2012: Purchased Miata, Laid off 3 days later. 4th place overall (default!), NWOR SCCA (RTR)
2013: Budget RTR build, massive increase in participation, 3rd place overall, NWOR SCCA (RTR)
2014: Suspension and more active competition in STS. 3rd place overall, NWOR SCCA
2015: Time for some "form" and vintage styling (while still racing NWOR, of course).
Check out my Miata Journal: http://mazdaroadster.net/showthread....-miata-journal
kung fu jesus (07-18-2014),tsingson (08-04-2014)
Plastic radiators, don't like them. If you have the money, upgrade to metal. If not, get the OEM. The main point is if your plastic has turned brown, you are on borrowed time.
If you think the Miatas are bad, you should see the shit storm the plastic in the cooling systems of BMWs brings.
My 91 still has original brown rad, all original hoses and as far as i know original water pump. All good. After reading KFJ's maintenance advise in another thread I bought all new OEM cooling parts and I plan to do the timing belt as well as it's ten years old. I used to think that timing belts lasted 100,000km but evidently they should be changed at 100K or five years. Oops. I chose another OEM radiator to retain the original appearance.
I agree if your running any type of FI, then a larger radiator is in order.
But…I see more stock Miatas running aluminum radiators for the bling, or they have an issue with running warm and thats their way to mask it.
That "looks" better than actually fixing the issue.
The OEM style is plenty enough for a stocker in good nick.
I have had to replace some OEM "style" radiators (which is actually for an automatic) with a actual NOS OEM to stay in their SCCA class.
PS…….I just had one blow a week ago that had been rattle canned black, so look closely. :/
1992 BnT, 93LE #737, 94M, 95M, 96M, 97PEP, and a few 90s
kung fu jesus (07-18-2014)
yuck, why wait for it to break?
Well, the guibo is pretty easy to replace, to me, but the plastic pieces all have quality metal aftermarket replacements. Compared to a Miata, the bimmer waterpumps are pretty easy to replace.
BoBo (08-04-2014)
You might want to take a look at the rules again, depending on what class you are talking about. They made a change to the Street Prepared rules, now you can replace a plastic radiator with an aluminum/brass/steel etc. provided that it is no SMALLER than the factory OEM unit.
^Easy to do but also easy to rip especially if you have a 4.4L V8 LoL. I finally bought a metal one, but metal with rubber inserts I favor over the polyurethane because it's hard on the drive shaft. I had to replace my drive shaft.
I hated the common shimmy the most. I had to replace the ball joints, bushing, tires, wheels, and brakes. On the other hand, the front bushing kept going bad every 20-30k. I gotta say the power and massive torque was worth it, It made my day every day. Yeah, the water pump were a joke to install compared to a miata, that's one thing I can appreciate.
08 Kawasaki Ninja 250R Tuned/Track Prepared
04 Z4 2.5 M Sport Package
01 SLK 230 Kompressor AMG Sport Package
Yes! I replaced myDS too and the rebult one I received had that stupid shield over the guibo removed. SOOO much easier to work on. I am actually surprised how inexpensive OEM parts are for the suspensions on the e30. I replaced both front control arms for $90/ea (Lemforder). The rear suspension is a little more involved, but still easier than some Miata suspension work I have done. I would love a '00 528iT, but it's a unicorn and the chassis does require a bit more vigilance. On the e36m3 I had, everytime I did something maintenance wise, I looked for an upgraded equivalent. I went to metal cooling system components rather inexpensively. I also went straight to a Stewart metal water pump, though at 2-3x the cost of a plastic OE unit...worth the cost for the peace of mind. I have never seen a waterpump built like that Stewart unit...it truly looked engineered to last 300k miles.
You are on borrowed time.
Slampen (03-06-2015)