BillyBob
Active member
Oh, and there's a world of difference between 8 and 15 psi... Even more so when you take into account turbocharger sizing, or what kind of supercharger kit you'd like to use, where you're building the motor to rev to, etc.
Rather start off with these two questions:
How much power do I want?
What's my budget?
Whether going turbo or supercharged, you're somewhat limited by what the stock motor can handle - M54B30 reliability starts becoming iffy around 0.6 bar or thereabouts on stock internals - which should see you pushing in the region of 240-250 kW on a supercharged setup, and around 270-280 kW on a well-matched turbo setup. (flywheel figures)
Bear in mind, the M54B30 doesn't like revving - stock cams peak early and drop off dramatically, the head doesn't flow too well for big power applications, and there's a well-documented issue with continuous high revs backing out the oil pump nut with catastrophic results - so if you're thinking you're going to build a reliable 1-bar boosted 350 kW 7500 RPM animal on a stock motor, then you've got the wrong platform as a starting point..
To get to 350 (Supercharged) - 400 kW (turbocharged) reliably, you will need:
A built bottom-end with forged rods and pistons.
An aftermarket oil pump - or at least for the nut on the OE pump to be replaced and the shaft-welded in palce
Aftermarket FI cams - Schrick has a nice 264/248° set if I'm not mistaken.
Headwork (exhaust ports are too restrictive from factory)
Uprated clutch
Bolt-on forced induction on the M54 will yield you the same or sliiiightly more power than an E46 M3 (250-280 kW)... then the M3 still has better brakes, better suspension and a limited slip diff. However, your car WILL be fun and entertaining, and will run away from an E46 M3 at altitude in a straight line. If that is all you want, go for it... but bear in mind that the spend to get it there will cost you nearly what just buying an E46 M3 would cost you.
If you want reasonably good power (350-400 kW), you're going to spend R120k+ rebuilding the motor and doing the conversion properly - and you'll never see that money back when time comes to sell the car. That same power can be had from an E46 M3 with a simple bolt-on Supercharger kit.
So, yes - there's merit to going the FI route on a 330i - but only really if you're going for a bolt-on kit. For big power applications, there are much better avenues.
In short:
Unless you specifically NEED 4 doors or you have a huge sentimental attachment to the 330i with the intention of driving it till the wheels fall off, you're better off just upgrading to an M3 for your thrills.
Rather start off with these two questions:
How much power do I want?
What's my budget?
Whether going turbo or supercharged, you're somewhat limited by what the stock motor can handle - M54B30 reliability starts becoming iffy around 0.6 bar or thereabouts on stock internals - which should see you pushing in the region of 240-250 kW on a supercharged setup, and around 270-280 kW on a well-matched turbo setup. (flywheel figures)
Bear in mind, the M54B30 doesn't like revving - stock cams peak early and drop off dramatically, the head doesn't flow too well for big power applications, and there's a well-documented issue with continuous high revs backing out the oil pump nut with catastrophic results - so if you're thinking you're going to build a reliable 1-bar boosted 350 kW 7500 RPM animal on a stock motor, then you've got the wrong platform as a starting point..
To get to 350 (Supercharged) - 400 kW (turbocharged) reliably, you will need:
A built bottom-end with forged rods and pistons.
An aftermarket oil pump - or at least for the nut on the OE pump to be replaced and the shaft-welded in palce
Aftermarket FI cams - Schrick has a nice 264/248° set if I'm not mistaken.
Headwork (exhaust ports are too restrictive from factory)
Uprated clutch
Bolt-on forced induction on the M54 will yield you the same or sliiiightly more power than an E46 M3 (250-280 kW)... then the M3 still has better brakes, better suspension and a limited slip diff. However, your car WILL be fun and entertaining, and will run away from an E46 M3 at altitude in a straight line. If that is all you want, go for it... but bear in mind that the spend to get it there will cost you nearly what just buying an E46 M3 would cost you.
If you want reasonably good power (350-400 kW), you're going to spend R120k+ rebuilding the motor and doing the conversion properly - and you'll never see that money back when time comes to sell the car. That same power can be had from an E46 M3 with a simple bolt-on Supercharger kit.
So, yes - there's merit to going the FI route on a 330i - but only really if you're going for a bolt-on kit. For big power applications, there are much better avenues.
In short:
Unless you specifically NEED 4 doors or you have a huge sentimental attachment to the 330i with the intention of driving it till the wheels fall off, you're better off just upgrading to an M3 for your thrills.