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Talk to me. 85 535i with 140k for $2000. Should I?


Guest Anonymous

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Guest Anonymous

Its got a 5sp od. The body is clean (8 out of a possible score of 10) 2nd owner, all the recepts.

thinking this could be my discreet commuter ride.

Has AC. Is quiet. Kids can ride in it.

I could still work on it - mounts, bushings, brake lines, lubes - sorta familiar.

Suggestion, Comments welcome.

John McA

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Guest Anonymous

bmwrace.jpg

Does the front end shimmy under light braking around 50 mph?...control arm bushings.

Vacuum accumulator (brake bomb) is know to go bad.

TRX tires suck!

Everything else is bulletproof, and that is an EXCELLENT price.

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Guest Anonymous

Gonna test drive it tonight. Contingent on passing smog.

This will really help me work on the 1600 & 2002 too.

Couldn't do alot of stuff because I would need

the car on Monday... Of course the spouse will want

me to sell one...

So, its all good.

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Guest Anonymous

Could be some big bills in its future. Its at that mileage where everything may still be working but won't be for long. I bought an '88 535i with 127k and spent $3-4k (including labor) in two years - clutch, alternator, wheels/tires, etc. Much cheaper if you can do the work yourself but prepare yourself by doing some research. If I were to do it again, I would look for one where the big maintenance bills had already been paid. Great cars! Good luck.

Karl

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Guest Anonymous

The tranny died (PO abused it too long) and I ended up getting rid of it (wife didn't like me having two cars to work on). But it was a great car. Comfortable, fast, and very familiar.

The major shortcoming is the electrical system. Replacing bushings is easy; tracing down electrical glitches in miles of wiring is a PITA. A two-owner car is probably a good bet compared to something that's been passed around a lot.

I say go for it.

Matthew Cervi

'73 tii

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