Not sure about the beam bushes, wasn’t aware of the issues, but hope ML would have picked it up and advised me. They did a very thorough survey and job. I’ll ask.
The reason I had the underside dry ice blasted is that it didn’t look too good when I first got it home. All the suspension, steering, Componants had a good covering of surface rust, the diff/drive likewise had a covering of surface rust. The subframes were covered in road dirt and grime. It was not really possible to evaluate the sills because of 22 years of dirt, debris and oil. Hence my decision to get it thoroughly cleaned and rust protected. I had the view that the sills would be corroded and would need remedial work. It was a pleasant surprise that it was effectively corrosion free.
Cannot thank Munich Legends enough for a superb job, well managed with good communications.
Giving the paint a light cut tomorrow with a DA, polish and wax. Trouble is that it won’t leave the garage unless the weather is right!
Wow. If that's what dry ice can do, I'm impressed. I've seen it on telly, and it looked good, but thought it could be snake oil. Was it dry ice to clean, then Lanoguard to make it shiny, or is that ML's little secret?
It looks like one of the best undersides that I've seen on a car that hasn't been stripped and rebuilt.
With everything being so original, I'd be very tempted to get a set of original rear boxes (around £250 for the pair was the price for the last pair I bought, but that was around 10 years ago), and then you have a real super gem. At the moment, it's just a gem

.
I wouldn't be too concerned about the ream beam bushes. I would estimate that 50% of the Z3s have failed bushes and don't even know it. They are hidden by the rear wheel arch liners, and need a determined examiner to see the fault, and Jim Clark (or Lewis Hamilton for the younger readers

) to notice the fault through driving. The 5mm pad wears down, then the rubber can become detatched from the inner sleeve, and the whole rear beam drops by 5mm. The bush still works for left-right, front-back absorbsion unless the bush gets properly destroyed, but the beam is now at the wrong height at the front, and doesn't work for up-down absorbsion.
It's nice to see a car that's not just "shiny on top"
