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DCColegrove
03-28-2008, 12:48 AM
http://bmwzenperformance.com/photo/plate-frame.jpg



I wanted one...

The minimum order was 200...

Comes with fasteners and detailed instructions even an eBay retard can follow.

swiss318is
03-28-2008, 09:13 AM
what means "entwicklung dreissig" ??? i mean i speak german but i dont understand that...sorry...it doesnt make a lot of sense..

DCColegrove
03-29-2008, 03:21 PM
Ha, The Swiss.

E codes like E30 E36... I assume that you know the "e" stands for entwicklung.

English translation: Evolution or Development

Dreisseg I think we can agree on (even in Bavaria) is Thirty.

The Triple "s" (ß) is just cool I think it should make a comeback.

Now, my German is for shit (limited to technical language) however I can't really see how you missed the meaning.

Here it is in French: Développement Trente (better?)

Asbradley21
07-26-2008, 07:12 AM
Out of curiosity, why is it Entwicklung Dreißig Zen? That doesn't make any sense. Evolution thirty ten?

BTW, how much for just one of those things?

Oh, and ß is double s, not triple.

P. Kennedy
07-26-2008, 11:13 AM
It is a company with aftermarket E30 products. They have a web site. Seek them out. I obtained one of those license plate frames off of eBay.

Asbradley21
07-26-2008, 12:32 PM
It is a company with aftermarket E30 products. They have a web site. Seek them out. I obtained one of those license plate frames off of eBay.

I'm well aware, the giant link in his signature was a big clue. :rolleyes:

P. Kennedy
07-26-2008, 05:29 PM
Central to Zen teaching is the belief that awakening can be achieved by anyone but requires instruction in the proper forms of spiritual cultivation by a master. In modern times, Zen has been identified especially with the secular arts of medieval Japan (such as the tea ceremony, ink painting, and gardening) and with any spontaneous expression of artistic or spiritual vitality regardless of context. In popular usage, the modern non-Buddhist connotations of the word Zen have become so prominent that in many cases the term is used as a label for phenomena that lack any relationship to Zen or are even antithetical to its teachings and practices.

DCColegrove
08-16-2008, 12:32 AM
Central to Zen teaching is the belief that awakening can be achieved by anyone but requires instruction in the proper forms of spiritual cultivation by a master. In modern times, Zen has been identified especially with the secular arts of medieval Japan (such as the tea ceremony, ink painting, and gardening) and with any spontaneous expression of artistic or spiritual vitality regardless of context. In popular usage, the modern non-Buddhist connotations of the word Zen have become so prominent that in many cases the term is used as a label for phenomena that lack any relationship to Zen or are even antithetical to its teachings and practices.

:D