Looking at buying an E36 325i - Advice needed!

Gregmeister

Member
Hey gents!

I have recently started looking into getting a banger to rip around the street track days with, but don't want to spend an arm and a leg on a car that I might just bin anyway around the 1st corner. After some thought, I decided on the E36 325i/ 328i option. I have always fancied one and I also want something thats street legal.

So today I come across a car on the gum. It's a 1992 325i 239000 on the clock and the price seems interesting, @ 25K neg, BUT there is a catch....it's code 3.

Now before everyone has a crisis, a few details, and this is where I need help.

The guy claims the car was written off by the previous owners insurance company, as the repair bill was going to be higher than whatever their policy dictates they can spend on repairs...bla bla. So he bought the car and had it fixed @ Bruces BMW for around 7K. Apparently the car mounted a curb and there was some undercarriage damage. (Difficult to spot this sort of damage). His wife has been driving/ using the car for any number of years, it needs a service and the allignment needs to be done. He has pictures of the damage, and the cars paperwork is in order, implying that it had passed a valid roadworthy after the repair. He sounds pretty legit, IOW he does not sound like a bullshitter...yet. He claims no chassis damage.

I have gone to look at the car, without his presence, just where it's parked, and besides a few spots of less than perfect body panel repair, the panel gaps all look good, the windscreen and other glass is good and overall does not look too bad. (I have seen many worse) The interior I have to say looks very neat indeed! Tyres are in good nick and look evenly worn (not brand new). Just a bit of rust on the bootlid, where the spoiler meets the lid. Exhaust system fine.

I am not really worried about cosmetics here. As long as the thing does not look like a chop-job from the flats, i'm happy. In fact I like the condition. I don't WANT a car that is going to make me want to park on the other side of the carpark, or make me want to polish it every week-end. I have that already. I want a banger, but I want it cheap!

I realise however that selling a Code 3 car on later, can and will probably be a pain. I will have to get my mech to check it over, especially the suspension, as i am not sure about how well Bruce's BMW would have fixed it. No offence. I am going to have a look tomorrow and give it a closer look and a drive. I still need to check insurance and values on these cars.

Tell me what u guys recon. Remember, i am wanting this car to do some track days, so i would be looking at suspension bits anyway. Just need clarity on this code 3 issue. I am definatly going to offer a low amount to see what happens, if I am keen.

SHOT as always. Some pics:












 
J

Jandre

Guest
To my mind Code 3 on a cheap car is not always an issue.

To illustrate:
When we still had POFS (1996 e36 318i) my wife "met" a Run X in peak hour traffic. Pofs had a cracked bumper, a dented front kidney grill, and scuff marks on the bonnet. Not even a broken light or anything.

Total repair bill was R11 000. They did not replace the bonnet. It was just resprayed. Now, if they replaced the bonnet the car was a write off.

To be honest, that damage would have buffed right out. The cracked bumper could have been fixed in my garage.




So, in short, Code 3 on a cheap car is not always a deal breaker.
I would advise taking it to be thoroughly inspected though. You don't really want to go throw an e36 around the racetrack with a dodgy front suspension.

The front wheel might just cross the finish line before you do. Not good. :nonono::nonono:

 

Raybimmer

New member
I have an e36 325i 1992 model and can say that they are fun to drive with a 3.46 diff in them , it picks up speed from say 3000 and once over 4500 it really moves . I have not driven it for a year , I lent it to a friend and he thinks it great ( I pull away with the 328i on uphills !! )

They do understeer and could do with a bit of weight reduction . play around with wheel alignment and you can gain a bit . I think engine mods will be expensive to get good power so weight loss is relatively cheap way to gain performance .

Check the tyres for wear patterns - may show alignment problem .

Check the front anti roll bar and lower control arm mounts , steering rack mounting bolts etc .

Good luck .
 

ChrisBrand

Staff - Legal
Staff member
GConry is selling his 325i as well. Maybe have a look into that. Very clean. Although a AUTO i think manual swop won't be too hard
 

Andy1GP

///Member
Phoenix has a 325i for sale, he did a 328 stroker on it. Mechanically the car is very sound and definitely worth checking out. Uh oh, just saw you're in cape town :facepalm: the car is here in centurion highveld.
 
P

Psymon69

Guest
ChrisBrand said:
GConry is selling his 325i as well. Maybe have a look into that. Very clean. Although a AUTO i think manual swop won't be too hard

what he said:thumbs:
 

Gregmeister

Member
ChrisBrand said:
GConry is selling his 325i as well. Maybe have a look into that. Very clean. Although a AUTO i think manual swop won't be too hard

I had a look at GConry's 325i. Very nice indeed. And thats the problem. Too nice. Knowing me, I'll want to keep it that way...and I'm trying to avoid the urge to pamper this particular potential purchase. It will be the kind of car you don't spend half a tank of petrol on looking for the safest parking, or worry about that it might get cought in a hail storm, or if it gets beaten to an inch on the track once in a while...it's a purely fun purchase to be used as a plaything and runabout, as well as to learn from, as I want to feel free to tinker with it, without worrying about having no backup transport. That sort of thing...:rollsmile:
 

Gregmeister

Member
A bit of an update: So I went to see and drive the car. unfortunately it was dark and raining, but I had my Uber strong LED flashlight with. Car seems to be in okay nick. Drove very well actually. I have to say for a 20 year old car, it was impressive. I must admit, I only drove an E36 once before a while ago, but I remember going away from the experienced very impressed. There's genuinely something about these cars...oh and the 5 Speed gearbox...WHAT A GEM!! So spoke to my mech and he warned me about the pre-vanos engine's head issues. Apparently they like to crack when run hot and it is difficult and expensive to source replacements, because few of them are around. So I am going to check it out one more time on Sunday and make a decision. The issues there are with the car fall into the "anyway to do list", like pulling the head, replacing the head gasket, porting the head and swirling valves, along with modifying suspension, new uprated discs and pads and a more free flowing exhaust. Then later, depending on how it goes, we can move on to weight reduction, rollcages etc...:thumbs:
 
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