
joshuaho96
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Everything posted by joshuaho96
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From what I have seen/heard the oil control issues involved with huge power is just too annoying to deal with, I'd rather keep power targets conservative for that reason. I am planning on running VCAM whenever I finally get around to it though. I have seen enough charts to conclude that within the bolt-on turbo design space there is no free lunch, more power up top means worse response down low. Doing the same optimization with a stock turbo would yield better response than GT-SS. Emissions and OEM engineering validation are issues that I need to be concerned about so going single turbo isn't really something I want to do either.
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https://nissan.epc-data.com/skyline/bnr34/3957-rb26dett/engine/144/15188A/ Looking at the diagrams I don't see double washers. That sounds like an oil leak waiting to happen. The only exception is certain cases where there is a lock washer (split ring) and a flat washer.
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In the future I recommend posting your questions in the thread instead of sending them to me as a PM, just in case someone else has your problem in the future. Two things stand out to me from what you've sent me: 1. Someone appears to have messed with the wiring on the car. So in that regard you're on your own, I can't trace wires remotely and figure out what's been done to your car. 2. I recommend reading through what I linked to figure out what the ECU error code is and report back. That may give you some clue as to what's wrong.
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For a transmission pick a GL4 75W-90 with synchromesh additives. For the differentials pick a GL5 75W-90, for the rear diff you will need one with additives for limited slip. For the front you can get away with using a gear oil with LSD additive but if you can find one without it the diff should live a longer life. I recommend doing some research with your favorite search engine if you need a more comprehensive answer than that.
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AC compressor tech questions
joshuaho96 replied to Murray_Calavera's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
I'm pretty sure the AC cut at WOT in most cars is just to reduce the parasitic loss when requesting maximum power. The RPM limit though is almost certainly determined by what the compressor can take without destroying itself. -
Check the Consult connector, make sure the connector is in good shape. Then verify that there are no active codes on the ECU. The exhaust gas overtemp lamp is also a check engine light: https://www.gtrusablog.com/2016/04/how-to-read-check-engine-or-cat.html
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AC compressor tech questions
joshuaho96 replied to Murray_Calavera's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
Even if it couldn't actually run AC from idle to redline, the way the system is described means it can use the water to air charge cooler to help absorb the transients until the compressor can kick on again. It also seems to be designed for drag passes so there's a definite start/end to when that transient would be in the intended use case. -
AC compressor tech questions
joshuaho96 replied to Murray_Calavera's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
AFAIK since the 2000s a number of cars have variable displacement compressors to improve AC efficiency so the behavior in those systems will be different compared to a fixed displacement unit that has to cycle on and off. -
AC compressor tech questions
joshuaho96 replied to Murray_Calavera's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
I can try taking some logs with an RB26 on the stock ECU to see roughly where the OEM RPM threshold is. 4500 RPM seems a little low to me but who knows. -
R33 s1.5 missing at 5,000rpm onwards.
joshuaho96 replied to Killer33gtst's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
Do a compression test then check the injector flow. If there's per-cylinder fuel trims make sure it's reasonable too. -
Bosch donut knock sensors install
joshuaho96 replied to mrsr32's topic in Engines & Forced Induction
Is there anything particularly wrong with the stock RB26 knock sensors? NTK KNE01A as far as I can tell is a wideband sensor. I would have figured if anything is the problem it would be the wiring harness which appears to ground the knock sensor to the block rather than using the knock sensor pins as a differential input. The wires also appear to be unshielded. -
viscous diff replacement for R33 gtst
joshuaho96 replied to Dasmbo's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
I think the A-LSD is cool, but it has nothing to do with practicality. Fun conversation piece as I believe the R33 was one of the first cars to ship an active LSD. Ferrari I believe did not do their E-diff equivalent until the F430. As with any technology though, being first to market has nothing to do with whether it's actually any good. -
R33 rear indicator surround
joshuaho96 replied to BlackLine33's topic in Exterior & Interior Styling
The tail light is all one piece, so you'd have to crack it open and see if you could clean it up. I ended up just buying another one. -
In this scenario you'd have to keep the OEM sensor, presumably it would be easier to rig up something to test the calibration of your sensor and put that calibration in your standalone ECU/dash/etc compared to adjusting the calibration of the factory gauges to suit a new aftermarket sensor. This only makes sense though if the factory sensor is actually good enough to use. For example the OEM RB26 IAT sensor is really a coolant temperature sensor so it's useless for speed density because it takes so long to react.
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I was visualizing a splitter like this so you can just run wires to your ECU/gauge/etc without chopping up a harness or something like that, the important part is to get as close to infinite impedance as possible on the new wiring so as not to disturb the existing electronics that need that sensor as well:
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RBs already take ages to get the oil up to temperature when I stare at the gauge and that's in a pretty temperate climate driving the car gingerly to warm it up. Can't imagine having it take even longer without the OEM heat exchanger. Obviously for a full race kind of deal there's no point in having one, the N1 cars deleted all of that in favor of having an air cooled setup mounted in front of the radiator. I have wondered for a while now, what's keeping people from using a very high impedance analog input to sample the OEM sensor instead of adding more sensors that clutter up what is already a very cramped area of the engine? The gauge reacts very slowly obviously but is the same true of the actual sensor itself?
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Just don't get bored with 300 kW, problem solved.
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The oil temp sensor is right at the inlet of the oil filter. I don't have great pictures of the heat exchanger flow path but the oil temp sensor is definitely before the heat exchanger.
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R34 auto stalled in traffic and struggled to start
joshuaho96 replied to Hobbs's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
If it was totally fine before and then suddenly now you're having horrific running issues maybe crack open the ECU and take a look to see if the capacitors have died. Any ECU on original caps from this era is suspect. -
R34 Gt25 auto terrible fuel economy
joshuaho96 replied to Hobbs's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
Not a bad idea at this point, here's what mine looked like: -
I've also heard that part of the reason why it dies is often some contamination like one of the o-rings in the filter housing disintegrating and bits of it clog up the sensor. Personally I don't worry about it being a problem.
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An EFR7163 would be 0.80 a/r for twin scroll, 0.85 for single scroll.
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If the goal is street use I recommend using the longest runner manifold you can find. Look at a factory VG30DETT manifold, it's incredibly long compared to an RB26 to help it make good torque down low.