The previous owner was planning to give her a full restoration but never got around and eventually decided to get rid of her as is.
(Imagine the troubles I would have to go through if I picked the Alfa instead


Dropped the girl at my mechanic's shop for the night, I was still arranging a deal to get a unit with hoist for myself at the time.

This is how she looked:
- The thermostat housing wasn't fitted and I could see a decent amount of deposit in the water system.
- Some fuel lines were disconnected and the old petrol just stank like bad eggs
- Battery missing
- Alternator dangling
- Corrosion everywhere
I must admit, I have seen worse and a lot of people would have probably chucked the missing/broken parts and give her a go, but I wanted to do something more.
The idea of a full restoration wasn't even crossing my mind at that stage, I was planning to rebuild the engine and refresh bushing and suspensions... then it got out of hand.

Surprise! The boot (not trunk in Australia) was full of goodies:
- "200" cylinder head
- "731" cylinder head
- 528 intake manifold
- 535i ECU
- Cams, rockers, bits and bobs
At the time I had no idea on what a 200/731/885 head was, but I understood the current engine was the bottom of the line and the previous owner was attempting an upgrade.

Once the intake manifold was off I realised how much dirt was there after almost 40 years of service.


One the engine was out I couldn't wait to see how's head and block looked like. The 200 head was really bad, corroded mostly, thankfully the block was very healthy.
Due to the high mileage a re-bore and oversized pistons was mandatory.

(Date with my other girl


Sandblasting the engine bay.

Clean! All the paint is gone.

I quickly moved the car to the Panel Beater to apply the colour before the surface start rusting, I live on the coast and the air is... salty!
The colour I choose is Nardograu.

Now the car didn't need to move for any other job I decided it was time to remove the front and rear suspensions.

And remove the fuel and brake system. I was really unhappy on how the floor looked like, it was probably at this stage when I decided it was time to strip and refresh everything.

Brake/Fuel lines would have to come down as well.

In the meantime I started sandblasting the suspensions components...

...and the calipers. (Only the one on the bottom right was done at that stage)



Then it was time to respray all the sandblasted bits.

Brake/Fuel lines sanded and ready for a fresh coat meanwhile all the suspensions bits are drying up.

Primer coat and black coat done.

Those muddy clips gotta be washed!

Much better.

Brackets polished.

The underbody got steam washed and coated with "Raptor Tough Undercoat"

Detail on the clips.

Time to fix this mess, new fuel filter and fuel pump obviously.

Fuel pump and filter fitted, I couldn't find the fuel pump rubber enclosure so I decided to clean it.

Front suspensions needed new shocks absorber so bad, the car was really bouncy.
While I was there I decided to refresh the springs. Yellow should stick with the gray panels.

Ouch! That was a scary moment, still alive tho


Rear shocks replaced too (KYB), springs refreshed.

New suspensions and steering arms received.

Tie rods and steering rack assembled.