Gookah's Progress Journal

t-tony

Zorg Expert (II)
Supporter
British Zeds
#ZedShed
Joined
Dec 31, 2013
Points
226
Location
Torksey Lock,Lincoln, England
Model of Z
E89 Z4 23i Auto
It's the floor which lets mine down really Mark.

Tony.
 

Ian&Sue

Zorg Guru (III)
Supporter
British Zeds
The M44 Massive
Joined
Mar 30, 2019
Points
149
Location
North Yorkshire
Model of Z
1.9 Z3
Not car tinkering, but more a surface for it (and me) to sit on,

Used some 5mm coin rubber flooring, It came on 3 rolls

View attachment 187415

Its really heavy too.




I scraped the old paint off the floor and glued it down:

View attachment 187417


View attachment 187419



and black silicon sealed all the edges

View attachment 187421

View attachment 187423


the rubber smell is fading now,
I have some thin pieces of ply to use under the trolley jack, the axle stands and the tilting lift, so it doesn't damage the surface

It is insulation from the cold concrete, and is comfortably cushioned enough to kneel on too,
Cleans easy with the small leaf blower, then just a wipe with quick detailer on the sponge mop..

Well pleased.
That looks great.:thumbsup: I end up with garage envy every time I look at this thread!

Ian.
 

SviRu

Zorg Legend
Joined
Jan 12, 2015
Points
70
Little update, fitted some different DTM style angel eyes
These have a lens in front of the led's similar to modern BMW headlights.
I fitted these in front of the inner lenses this time around:

Really pleased with them:
View attachment 178985

View attachment 178987

View attachment 178989In my opinion, this is the shape Z3 angel eyes should have always been, with a flat bottom to match the flat bottom lenses.
I have fitted the horseshoe ones loads of times in the past.

details of the build here:





.
This is more than awesome. Wish I didn't sell mine Z3. Always wanted a good looking angel eyes for stock lamps :)
 

gookah

Zorg Guru (IV)
Supporter
British Zeds
Joined
Dec 7, 2011
Points
170
Location
Shropshire
Model of Z
2.8 Z3
forgot to add this as it was in a separate thread:

I had not realised that there is an actual roof indicator lamp on the Z3, within the instrument cluster as below.

1632696444649.png

So I wondered how I could make use of this.


How the roof works is as follows: (stay with me..... or just skip to the method)

The roof microswitch is switched 'normally open' when the roof is clamped shut. ie the circuit is not passing through it.
One connection on the microswitch goes to an earth point.
The other connection goes (eventually) to the roof buttons.

When you flip up the front part of the roof, the microswitch operates and the earth circuit is now made through to the roof buttons.

There are two relays mounted near the roof motor, one for up, and one for down.
A relay is a powered switch, so you can pass the big current required for the motor, without burning out the little switches in the console roof buttons.
The relays use a coil which when energised uses magnetism to close the bigger switch.
The coil only needs a small amount of current to energise it, hence this does not burn out the small roof switches.

When you press the roof 'down' button, the earth circuit is then sent to the coil of the 'down' relay.
If you press the 'up' button the earth is sent to the coil of the 'up' relay instead.
But to energise a relay coil, you also need a +12v, as well as an earth.
This is where the brake pedal comes in.
The brake pedal provides +12v to the brake lights. but that +12v also goes to the coils of both relays, regardless of whether you want to open or close the roof, and it happens every time you press the brake pedal.
This is why, to operate the roof, you need to both flip the roof, and press the brake pedal.

There is a larger +12v ignition supply that goes to the big switch on both relays, which ultimately powers the direction of the motor when the relevant coil energises and operates that big switch.
I have bored you enough, so I wont go into the workings behind how the relays swap the circuit between earth and +12v for the motor.



Anyway, investigation:

The lamp position is the 5th one from the right, when looking at the rear of the cluster.
1632696482800.png

First of all, I fitted a spare lamp, and then looked for the associated connection pins needed to light it.


The circuit track that runs along the very bottom edge of the circuit board, is energised +12v ignition controlled and is used for nearly all of the tell tales, with an earth completing the individual circuit for each lamp condition.

I did find one half of the circuit that if supplied with an earth it lights the lamp, this was on pin 23 on the Blue connector.

I want to find a circuit that would light the lamp on both of the open, and close movements.
The earth I can use is the one that comes originally via the microswitch.
It occurs either via the up or down button, and only happens if the relevant button is pressed with the roof pushed up.

But if I just put that on pin 23, it would light the lamp, even if I hadn't pressed the brake pedal. This is because the +12v is being supplied by the track on the bottom of the cluster circuit board.

I wanted a way of knowing the circuit from the brake pedal was also made.
If I could use that as the +12v, with the earth from the microswitch, and the lamp lit when I pressed either up or down button, then I would have an indication that proved the circuits of the usual troublesome parts of the roof operation were OK.
To do this I would need to break the circuit board track, and wire up the lamp direct.


Method:
Take a spare lamp:
1632696537279.png



cut away the black plastic just above the terminals so you can solder on a set of wires
1632696562759.png


1632696586728.png




Now I used a dremel to cut away both tracks on the board. (Ignore the lamp circuit to the right, that was the cruise control lamp trial)

1632696614446.png



Then fit the lamp: (again ignore the lamp circuit to the right, that is my cruise control lamp trial, and I swapped wire colours)
1632696639436.png


refit the cluster and run the wires though behind the dash to the footwell.

Next up, is to wire into the brake pedal switch.
On the brake pedal switch is a blue and red wire, this provides that +12v to the brake lights and relay coils.

Cut the wire,
1632696663746.png

join, solder and heatshrink any one of the two lamp wires to it.


The next is a bit tricky.

Remove the roof switch,
You will need to get to the brown & yellow wire (Up), and the brown & red wire (Down). these send the earth the relevant relay once that button is pressed.

Now these earths need to go to the second lamp wire,
However, if you connect them both to the lamp wire, you have no longer got separate up and down circuits anymore. so you need some electroniccy type bits..
1632696694138.png


These are diodes, they allow current through one way but not the other, and have a stripe around them to indicate where the flow goes.
I wont explain exactly how they separate the circuit, but this is the way they need to go:
Join the two ends furthest away from the stripes, these will go to the second lamp wire.
1632696727361.png

solder and heatshrink the lamp wire to the twisted diode wires.



For the other ends, one will go to the brown & red wire, so solder and heatshrink
1632696773296.png



and the other will go to the brown & yellow wire: solder (as shown) then heatshrink
1632696800377.png



The diodes keep the circuits separate provided they are fitted the right direction..

and that's it,
all done

try it, and then and refit the switch;


Now, if the roof wont go down, but the lamp lights, you can instantly see that the circuit is correct from the pedal, the microswitch and the buttons, and the problem is upstream of them.
If the lamp doesn't light there is a problem with one of these circuits.


Pointless? maybe, but I enjoyed the tinkering
.
 
Last edited:

t-tony

Zorg Expert (II)
Supporter
British Zeds
#ZedShed
Joined
Dec 31, 2013
Points
226
Location
Torksey Lock,Lincoln, England
Model of Z
E89 Z4 23i Auto
Pointless, maybe, but definitely interesting Pete.

Tony.
 
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