior Trim l Bimmian Celly Mount l M3 Trunk Mat l l e90 Performance E-Brake & Shift Knob l M3 Tri-Stitched Boots l AL Headlight Retrofit with ZKW Lenses l CobyWheel Wrap w/M3 Stitching l LCM sw 4.5 triple blink and rear fogs l Maple Interior Trim

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Liberty Township, OH
    Posts
    37,935
    Wait. I thought the 128i was a company car
    Call Me Dane l 2/2004 330i ZHP l 18x8 ET45 BBS CK's wrapped with Michelin Pilot Sport AS3+ @ 245-40-18 l KW V1 Coilovers in front l KW V1 springs w/ Bilstein B8 dampeners in rear l BMW Performance Rotors l UUC StrutBarbarian l Racing Dynamics Rear Strut Bar l Jim Conforti Shark Injector l Light Birch Interior Trim l Bimmian Celly Mount l M3 Trunk Mat l l e90 Performance E-Brake & Shift Knob l M3 Tri-Stitched Boots l AL Headlight Retrofit with ZKW Lenses l CobyWheel Wrap w/M3 Stitching l LCM sw 4.5 triple blink and rear fogs l Maple Interior Trim

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Cleveland/Dayton
    Posts
    2,620
    Quote Originally Posted by derbo View Post
    This sounds like a fun build! Whats happening to the Z4M?

    I am running 17x8.5 245 tires on my E46 due to clearance with the 255 on my current suspension height. Looks like you might some regulations to follow though!
    Z4M is staying put. It will be a Friday/Weekend car for me. I'd just hate to keep on tracking the Z4M to a point where I go off course...etc. You never know. I just don't want something happening to something that valuable..IMO

    I guess I should add the rules for STX. For wheels, I'm limited to 9" wide wheels and 265 tires. 255s are a tight fit, but 245s might be the best option for 9" wheels.



    Quote Originally Posted by 3ZHPGUY View Post
    Hey Kyle, My son in Westlake has a 91 E30 318Is that he autocross for a few years with NORA. The car is just sitting with quite a few mods already done and is available if your interested.
    Thanks, but when I bought this car I always had an end goal of it becoming a track car.


    Quote Originally Posted by danewilson77 View Post
    Wait. I thought the 128i was a company car
    It is, and it will maintain that way. To shorten the story, I've had a long talk with the president regarding my car situation (typically we are required to have a car with 4 doors for client purposes). With my position, I will never be taking clients, and will always be with another person who is the actual sales...so I'm good there. As well, I'll still have OEM wheels for weekly driving, and the suspension is so unique that you can set everything to full soft where it will ride like OEM.

    Down the road, once the car is paid off (I'm planning on 2 more years or so), the car will put set aside for purely track and autocross and I'll find a cheap car to daily again.


    Project STX: TCKline Racing l APEX l Vorshlag l Eibach l Hawk l Schroth l BMW Performance

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    Deale, MD
    Posts
    1,826
    Sounds like a fun project. Good luck with the build! In for pics as progress continues.

    -Brettski

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Cleveland/Dayton
    Posts
    2,620
    TIRERACK.com - Revolutionizing Tire Buying
    Hawk HP+ Pads are in the process of being ordered.

    Will have to also order new magnets. Thinking on going with a Blue Color (My car is silver). Thoughts?

    Lastly, I'm going to be buying a Schroth 4-Point belt for me (no use in spending money for a passenger when one rarely sits in). I can order in Black/Blue/Red/Silver...thoughts on a color?

    I was going to go with Blue...but I might just be boring and go with black:

    http://www.apexperformance.net/prod-2549.htm


    Project STX: TCKline Racing l APEX l Vorshlag l Eibach l Hawk l Schroth l BMW Performance

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