So, 9 months later the cleanup continues. It's progressing slowly since every time I clean/detail/defunk something, the parts around pretty part become visually offensive. Since I only want to do this once, the "while I'm in there" syndrome has taken over. Treating rust, holes, questionable hoses, wiring details, broken clips, brackets, hose routing are taking some time.
I'll try get ya'll caught up if anyone is still interested.
Cooling system was to remain as is but after the sludge discovery I had to clean that out.
Clogged heater bypass recall thing. Took it back to pre-recall. Much cleaner hose set up.
All the stop leak after it dried.
Hoping radiator doesn't leak but I'm sure it will after the system is flushed. Detailed it anyway. The silver parts under the hood I'm using silver BBQ grill paint topped by a Duplicolor lacquer clearcoat. Cheapest solution that got me 90% of the factory-ish finish. I have yet to find a cheap way to duplicate Cad Plating so some of those Cad parts under the hood are now silver. I'm sure it will be a deduction on the concourse score Any black plastic under the hood is getting a light coat of SEM Trim Paint. VERY nice finish and seems to be pretty tough. I can wipe down and it doesnt come off at all.
Before:
After:
I decided the swollen, torn, cut, leaking coolant hoses should be changed. Turned into a water pump(was leaking), timing belt, pulley change.
Something had been rubbing on this pulley for awhile. Could've cut myself worse than I did had I not been paying attention. Was really freakin' sharp!
I didn't take as many before pics as I should've, as parts were removed, something always popped up I didn't plan for.
Before, frame rail probably needed some thinned down Rustoleum Rusty Metal Primer applied but sometimes I want the job to be DONE and later regret my impatiencewhatthe:: :
Always making more work for myself. SEM High-Build Primer likes a clean surface. I didn't wipe down the frame rail after I hit it with Permatex Rust Converter. So, had to repeat sand, prime, paint process.
After the second paint job and rust hole repair:
You can still see some of the wrinkling under the paint but I was going to have to sand way more than I wanted to after the mistake and well, it's under the hood after all...
This pic of the driver's side shows what Rustoleum Rust Reformer looks like after it's applied, dusty/powdery look and feel. Parts store didn't have the Permatex Rust Neutralizer I preferred one late night, so I bought a can of this. It only seems to seal the rust in, no conversion of any kind and it make a HUGE mess, overspray city!! Time will tell if it's any better than my other method. It took the Krylon Rust Tough Enamel just fine.
After paint:
Turned out pretty good for what I'm trying to achieve with rattle cans.
After, AFTER paint, had to pull the brake booster since it looked like a bag of butt. You can also see some grind marks on the fender, I removed the airbag system and their associated bracketry. Replacement parts are getting rare and I don't necessarily trust a 25 year old airbag to work anyway. Wish I would've prepped those marks better but hey, maybe my kid will restore this thing long after I'm gone.
Wiring tape had seen better days and I unwrapped a big part of the main harness to remove the brake pad wear sensors from the system. It looked like the stateside dealership installed the system and they had wrapped the wiring with vinyl electrical tape. That adhesive sucked to deal with but it's going back together now. The brake pad light is almost always on no matter how hard you try to make the factory system function. BMW gave it a nice try for 1989. I used 3M Friction Tape, easy to use, looks factory.
Naturally, I ran out of tape and the 2 other products I bought to try didn't look right under the hood.
I also wanted to mention Adam's Polishes VRT product. I love this stuff! Nice smell, easy to use and it's water based. I've been using it on the under hood rubber that I'm not replacing. I clean the offending rubber/vinyl bit with VRT on a green scotchbrite pad, keeping it WET, then wipe it down with a shop towel. Then I reapply with a shop towel to give it a nice finish, not too shiny or greasy. Holding up well. My $.02