MTechnically said:
BoxheadTim said:
Just to clarify, between me buying it from the old lady and DDing lie about 5k-6k worth of serious maintenance.
I've got to ask, what kind of due diligence did you do before buying this car? PPI? Inspection? Just sounds like an awful lot was wrong with the car before you took ownership. What kind of maintenance are we talking here? Clearly the transmission wasn't replaced, engine wasn't swapped and major suspension overhaul hasn't been done.
To be fair, the numbers were that high because I had to get a bunch of expensive work redone. The due diligence was me checking the car over carefully, and I didn't miss much other than the Guibo that needed flipping. I did take a knowing gamble (and lost) on the oil pan gasket not leaking - I knew the car was leaking from the rocker cover gasket, the oil sensor gasket and one of the power steering hosts.
I was fully expecting to dump about $2k in the car to make it DD-able, so I wasn't exactly trying to wing it. First shop addressed the initial oil leaks, serviced the transmission and was tasked with checking over everything, especially the suspension (essentially doing a Post-PI). Gave the car a clean bill of health, fully knowing that I'm the kinda guy who will green light necessary repairs. Only "you may want to look at this closer" hint was that the dog bones in the rear suspension were a little worn, and that their alignment guru couldn't get the rear suspension exactly on spec. So far, so good.
A few days after picking up the car, it was clear that the oil pan gasket was leaking, but over all the car had gone from "gusher" to "trickler". Back to the shop it went, they did the oil pan gasket and that's when the SRS saga started. SRS light wouldn't go out or come on a few minutes after you started the car. They went through three used computers, couldn't get things working right. Eventually I figured out that it might have been the battery voltage as the car had been sitting at their shop for at least six weeks. Oil pan gasket was still leaking, shop went out of business before being able to address that.
That's when the second shop came into play. They did another post-post-PI, confirmed the issue with the oil pan gasket, redid that, found a bunch of other stuff the first guys had missed and/or were a result of their tender ministrations. That was the next 2500 bucks...
Second shop gave the suspension a clean bill of health, said the dog bones were used but OK and the alignment was within spec. They found the exhaust was about to fall off, the Guibo being in backwards and that they had to redo both the oil pan gasket and figure out what the heck the first guy did to the airbag computer. That's where a lot of the expense went - as you know it's usually most costly to fix other people's mistakes than doing it right the first time.
I had asked the second shop to check over everything the first shop has touched, and I have no reason to disbelieve that they did do a decent job. Well, other than potentially the evidence in my driveway.
Not to invalidate your experience, but your experience doesn't quite match up to mine. I've converted by car to manual, rebuild the entire rear subframe with power coating, and a host of upgrades for not much more than what you are talking about here.
Keep in mind that I try not to wrench on my dailies, so this was at specialist shop rates. If I had done the work myself it probably still wouldn't have been done completely but I would've been able to redo the suspension as well. And it still would've been a project car, but I would've had more money in my wallet.
At this point I'm honestly curious what all was done to the car and what issues you had that have sidelined the car for so long. It sucks that you put the time and money into a car that hasn't worked out.
Whole host of smaller stuff, waiting for (used) parts mostly and I think the initial shop being completely swamped with work. That certainly accounted for the first bunch of months of the car in being in the shop.
Not quite sure why the other shop took that long, but I think they were trying to give me a bit of a break on parts costs as they tried to source a bunch of parts to fix some of the more niggling issues with used parts.
If this was an M5 restoration I’d just do it, but this is just a rust free 525i with some dings that I don’t mind parking at the airport.
You've already pointed this out, but it certainly sounds like you were looking for an appliance and bought a project instead.
Certainly looks that way. I'm not sure I bought a project, I think somewhere along the line it turned into one. Which wouldn't have been as big an issue as it is now if it had been properly fixed up before we moved house. Due to lack of local connections I don't know yet where I can take the non-appliances vehicles. I'm fine with wrenching on my Miata and the 911 as those are hobby cars, but it's becoming a serious issue with the BMW.