The real sleeper is the Portuguese/Italian specific E30 320is, which had a slightly detuned M3 engine, same LSD and gearbox, but with a much more subdued exterior. These can still be had for almost acceptable prices, at least compared to "proper" M cars, but they are in short supply and few are found on the market in Europe. Out of the regular line-up, late years 318is is an excellent vehicle too, and you could spec a rear LSD on that too as an option back in the day.
I bought a used one myself. A very.. very.. used one. Being the first driver since 1999, it had ONLY problems. It was the worst financial decision i've made, but all of the mechanical problems aside from some smaller things are fixed, and it has NEVER left me stranded. It is the most reliable daily driver I have ever had. The M20 is such a bulletproof drivetrain, efficient and easy to make power with if you're handy, and even the ZF 4HP22 automatic slushbox feels phenominal. (the autos are surprisingly great!) It shifts as if it's brand new, doesn't make any noise (aside from the classic e30 diff clunks and the TC locking at higher speeds). If you fix alot of the big issues like some wiring, water leaks, vacuum leaks, and fuel delivery, it'll get you from not only point A to point B, but also wherever else. I will only ever only the E30 as a daily as of now. This car is my entire life.
@@Robwra320 your a clown, imagine trying to justify smoking by saying that. Many people in my own family have died to lung cancer from smoking cigarettes. Please just dont do it
@@Robwra320the point is that this guy stopped smoking and your encouraging him by saying it’s not even that bad. Smoking is not good for you. No one asked about ur random study nor do I believe it
I once owned an E30 for 3 months & it was the happiest 3 months of my life. Then I sold it & was even happier. It's a great car, but you REALLY need to enjoy spend half your life wrenching on one in the garage to own one.
Then you bought a very abused one. These cars are actually pretty bulletproof, not a lot of electrical stuff going on so if you know how to use a wrench you will go a long way with this car.
My mom had a 325e sedan as a company car in 1988, working for a US based parts supplier. It was a harrowing experience looking at the option list. Power steering was optional. Amazing car at the time.
I used to have a 86" 323i coupe as my first car in 2007, AMAZING car, but a massive pain in the arse. Rust in the floor, in the firewall. steaeing rack was a constant issue, used piles of fuel until i had the whole fuel system re-done, allllll sorts of problems. Having said that , its the most fun I've had driving a car, ever. Unreal balance, not too much power so you can thrash it on a twisty road. I loved it, i LOVED it.
Knowing these cars inside out for the past few years, I can safely say you did a good job presenting this car and it's pros and cons. That shows you're a good, honest, hardworking channel that walk the walk and talk the talk. Best of luck as you have a great future ahead of you keep it up.
Happen to be taking some time out in my E30 when this popped up. Been waiting for this to drop since seeing your posts on the groups. Rust is definitely a problem on old cars, but in my experience these have better corrosion resistance than Australian and Japanese cars from the same era. I think the thing that eats / kills these is shitty mods when they were cheap hacks. ‘Should you buy one?!’ ‘If you’re going to do shitty mods and destroy these great cars - NO then you should definitely NOT buy one’. Also what goes wrong ‘literally everything is prone to failure on these due to age’. They’re quite reliable and simple cars, but age and neglect get to everything. All the bushing and other bits will need replacing. The auto boxes have a design fault where if they are revved in park or neutral they build pressure and destroy the box. The M40 engine in the S2 318i is a bit crap. Not terrible but the worst of the engines. Some parts are simply NLA and make sourcing some things tricky, BUT there is surprisingly good support for them on the whole. Seats also rot and fall apart in Australian climate, sport seats cost a fortune even in terrible shape. Centre consoles bubble. This one interior is in good shape because the owner(s) clearly care for it and replace dodgy bits. Those front seats are from a coupe. The interiors do hold up pretty well on the whole though. Fun fact, they weigh about as much as many MX-5s, while being a lot more practical. The touring wasn’t offered here and you didn’t include the TC Baur (which is different to the convertible). All of the Z cars have been based on the 3 series platform / underpinnings. The Z3 on the E36 (with E30 rear end), Z4 on the E46. 2nd Gen Z4 on the E90 and so on. Simple, surprisingly reliable engineering in a light, RWD chassis that was made in huge quantities with a massive cult following. Beautiful, simple, understated design that made the Germans so good to start with. These were criticised when they came out for being ‘old fashioned’ and not cutting edge ‘trendy’ design. They were distinctly a BMW. Like when cars were a design evolution, not trying to reimagine the brand ‘face’ every generation. Like what Porsche does with the 911. Iconic, not brash and overt. Just a brilliant, brilliant vehicle.
Loved you when you sold me my first Roland TD-12 and have loved you ever since. Best car presenter on RUclips and a pleasure to watch. Best E30 review and we have one! Love your work
Found a e30 320i convertible 8 years ago for my father in law. $6000 paid. Fixed the lack of previous 10 years of maintenance and it was mega reliable. Easy to maintain
I’ve owned my 325i since 1989 new. I put a million miles on the original engine. It’s been modded quite extensively when I did the rebuild. Still original paint and blacked out and definitely a looker. The biggest problems for me were the wheel bearings, only one window regulator, water pump, valve cover gasket. FYI my door handles are not plastic.
Love this car. I used to own one. Auto, 4cylinder, 318i, 1990. The air con was frustrating not to have. I was tempted to buy another one but I couldn’t justify it. Wanted a safe car this time with aircon and less maintenance costs.
I’m NOT a BMW fan personally but they’ve made some cracker models. I visited the BMW museum in Germany 🇩🇪 and it was an eye opener some beautiful examples.
My dad bought me my first e30 325i convertible when i was 16. Being into cars and loving all different types, the only car for me is an e30. My dream is to engine swap it and give it some more power. id be just as happy maintaining it and keeping it nice stock. Buying a new car today just doesnt appeal to me.
They are incredible cars, but IMHO, it's worth spending the money buying a well-maintained example. These cars were made back when BMW still handmade their cars, hence the reason they've lasted so long. These cars were handmade (that ended in the nineties), every part of the car was designed to be taken apart and serviced, not just replaced and thrown away. You can still buy one that was poorly maintained, go through the car, and fix everything, and you don't need to be a certified BMW Tech to do it.
My late father’s first BMW was a slightly used 1977 320i in beige!🤢 That was in 1978. Subsequently dad had several 3.0s models over the years & his last was a 735IL. Fantastic cars, all of them! No major issues & both 3.0s models had well over 350,000km. One needed new rings & surprisingly dad’s German born mechanic put in a set of VC Valiant rings!🤣👍🏼
In 1988-89 my then girlfriend used to let me drive her brand new 318i.....it was fabulous. I loved it more than I loved her!!! I'd happily buy an MX-5 today.
@0:27 72k for an example with that mileage? I can tell the previous owner did a lot of work (and got ripped off themselves) but that still seems like a rip-off.
NIce video. Just to add, the 333i we did was cool. but our 325iS was way better. was a 2.7 (worked 2.5i) with 155kw. we couldnt get an M3 so made our own one.
Funny thing about the power windows on the front. My old 2007 B7 had exactly the same setup, power on front, manual in the back. The car was loaded with options, but still no power windows in the back. Just doesn't make sense to me.
Love these. I have the younger cousin, the mk3 golf, which I doubt will ever be reviewed on this channel as they are rather rare in Australia. I would still prefer the 'what goes wrong' to be later on in the video like it used to be :)
Wtf? Got a golf 1 ‘78 and an e30 convertible ‘87. They are far from family imho🫣 no hate for mk3’s tho, my wife allways drove those till 6 or 7 years ago. Honest and reliable, espacially in diesel version👍 but rust for days😇 enjoy it and have a nice day👍
@@jensbeernaert8636 cousin is a bit of a stretch I'm aware but a lot of the same interior design and materials 😂 mine is a 1997 1.8 petrol 90PS with 175000km on it, no engine problems whatsoever and the clutch is still the factory one
Considering the age of your mk3, that’s relativly low milage. But that’s only positive😅 a lot of smiles still to go. But still, original clutch: decent driving from you👍 and even if it goes, it’s relatively cheap (the best thing about old golfs). basic maintanence and a 1.8 petrol won’t go wrong, unless the mounts fall out from rust on the body🤪 but maybe you are located somewhere where that’s not an issue, not lucky on that front over here😅
@@jensbeernaert8636 eh, I'm close to the ocean (brisbane east) but only spots of rust at the moment, underside looks fantastic. The paint has a couple rust spots especially around the top of the windscreen but apart from that yeah it's been great. I have a mk3 parts car with like 300000km on it exact same spec, only had to swap air condenser and oil sensor plug thing
Hmm salty ocean 😅 must be beautyfull tough👍 great you’ve got the spare and especially great you haven’t really needed it yet💪 keep it going and keep on enjoying!
Excuse me you didn’t say (what goes wrong with them, well I’m not a qualified mechanic, I can’t tell you, luckily Jim is ), please don’t forget this iconic line
Nice review Adam. I have an 09 135i MSport E88 with the same engine. All issues are fixed and there are a few. Plastic charge pipe changed from plastic to metal, electronic water pump replaced, oil filer housing removed and replaced with new gaskets/seals/o-rings (and it still weeps a bit of oil) and other oil leaks taken care of. I’m now waiting for one or both turbos to give up where I may swap to a single turbo and out in a bigger rad pack. 225kW and 400Nm are so much fun to potter around town with, but even more so on the open road. It pulls from virtually “any speed” to “way too rapid” in the blink of an eye. Lloyd
These things are at an age where You shouldn’t be asking what goes wrong? Instead ask what do I need to do to keep it on the road & in a decent enough condition?Chances are pretty much everything will be needing some form of attention. The fuel system, brakes, suspension absolutely bloody everything. However the biggest killer of these cars is RUST.
A bit unfair with the rust everywhere comment, if I remember rightly the body work on these cars could outlast most other manufacturers from this period, especially Japanese which were notorious for rot in the 80's (although mechanically and electrically better than most). Any vehicle this age will require a complete tear down and all perishables and consumables replaced (ruɓbers, seals, hoses, even some wiring and connectors) to make properly roadworthy and less troublesome like Jim said, regardless of manufacturer. These do rot, but were above average for the time in terms of longevity. BMW and most of the other premium German makers did have reasonably good factory body preperation techniques and protection for this period compared to most other manufacturers, Volvo were also good. Australia is odd compared to the rest of the World when it comes to the value of older vehicles, maybe because the climate is kinder to sheet metal in certain areas, although the fierce sun degrades plastic, paint and rubber rapidly. Vehicles of a certain make, type and age that would be extremely cheap or worthless in Europe seem to hold value better in Oz. Australians seem to hang onto vehicles longer (which I like), in Northern Europe the average life span is 12 to 15 years, anything older is a rare survivor, manufacturers do not expect 20 year life spans out of vehicles. Great videos, get to see vehicles I remember here in the past that are very rare here now. Would be interesting to see a video on journo reviews of vehicles in the past and if the journo hype of the time stands the test of time today?
The e30 was a well built, robust car for it's time. They're just very old now, so you buy based on how well maintained / rust free the car is, not kms. There's some very ratty LS400s around by now too, but that's ok - they're 30 years old! My e30 has over 400,000km on it and still going strong. Most parts are cheap for them & they don't rust as badly as Japanese cars of the same era. How many 80s Celicas, Supras or Corollas do you see around these days? There are more e30s despite the Toyotas selling in much larger numbers at the time.
Yes this was the best designed BMW. But they are very old now and the only way to fix one of these is a total rebuild. Total rebuild, every nut, bolt, rubber, glass and sticker.
Disagree. Yes, there are plenty of clapped out ones. But also plenty of excellent ones. Mine is an 86 (38 years old) and is in better shape than many 15 year old cars I’ve driven.
Will definitely admit it is a good looking car the E30 wagon but the ride height of your review car would most likely get you canaried over here. I'm honestly suprised how many kms on the clock she had and bar the dashboard was in pretty bloody good nick. I definitely didn't expect the visceral reaction to an electric motor swap Hullsy had though I do agree unmolested is best. Good work as always guys and look forward to Sunday's video as per usual 👍
Love the content mate. It would be great if you stopped insulting smokers every video (no I’m not a smoker). Yes, people smoke (regardless of how you feel about it which is evident given the constant remarks). People also used to smoke in the 80’s, 90’s and every other era you review too. Looking forward to the next video! Cheers
My first car was an 1987 325e coupe. Was bought off a family friend for $1200 and then I sold it for $450 because the gear box gave me problems and kept slipping. Overall a good 1st car bit it was so expensive to maintain. I had an aftermarket sound system so driving this around was cool
@@mattdebyl8806 I'd prefer having it able to tow a heavier load & have a full boot. It probably only handles 800kg dry with just the driver for towing with the stock engines.
@@ultimablackmage keep in mind they’re a bloody small car. I think they’re rated at 1200kg from memory. The 2.5 I6 is around the same output as most 2.5 4s (like in forester and Mazda CX5 for example). But the car itself weighs 400-500kg less. With weights around that should be able to pull it’s rated weight without much drama. Obviously if you need more than that, it’s not really going to fly. It’s a car smaller than a Mazda 2. If you need more, an E23 7 series or E34 5 series with M30 should be able to do 1500-1600kg. E34 was even offered in the Touring here (wagon) unlike the E30. E34s are E23s are usually cheaper than E30s anyway. E34 also came in the V8s later in life. E30, even with more grunt, isn’t going to increase in towing capacity really.
A while ago I asked you to review a Brera hoping you’d convince me not to buy one. Well I just bought one, come review it and tell me it wasn’t a heart over head choice 🙏🏼
3 series design has actually progressively gotten better...until the G80 M3 when it fell off a cliff. Regular G80s aren't bad looking considering what BMW did with the 4 and 7 series, but the M3 is an eyesore.
Hi Adam, what is the go with the late up load? Normally your videos appear bang on at 6pm but the last couple of weeks they have been running late. The cog for the speedo disintegrating is a common problem on the VS commodore as well.
The safety is terrible by today’s standards but it was decent in the day. I always wanted to own one of these but sadly I think they are just too old now. I still love them though.
The real sleeper is the Portuguese/Italian specific E30 320is, which had a slightly detuned M3 engine, same LSD and gearbox, but with a much more subdued exterior. These can still be had for almost acceptable prices, at least compared to "proper" M cars, but they are in short supply and few are found on the market in Europe. Out of the regular line-up, late years 318is is an excellent vehicle too, and you could spec a rear LSD on that too as an option back in the day.
This was peak BMW design. E30, E38, E39
G80 is peak design bud.
@@madrx2yeh u lost ur mind
Yep. Grill and lights look so much better than modern BMWs
@@madrx2 if u acc think the g80 m4 is the best looking BMW you’ve lost ur mind
@@madrx2 n why h saying bud ur probably like 14yrs old
I bought a used one myself. A very.. very.. used one. Being the first driver since 1999, it had ONLY problems. It was the worst financial decision i've made, but all of the mechanical problems aside from some smaller things are fixed, and it has NEVER left me stranded. It is the most reliable daily driver I have ever had. The M20 is such a bulletproof drivetrain, efficient and easy to make power with if you're handy, and even the ZF 4HP22 automatic slushbox feels phenominal. (the autos are surprisingly great!) It shifts as if it's brand new, doesn't make any noise (aside from the classic e30 diff clunks and the TC locking at higher speeds). If you fix alot of the big issues like some wiring, water leaks, vacuum leaks, and fuel delivery, it'll get you from not only point A to point B, but also wherever else. I will only ever only the E30 as a daily as of now. This car is my entire life.
Your story seems to be similar to mine. Mine is a 1938 316 converted to a 318i. I bought mine running though.
Adam's comments on smoking actually made me stop smoking. Much love from South Africa😂🇿🇦
@@Robwra320 your a clown, imagine trying to justify smoking by saying that. Many people in my own family have died to lung cancer from smoking cigarettes. Please just dont do it
@@Robwra320the point is that this guy stopped smoking and your encouraging him by saying it’s not even that bad. Smoking is not good for you. No one asked about ur random study nor do I believe it
@@Robwra320 you are so in your own little world I feel sorry for you. I have not spread any fake information
A simple Google would show you that even in the most polluted places in the world, smoking is still more harmful
Two hardest things that I have done in my life are raising two kids and quitting smoking and I am sure glad that I did both!
I once owned an E30 for 3 months & it was the happiest 3 months of my life. Then I sold it & was even happier.
It's a great car, but you REALLY need to enjoy spend half your life wrenching on one in the garage to own one.
Keeping one original is enough of a challenge let alone modifying one.
Then you bought a very abused one. These cars are actually pretty bulletproof, not a lot of electrical stuff going on so if you know how to use a wrench you will go a long way with this car.
My mom had a 325e sedan as a company car in 1988, working for a US based parts supplier. It was a harrowing experience looking at the option list. Power steering was optional. Amazing car at the time.
I used to have a 86" 323i coupe as my first car in 2007, AMAZING car, but a massive pain in the arse. Rust in the floor, in the firewall. steaeing rack was a constant issue, used piles of fuel until i had the whole fuel system re-done, allllll sorts of problems.
Having said that , its the most fun I've had driving a car, ever. Unreal balance, not too much power so you can thrash it on a twisty road. I loved it, i LOVED it.
Knowing these cars inside out for the past few years, I can safely say you did a good job presenting this car and it's pros and cons. That shows you're a good, honest, hardworking channel that walk the walk and talk the talk. Best of luck as you have a great future ahead of you keep it up.
I want to do a steam engine swap.
basically sounds like it with how much the m20 screams like a typewriter
What happened to Jim's intro? "Mechanically, what goes wrong? I can't tell you, because I am not a qualified mechanic..."
So observant!
Just missed it is all. Will be back next week
Happen to be taking some time out in my E30 when this popped up. Been waiting for this to drop since seeing your posts on the groups. Rust is definitely a problem on old cars, but in my experience these have better corrosion resistance than Australian and Japanese cars from the same era. I think the thing that eats / kills these is shitty mods when they were cheap hacks. ‘Should you buy one?!’ ‘If you’re going to do shitty mods and destroy these great cars - NO then you should definitely NOT buy one’. Also what goes wrong ‘literally everything is prone to failure on these due to age’. They’re quite reliable and simple cars, but age and neglect get to everything. All the bushing and other bits will need replacing. The auto boxes have a design fault where if they are revved in park or neutral they build pressure and destroy the box. The M40 engine in the S2 318i is a bit crap. Not terrible but the worst of the engines. Some parts are simply NLA and make sourcing some things tricky, BUT there is surprisingly good support for them on the whole. Seats also rot and fall apart in Australian climate, sport seats cost a fortune even in terrible shape. Centre consoles bubble. This one interior is in good shape because the owner(s) clearly care for it and replace dodgy bits. Those front seats are from a coupe. The interiors do hold up pretty well on the whole though. Fun fact, they weigh about as much as many MX-5s, while being a lot more practical. The touring wasn’t offered here and you didn’t include the TC Baur (which is different to the convertible). All of the Z cars have been based on the 3 series platform / underpinnings. The Z3 on the E36 (with E30 rear end), Z4 on the E46. 2nd Gen Z4 on the E90 and so on. Simple, surprisingly reliable engineering in a light, RWD chassis that was made in huge quantities with a massive cult following. Beautiful, simple, understated design that made the Germans so good to start with. These were criticised when they came out for being ‘old fashioned’ and not cutting edge ‘trendy’ design. They were distinctly a BMW. Like when cars were a design evolution, not trying to reimagine the brand ‘face’ every generation. Like what Porsche does with the 911. Iconic, not brash and overt. Just a brilliant, brilliant vehicle.
I agree with the styling comments. There’s no current bmw that stirs my hearts like the 90-00s bmws.
Loved you when you sold me my first Roland TD-12 and have loved you ever since. Best car presenter on RUclips and a pleasure to watch. Best E30 review and we have one! Love your work
You’re too kind. - AK
In order to improve aerodynamics, golf balls have those little indentations. That's why the roof lining actually has those rivets. Aerodynamics.
Found a e30 320i convertible 8 years ago for my father in law. $6000 paid. Fixed the lack of previous 10 years of maintenance and it was mega reliable. Easy to maintain
I’ve owned my 325i since 1989 new. I put a million miles on the original engine. It’s been modded quite extensively when I did the rebuild. Still original paint and blacked out and definitely a looker. The biggest problems for me were the wheel bearings, only one window regulator, water pump, valve cover gasket. FYI my door handles are not plastic.
Love this car. I used to own one. Auto, 4cylinder, 318i, 1990. The air con was frustrating not to have. I was tempted to buy another one but I couldn’t justify it. Wanted a safe car this time with aircon and less maintenance costs.
I’m NOT a BMW fan personally but they’ve made some cracker models.
I visited the BMW museum in Germany 🇩🇪 and it was an eye opener some beautiful examples.
My dad bought me my first e30 325i convertible when i was 16. Being into cars and loving all different types, the only car for me is an e30. My dream is to engine swap it and give it some more power. id be just as happy maintaining it and keeping it nice stock. Buying a new car today just doesnt appeal to me.
They are incredible cars, but IMHO, it's worth spending the money buying a well-maintained example. These cars were made back when BMW still handmade their cars, hence the reason they've lasted so long. These cars were handmade (that ended in the nineties), every part of the car was designed to be taken apart and serviced, not just replaced and thrown away. You can still buy one that was poorly maintained, go through the car, and fix everything, and you don't need to be a certified BMW Tech to do it.
My late father’s first BMW was a slightly used 1977 320i in beige!🤢 That was in 1978. Subsequently dad had several 3.0s models over the years & his last was a 735IL. Fantastic cars, all of them! No major issues & both 3.0s models had well over 350,000km. One needed new rings & surprisingly dad’s German born mechanic put in a set of VC Valiant rings!🤣👍🏼
Great work guys. Excellent review as usual. Love to see an e39 review 😏
That wagon tho 😍
600,000 Km’s! 😲 That’s impressive
In 1988-89 my then girlfriend used to let me drive her brand new 318i.....it was fabulous. I loved it more than I loved her!!! I'd happily buy an MX-5 today.
Great video. Who remembers the check panel being featured on Sale of the Century back in the day?
e30 trailing arm suspension is reliable but BAD for performance. e36 update trailing arm is peak trailing arm design.
Review of the year
the cup holder shoe got me off guard as I am just rewatching Married with Children :) .....this is a damn good review, rare this day and age!
@0:27 72k for an example with that mileage? I can tell the previous owner did a lot of work (and got ripped off themselves) but that still seems like a rip-off.
Well I mean I am looking to get a GS 300h from 2013 soon. Its listed for 15000€ or for aussies its 24k with 82k miles or 132k kilometres.
Good to see some 80s cars on this.
That parking pole is so JDM vibe
E30 M3 needs a feature here!! Would you also be interested in reviewing a Clubman JCW?
NIce video. Just to add, the 333i we did was cool. but our 325iS was way better. was a 2.7 (worked 2.5i) with 155kw. we couldnt get an M3 so made our own one.
My new favourite episode, and of all the cars reviewed, maybe the one I most want to buy
Also another thing worth noting is that it can be hard to find affordable parts in Australia.
These vintage cars are cool.
Funny thing about the power windows on the front. My old 2007 B7 had exactly the same setup, power on front, manual in the back. The car was loaded with options, but still no power windows in the back. Just doesn't make sense to me.
Not me already considering one for the past 3 weeks.
N you make one of these videos about it ❤️
Love these. I have the younger cousin, the mk3 golf, which I doubt will ever be reviewed on this channel as they are rather rare in Australia. I would still prefer the 'what goes wrong' to be later on in the video like it used to be :)
Wtf? Got a golf 1 ‘78 and an e30 convertible ‘87. They are far from family imho🫣 no hate for mk3’s tho, my wife allways drove those till 6 or 7 years ago. Honest and reliable, espacially in diesel version👍 but rust for days😇 enjoy it and have a nice day👍
@@jensbeernaert8636 cousin is a bit of a stretch I'm aware but a lot of the same interior design and materials 😂 mine is a 1997 1.8 petrol 90PS with 175000km on it, no engine problems whatsoever and the clutch is still the factory one
Considering the age of your mk3, that’s relativly low milage. But that’s only positive😅 a lot of smiles still to go. But still, original clutch: decent driving from you👍 and even if it goes, it’s relatively cheap (the best thing about old golfs). basic maintanence and a 1.8 petrol won’t go wrong, unless the mounts fall out from rust on the body🤪 but maybe you are located somewhere where that’s not an issue, not lucky on that front over here😅
@@jensbeernaert8636 eh, I'm close to the ocean (brisbane east) but only spots of rust at the moment, underside looks fantastic. The paint has a couple rust spots especially around the top of the windscreen but apart from that yeah it's been great. I have a mk3 parts car with like 300000km on it exact same spec, only had to swap air condenser and oil sensor plug thing
Hmm salty ocean 😅 must be beautyfull tough👍 great you’ve got the spare and especially great you haven’t really needed it yet💪 keep it going and keep on enjoying!
As much as I'm aware of how big cars have become, it's hard to wrap my mind around this being the same size as a Mazda 2 sedan.
Even e36 looks small in a carpark surrounded by modern cars. Similar to new corolla
Yep. Mine is smaller than my Swift Sport (although a little longer, not being a sedan and all). It’s not the same size, it’s smaller.
Excuse me you didn’t say (what goes wrong with them, well I’m not a qualified mechanic, I can’t tell you, luckily Jim is ), please don’t forget this iconic line
Nice review Adam. I have an 09 135i MSport E88 with the same engine. All issues are fixed and there are a few. Plastic charge pipe changed from plastic to metal, electronic water pump replaced, oil filer housing removed and replaced with new gaskets/seals/o-rings (and it still weeps a bit of oil) and other oil leaks taken care of. I’m now waiting for one or both turbos to give up where I may swap to a single turbo and out in a bigger rad pack. 225kW and 400Nm are so much fun to potter around town with, but even more so on the open road. It pulls from virtually “any speed” to “way too rapid” in the blink of an eye. Lloyd
So, you would frown upon a corroded rear mudguard lip on a coupe and corrosion on the mating of the rear window and the upper mudguard?
Would have saved so much time to just point out where it doesn't get rust.
One of the best episodes in awhile 🤣
E46 after this, please
Driving around Carlingford. NICe!
These things are at an age where
You shouldn’t be asking what goes wrong? Instead ask what do I need to do to keep it on the road & in a decent enough condition?Chances are pretty much everything will be needing some form of attention. The fuel system, brakes, suspension absolutely bloody everything. However the biggest killer of these cars is RUST.
love the cup holder
These videos really are nice to watch!
P.S I think I saw you today (stuck in traffic...😞) while on my bike
I want a current version of THIS car. Keep the size and shape as it was, just new motor and some rudimentary modern technology.
i have a 1992 with 45k miles. drives like a dream and i can drop the top. its my daily.
e30 325i (auto DX)
Nice shoes Adam 😅
haha doing my research on e30s which will be my second car next to my NA miata
A bit unfair with the rust everywhere comment, if I remember rightly the body work on these cars could outlast most other manufacturers from this period, especially Japanese which were notorious for rot in the 80's (although mechanically and electrically better than most). Any vehicle this age will require a complete tear down and all perishables and consumables replaced (ruɓbers, seals, hoses, even some wiring and connectors) to make properly roadworthy and less troublesome like Jim said, regardless of manufacturer. These do rot, but were above average for the time in terms of longevity. BMW and most of the other premium German makers did have reasonably good factory body preperation techniques and protection for this period compared to most other manufacturers, Volvo were also good. Australia is odd compared to the rest of the World when it comes to the value of older vehicles, maybe because the climate is kinder to sheet metal in certain areas, although the fierce sun degrades plastic, paint and rubber rapidly. Vehicles of a certain make, type and age that would be extremely cheap or worthless in Europe seem to hold value better in Oz. Australians seem to hang onto vehicles longer (which I like), in Northern Europe the average life span is 12 to 15 years, anything older is a rare survivor, manufacturers do not expect 20 year life spans out of vehicles. Great videos, get to see vehicles I remember here in the past that are very rare here now. Would be interesting to see a video on journo reviews of vehicles in the past and if the journo hype of the time stands the test of time today?
Al Pyna, Ack Schnitzel, Hart G, Hoffmeister kink... maaateee 🤣
Imagine a Lexus LS 400 from 1993 and comparing it's build quality versus this BMW. Still, we appreciate the retro review ❤.
The e30 was a well built, robust car for it's time. They're just very old now, so you buy based on how well maintained / rust free the car is, not kms. There's some very ratty LS400s around by now too, but that's ok - they're 30 years old! My e30 has over 400,000km on it and still going strong. Most parts are cheap for them & they don't rust as badly as Japanese cars of the same era. How many 80s Celicas, Supras or Corollas do you see around these days? There are more e30s despite the Toyotas selling in much larger numbers at the time.
Two every different cars. I've had both, I could write an essay haha. But both have their own pros and cons, especially 30 years on.
I am a little bit in love with the presenter. He is great !
Yes this was the best designed BMW. But they are very old now and the only way to fix one of these is a total rebuild. Total rebuild, every nut, bolt, rubber, glass and sticker.
Disagree. Yes, there are plenty of clapped out ones. But also plenty of excellent ones. Mine is an 86 (38 years old) and is in better shape than many 15 year old cars I’ve driven.
You don't need to do a total rebuild lol.
Nice video mate
If you're ever up in QLD, I have a bone stock 1M, and a very highly modified 1M
I have a turbo na8c eunos roadster if you want to use for a review
Will definitely admit it is a good looking car the E30 wagon but the ride height of your review car would most likely get you canaried over here.
I'm honestly suprised how many kms on the clock she had and bar the dashboard was in pretty bloody good nick.
I definitely didn't expect the visceral reaction to an electric motor swap Hullsy had though I do agree unmolested is best.
Good work as always guys and look forward to Sunday's video as per usual 👍
Yeah loved Jim in this.
My brother had an 1987 325is, to this day he misses that car.
How i would like to see an Evo 325is even mk 3 vr6 or Opel boss, yeah I'm from South Africa (Soweto)
For the heat you can always roll the windows down. ;)
If it’s got a standard system. Leave it the heck alone:)
Love the content mate. It would be great if you stopped insulting smokers every video (no I’m not a smoker). Yes, people smoke (regardless of how you feel about it which is evident given the constant remarks). People also used to smoke in the 80’s, 90’s and every other era you review too. Looking forward to the next video! Cheers
Thanks! Glad you like the videos.
Though we only talk about smoking, not smokers. The people themselves are lovely
@@ReDrivenperhaps remove the remarks all together and everybody wins 😎
Zip ties are underrated...especially the stainless steel ones🤣
If you can come over to Perth, I have a car you can review.
Have so many questions, like what is Adam doing with a sparkly high heeled disco boot 😂
The bigger question should be, why wouldn’t I have a sparkly high heeled disco boot? - AK
Do a redriven on cortina mk3
My first car was an 1987 325e coupe. Was bought off a family friend for $1200 and then I sold it for $450 because the gear box gave me problems and kept slipping. Overall a good 1st car bit it was so expensive to maintain. I had an aftermarket sound system so driving this around was cool
Nice boots Adam!
2.5 could not carry petrol till them 318.is not bad on petrol
Beautiful car, but a beefier engine swap would possibly make it a perfect utility vehicle. I prefer the 80s & 90s BMWs visually.
The standard engine options are plenty most of the time. They’re very light compared to cars these days.
@@mattdebyl8806 I'd prefer having it able to tow a heavier load & have a full boot. It probably only handles 800kg dry with just the driver for towing with the stock engines.
@@ultimablackmage keep in mind they’re a bloody small car. I think they’re rated at 1200kg from memory. The 2.5 I6 is around the same output as most 2.5 4s (like in forester and Mazda CX5 for example). But the car itself weighs 400-500kg less. With weights around that should be able to pull it’s rated weight without much drama. Obviously if you need more than that, it’s not really going to fly. It’s a car smaller than a Mazda 2. If you need more, an E23 7 series or E34 5 series with M30 should be able to do 1500-1600kg. E34 was even offered in the Touring here (wagon) unlike the E30. E34s are E23s are usually cheaper than E30s anyway. E34 also came in the V8s later in life. E30, even with more grunt, isn’t going to increase in towing capacity really.
oooo the cv pro's very nice
You make this car look tiny and to be fair in today's terms it is.
Car review suggestion: Maserati Ghibli. They're now incredibly affordable you can tell everyone that you drive a Maserati 😄
A while ago I asked you to review a Brera hoping you’d convince me not to buy one. Well I just bought one, come review it and tell me it wasn’t a heart over head choice 🙏🏼
Soon as we can find a Brera with an owner willing to lend it to us, we’ll be on it. - AK
@@ReDriven pick me, pick me!
3 series design has actually progressively gotten better...until the G80 M3 when it fell off a cliff. Regular G80s aren't bad looking considering what BMW did with the 4 and 7 series, but the M3 is an eyesore.
Hi Adam, what is the go with the late up load? Normally your videos appear bang on at 6pm but the last couple of weeks they have been running late. The cog for the speedo disintegrating is a common problem on the VS commodore as well.
Late uploads = life getting in the way sometimes
Not in the market for any BMW. Here to listen to anti smoking health messages and to see which shoes Adam is wearing 😂
E34 is the smart mans E30
In hey guys got a 2020 RS3 Stage1 probably Australia’s lowest klm which you can review
Mate can you shoot us a message on fb or insta? - AK
04:15 AL PINE A 😂
Ack schnitzel
The safety is terrible by today’s standards but it was decent in the day. I always wanted to own one of these but sadly I think they are just too old now. I still love them though.
Soooo... E39 next?
better than all the cliched looking modern bmws, or majority of modern cars for that matter
An E30 M3 Evo 2 might be nice 😨
Might be 😂
You can test my 850R wagon, unlike yours it will not catch fire.
Great safety section tbh
this era bmw was the peak and anyone who tells you their unrelible, just bought a shitty one now their painting all cars with their bias brush
Mate Rimac did an EV swap on his E 30 and look where is he now owning Bugatti
It’s too bad you didn’t have Tony Longhurst to show you how to drive it as intended.
Nice shoes
It's 'Alpeeena'
I know, just taking the piss. - AK
Lol i bought my e30 with a blown motor for $500 I decided to barra swap it😂