My Z has 115,000 1997 2.8 and it had a stock bush in. I have had the car 2 years total rebuild needed. Before I had it the Z had been stood in a field for a couple of years, so as you can imagine a roadster it was soaking inside both seat motors were seized adjusting worm wheels were solid etc, all the work has now been completed except for the bushes and when they are done it's off for a respray and new top then I'm off to the rallies with you lot. The Z has been on blocks for the two years so I thought before I take it for the test I'll drop the diff and subframe and do the bushes then I know everything was new, the diff and subframe dropped a treat and the removal of the bushes from the frame was quite easy but the diff bush was solid so I had to hack saw it ,it took ages because I had to keep stopping to make sure I didn't go to far anyway I got it out only to find the crack at the opposite side to where I was cutting,personally I think it had been changed before and the crack was a result of that but I don't really know just guessing. I don't think the bushes really needed doing as their wasn't anything on previous test certs, I just wanted everything to be new and not have to strip the Z down againWere you running the stock bush on this?
What mileage and what engine?
Can materials like this suffer from ‘casting’ defect when made that causes these problems?
Mine is 22yrs old with 135k miles, the last 5yrs with poly bush and it hasn’t cracked yet - gets used properly too.
When I was looking at uprated diffs I spoke to a place that builds diffs for race and rally BMW cars and they don’t worry about the single ear diff mount - his experience was if they haven’t broken yet they won’t so he has race and rally cars using that design. Seems to be something in the build process as likeThe boot for issue- some cars rip the boot floor out with light use and others never do even with ‘proper’ usage?
Derick