
joshuaho96
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Everything posted by joshuaho96
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I'll let someone else speak to jack stand placement, I only use the pinch weld because that's the factory position and I try very hard to not damage them. For the front you jack by the crossmember you circled in red. Jack the rear by the diff. Those are the OEM designed floor jack/trolley jack points. Anywhere else is not a good idea. For placing jack stands on the sills you need a rubber pad that avoids engaging the protrusion to avoid bending and splitting: Probably what happened is someone improperly jacked the car, wrecked the pinch welds, and now it's hard to say whether they are structurally sound to use stands with. It really depends on the state of the car. If it's rusted out then you will have problems. If it's just bent you may be ok.
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Start by jacking up the front first. Leave the jack stands on their lowest setting. Then do the rear. Then repeat each side slowly going up one step at a time, do not rush this unless you want the car sliding off the stands. R34 Skylines should be similar to R33 Skylines: If you are having trouble with rear clearance when lifting the front you may want to get some wood to drive the car onto first to raise it before you begin lifting the front.
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As as general rule I do not recommend buying any injectors that lack a diffuser plate. Also if you are concerned about transient fuel tuning you want to avoid the ID injectors, if you talk to Adaptronic they have mentioned that the wall wetting effects are much stronger with the pencil spray pattern used on the ID injectors when used in 4V DOHC setups because much of the fuel goes straight into the divider between the valves. If you want to run E85 at all just go for the Bosch 0280158040 injectors, I believe NZEFI sells them with some adapters to be a direct fit for RB25DET with top feed fuel rail.
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The 78Works stuff is a Coplus headlight. You can probably get one locally and save on shipping charges. There's some threads on the "Morimoto" Corvette LED headlights which are also made by Coplus: https://www.corvetteforum.com/forums/c6-corvette-general-discussion/4152679-vette-lights-new-to-market-c6-corvette-morimoto-xb-led-headlights-group-buy.html I contacted them a while back to see if they had an LHD variant but it sounds like they only make the RHD variant. I'm guessing that to get an LHD version of the R32 LED lights people would have to organize a non-trivial group buy.
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http://midoriseibi.co.jp/blog/5094 Supposedly Midori Seibi has some aftermarket LED bulbs that actually work properly and have some improvement but they're expensive and nobody I know of has actually bothered to try them out. Most people go for HID retrofit or give up and run the higher brightness halogens.
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Stock ecu on r34 gtt manual want to upgrade
joshuaho96 replied to Miss r34gtt's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
Yeah if you have a single injector failure then things are going to be bad but at least these days you can detect when something is wrong, if your map is decent you shouldn’t need more than 10-15% short term correction. -
Stock ecu on r34 gtt manual want to upgrade
joshuaho96 replied to Miss r34gtt's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
I can tell you with something like Toyota's 3S-GTE it makes sense, 100%. If the stock Nissan map is anything like the stock Toyota 3S-GTE map they were terrified because they had no real visibility into AFR when running rich so the sandbagging in both timing and fueling is substantial. Basically max injector duty cycle as soon as you get into boost because they have no idea if fuel pressure is low or an injector is clogged or any number of factors. If you run a wideband you can do things properly, which is to say run the engine closer to lambda .9 or so at low RPM, high load to help the engine build boost where cooling is better, then enrich at higher RPM to prevent knock. You also don't have to pick a crazy rich gas AFR like 10.5:1, you can lean out to 12.5:1 if you're keeping stock timing values. -
Generally speaking I don't recommend doing a drivetrain swap vs just buying the trim you want. The cost of buying a clean R34 GTT is likely to be less than the cost of doing a proper swap. This is doubly true for anything that involves bodywork.
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I'm willing to bet that you're in for a major, major amount of work if you buy that one. Probably 30k AUD worth.
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I think these are turbos that are competing with -9s and the HKS GT3-SS, it's shocking to me that power noses over even earlier than stock.
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Dyno chart from their marketing literature, turbo barely came out a week ago: Maybe it's the first halfway decent turbo Tomei has put out? From what I recall their ARMS journal bearing turbos were horrendous. Personally I don't buy those dyno charts, it's likely that it gives up some low RPM power to get more power at high RPM. What confuses me is why the turbine trim is 82. That sounds like a very high number to me.
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You get more valve lift which will help. If you want to spool the turbo a little sooner get the 254 degree cams instead.
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Put some paint on it and a bit of soft vinyl as the sacrificial layer? Pretty common "mod" these days: http://www.garage-yoshida.net/daiko/
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Run a bad tune and your 500 dollar motor will be worth 0 dollars in a hurry.
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250k is conservative. 8% of the country getting infected is super, super unlikely considering how lax the measures were. Florida didn't shut down the beaches and the net effect is that they helped seed the disease across the entire country:
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Motul 8100 should be good. If you're going full race the 300V stuff is supposedly better but the change interval is something like 2000 miles.
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Foaming in gasoline engines occurs when you do something like hard cornering and oil sloshes up the sides of the crankcase and gets whipped up by the crankshaft. Or the piston squirters in the OEM and Tomei RB26 pistons that cause oil to fall onto the crank that gets whipped up. Do this at 8000+ RPM and you will create some foam. Or overfill and the crank will start whipping up oil as soon as you turn the starter. I'm always super, super skeptical of oil discussions because it's pretty much cargo cult stuff or straight up pyramid schemes in the case of Amsoil. But there is this post: Whether there's any truth to this post is hard to say, but the source is here: Personally nothing I run is ever going to need more than whatever full synthetic is 5 USD/quart online or at a local store. I would probably be just fine with Rotella T6. But I would be very cautious of making that recommendation to all people for all things.
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Foaming is created in dynamic conditions, you usually need high RPM to cause it. Low RPM conditions it shouldn't happen. Unless you have a viewing port in the crankcase you wouldn't know. Personally I'm not a tribologist and I don't feel like gambling an engine on oil selection. There is a Rotella T6 that is dual rated. But I don't think it's wise to run an engine oil that is not rated for gasoline engines or only has bare minimum certs. Especially when you can find a lot of different oils that meet whatever spec you're looking for for any given engine. Maybe a dedicated diesel engine oil works great for you but it seems unwise to recommend that in general.
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Rotella T6 is not recommended for high RPM engines due to the lack of anti-foaming additives. It works great on low RPM engines like diesels and low RPM gas engines like LS engines but the RBs rev high and tend to create a lot of oily air.
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R33 gets hot at lights with ac on
joshuaho96 replied to Blakeo's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
genuinely made in china -
Reading KM to MPH and when to shift
joshuaho96 replied to Anonymous's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
That is true, 90 kph is generally going to yield better mpg than 120 even if the BSFC is worse. But most highways in my area will have everyone doing 100+ kph, late at night 130 kph is not unusual. May as well go a little faster and not risk getting rear-ended. Only on certain arterial roads is it possible to safely do 75-90 kph in my area. -
Reading KM to MPH and when to shift
joshuaho96 replied to Anonymous's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
If fuel efficiency is immaterial then there's no reason to have any shifting algorithm at all. It literally doesn't matter as long as you don't stall the car or lug it to death. Or you could just stay in the lowest gear possible at all time which I suppose is an algorithm, just a terrible one that I've never seen anyone do. Anything other than those two choices implies that fuel efficiency matters at least a little bit, if only because running an engine at WOT all the time will kill it sooner than later. You can data log pretty much every automatic transmission within the last 10-20 years and see that it's going to try very, very hard to put you right at the max efficiency point for any possible power request give or take some hysteresis and other second order considerations. My original recommendation is to emulate that behavior, with the added benefit that you can be more intelligent and predictive than a TCU that will never be able to know whether you want to maintain momentum when coasting and select the highest possible gear without stalling to reduce engine braking or if a long red light is ahead and to downshift aggressively to maximize engine braking. There is nothing in that guidance that says you shouldn't rev the car past 3500 RPM under any circumstances. It depends on the power you're requesting from the engine. If you want to extract maximum power then you have to go WOT and keep RPMs as close to the peak power RPM as possible on average. If you want something in between max power and max efficiency then it's further down the RPM range. If anything if you think carefully about what I'm saying there is a minimum amount of power you should be using from the engine because below that point you're going to be running it inefficiently. If you're going to accelerate you should accelerate enough to apply a good amount of load on the engine. Gasoline engines are also terrible at doing something like cruising at 30 kph unless you're driving a kei car so driving below the speed limit for the sake of "fuel efficiency" is stupid. If you can do 120 kph it makes sense to do 120 kph because it's likely that your mpg will be constant, unless you're limited by gearing and lack a ratio tall enough to keep RPMs low enough. -
Reading KM to MPH and when to shift
joshuaho96 replied to Anonymous's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
Excellent, why does it matter in the context of answering OP's question? How badly other people screw up their cars with bad engineering and tuning is really not something I'm concerned with, it's not like I'm the one that has to live with the thing. It just seems ridiculous to answer a question about shift points with non-answers and gatekeeping.