ManiacLachy wrote:Actually, if I were in there I would be in all sorts of financial trouble.
Therein lies the problem!
My game plan is approximately as follows:
Buy VVT 1.8
Install VVT 1.8
Make all of the things work (VVT, knock sensor, 36-2 trigger, etc)
Do supporting mods (Flex fuel, big injectors, fuel pump, fuel reg, other things)
Buy Turbo
Install Turbo
Enjoy car
Get bored
Build bottom end
Wind up boost
Scare myself and passengers
Turn boost back down
Build top end (cams, port work, etc)
Turn boost up more than last time
Continue to be scared, turn it back down.
New transmission solution (BMW Swap)
Turn boost up more than last time
Continue to be scared, turn it back down.
...repeat last 2 steps for for several years until "be scared" stops happening, then as they say, it'll be "done" - but this is a multi-year plan of financial idiocy, and the girlfriend wants to buy a house, so there's going to be a long-term hiatus on the plan at some point while we do that. I kinda want to get to step number "Enjoy Car" before we buy a house, but ... that won't be my decision haha
To give you a timeline, I think I'm at 6 - 9 months at the "Buy VVT" step - it wasn't until I got it home and actually had a look at it (it was in my sister's shed for a while) that I decided to put a "refresh VVT" step in between step #1 & #2 - so as you can see, I'm in a huuuge hurry!
The basic idea is to only do things once along the way - If I need to do bearings now, then I'll do rods and pistons and get it balanced. But that'll turn it into a longer-term project before it actually gets into the car - AND I want to get it in the car and make the electronics work. I know it's not really hard, but I'd rather end up with a car that's not running right on old internals than one that's got gremlins on a multi-thousand dollar engine that needs to be broken in.
So I'm very much sitting on the fence, leaning towards "she'll be right" and slapping it all in on the existing internals, and hoping the state of the engine is more cosmetic than not.