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xscape237

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Posts posted by xscape237

  1. There are some very good points raised by everyone in this thread, and I agree with the most part of it. The biggest problem as I see it, are the dealers who snap up the crusty cars, slap on some polish, reset the odometer, and on sell for a price that doesn't make sense. It ruins it for everyone and its as simple as that.

    At the end of the day, the basic economics of the import business would be no different to any other industry in our capitalist culture. It is ruled by greed and tightarsedness. If it were possible, we would be seeing compliance being undertaken by illegal mexicans in a shed somehwere off the coast of shit creek.

    Anyhow I just cant help but to stir the pot a little, from a customer and enthusaist's point of view. Can you imagine how wrapped I am when I pick up cars from compliance, only to realise that my factory HIDs are still in tact, my project-mu pads are still there, my semis are still fitted, and I'm about a grand richer than I expected to be when I left?* I, and many other consumers, probably couldnt give a stuff if my cats have been changed or if the car "meets ADRs". What I want is a purple sticker at a good price, and to keep my JDM goodies.

    *note - may or may not have actually happened.

  2. Quick question guys, saw a few people mention the BC coilovers. Have been searching for them online, but cannot find a listing for a v35. Is it simply the case that they are the same listing as Z33 or do i need to search harder?

    Had a few mates running BC's in everything from silvia's to foresters, all have had good reports.

    I've been running HSD's in my s13 for the last 11000kms, with street duties as well as 3 or 4 drift days. Can't comment too much on the feel as it's pretty firm in my car (stripped car with 10/8kg spring rates), but they never clunk, seem to perform well, and are easily adjusted.

    justjap.com have bc racing coilovers for the v35

    i actually bought the 350z set myself.

  3. Thats a bit optimistic in my opinion.

    Perhaps on a very happy dyno.

    Also, the final drive WILL change the dyno reading, beacuse it is a reading of the power at the wheels (not the engine). Its the same as doing it in a lower or higher gear. So i'm not sure what you mean by "feel"?

  4. I'm not defending the person who sold you the car, but there are good chances that the odometer was wound back in japan, and that he has nothing to do with it. Caveat emptor, as they say.

    The organisation you should be complaining to is whoever did your pre-purchase inspection (state roads victoria?). But i'm guessing that they would have made you sign some T&Cs when the inspection was completed? something along the lines of limiting their liability to whatever you paid for the service, wouldnt surprise me.

  5. This might be a dumb question but...

    Are all complianced cars supposed to come with an Aussie-standard immobiliser? In actually fact, does someone really find the time to install them or do importers find a way to bypass this?

    Thus, what are the chances of a V35 not coming with an Aussie-standard immobiliser, and, since all imported cars are supposed to be aussie-standard immobiliser equipped, are they all automatically theft insurance ready?

    The compliance workshop fits the immobiliser. It is a requirement for all cars that are built after a certain year (2000?).

    Mine was a proximity thing with a dongle on the keyring. I had to get Chris Rogers to rip it out and install a full alarm because it was conflicting with the factory nissan gear, and i couldnt start the car sometimes.

  6. I also have the BC racing coilovers. I'm happy with them for the price.

    Just keep in mind that while its great having the adjustability, it is not as quick and easy to adjust as you might hope. The rears are the main problem.

    The rear upper strut mounts on these cars are basically enclosed. There are a few small holes, but none big enough to fit the extenders through (at least the BC racing ones anyway). I have read that some people drill a bigger hole and thread the extenders through to the boot, but i dont have the will-power to go that far just yet. My solution for now is to drop the shock each time i need to adjust it.

    Also, the height adjustability is always a slow process. The fronts you just deal with. They are not stricltly a "coilover" in the rear, which means you need to adjust both the spring perch and the shock individually, and with only enough room to do perhaps a quarter turn each time, i'm finding it to cause less stress if you basically unbolt everything and do it that way (but then again i'm not the patient type).

    Anyhow. I'm happy with the performance of these on the street. There are 30 notches of damper adjustment. On 15 rear and 10 front it felt a bit friendlier than my prior setup (nismo struts, rsr springs). I'm now driving around on something like 27 rear and 22 front and its quite firm, i need to back it off a bit after the next track day in late May.

  7. yes it is possible to get a white manual coupe for under $20k landed and complied. it may not be a premium edition though.

    i could be wrong here, but im going to suggest that many of the cheap v35s going through auction lately have had their kms wound back. the drivers seat side bolsters seem to be an obvious giveaway, some are showing significant wear and cracks.

  8. If you ask me, matte black works on a few different cars:

    1 - Old and crusty vehicles / track hacks

    2 - New and expensive vehicles (think supercars, high end euros, etc)

    Anything else (such as the V35) is a gamble. As mentioned you need the perfect set of wheels, in an agressive offset, and the ride height to match.. otherwise, i think its a bit like fitting one of those GTR look-alike front bumpers, if you know what i mean.

    Good luck and make sure you post a write-up!

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