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Everything posted by Kinkstaah
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MLR's Bogan cruise ship
Kinkstaah replied to The Bogan's topic in Members Cars, Project Overhauls & Restorations
Any reason you didn't, like... change it while at the Pie shop so you could compare them on the way back? (all the more reason to go for another drive I suppose) -
R200 abs vs non abs internals
Kinkstaah replied to RyzXne's topic in Suspension, braking, tyres and drivetrain
It's just one of those bugbears that I bring over from Facebook. Lots of people think the dividing line between them is Sedan vs Coupe or Manual vs Auto for some/any feature but it's always NA vs Turbo (or GTV). I have no idea if GTV got the GTT rear end. I'm just gonna pretend I know and say "yes they did" -
R34 Gtr Instrument Cluster Into Gtt?
Kinkstaah replied to OON80's topic in Exterior & Interior Styling
I believe (this is a great silviaz thread where we must all interpret) that he is asking how to put a GTR cluster into the car. But because the dials are reversed on the GTR (speedo and tacho are swapped positions) he's asking how to do it. The answer is you buy a R34 GTT Nismo dash, which also has 320kmh on it, and will plug straight in. The longer answer is it IS possible to configure a GTR cluster to work in a GTT, so if you somehow got one of those cheaper than the Nismo GTT cluster, you could configure it to work. Whether you have the time/skills to do it and whether it's worth the $ is another story. There's probably GTR to GTT cluster information out there. In threads like this one. I assume also what is being asked is he doesnt want to change the whole cluster. Just the KMH dial itself and put it back together in another cluster, then recalibrate the speedo needle so it doesnt show 320kmh when the car is doing 180, and is asking how to calibrate that. Which is doable with like a Dakota Digital speedo/signal interpreter box but jesus man just buy a cluster. -
R200 abs vs non abs internals
Kinkstaah replied to RyzXne's topic in Suspension, braking, tyres and drivetrain
Nope, the R34 Non-turbos have literal S15 parts for their subframe, axles, diff, diff internals, and ABS system (including the ABS ECU and wiring/pinouts) The non turbo part is where the difference is. -
Feedback on Carbonetics: R34 GTT cooling panel
Kinkstaah replied to DraftySquash's topic in General Automotive Discussion
I added one, it made the car hotter.... Mind you, that one looked great, did nothing so I sold it on. If you make actual good working ducts as above, it'll definitely work. This isn't that though, out of the box :p -
Feedback on Carbonetics: R34 GTT cooling panel
Kinkstaah replied to DraftySquash's topic in General Automotive Discussion
That is what will seal with the bonnet closed. Follow it down while closing the bonnet to see where it ends up with the bonnet closed. The panels don't do anything other than spending money, which this one will do just fine. :p -
Feedback on Carbonetics: R34 GTT cooling panel
Kinkstaah replied to DraftySquash's topic in General Automotive Discussion
Just walk away from the cooling panels. I've had one and it was a fancy carbon one from Japan (let alone a copy of one) and didn't actually line up with the GTT. Had cutouts and things. And probably more importantly, if you look closely at how your bonnet seals, there's a rubber strip on the underside of the bonnet that does the job you want this carbon panel to do. -
RB25DET with solid lifters - which cams ?
Kinkstaah replied to TomSky33's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
I'm actually surprised he's considering running an aftermarket turbo, because the fact that it's not a stock turbo is deregister the car territory! I would think Germany is the prime market for Hypergear highflows and ported stock manifolds, Nistune, Highflowed OEM injectors, super improved, ducted SMIC's and the like. (or maybe it's not quite that bad) -
RB25DET with solid lifters - which cams ?
Kinkstaah replied to TomSky33's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
Germany is _very_ strict. Think along the lines of Mandatory full EPA every year. -
I speak from experience, because my driveway is DEFINITELY not flat, and all 4 corners of the car sit completely independently from one another. It's bad enough it makes me guess everything, fender flares being the most common example, every single tyre sits different in the guard. I've learned to just go OH WELL and pretend not to see it and assuming it's fine. That said, unless you see your car on the alignment machine to soothe your brain you may forever also suffer this pain lol
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Just keep in mind (maybe too late now) that before you go crazy, most driveways aren't flat. This _can_ affect your dynamic camber and heights too. It is kinda funny but getting people to really align stuff right can be problematic for people with OCD. Consider a motorsport place if there's any around, and also consider you may have 'dynamically' altered your own camber after a visit to the track, which can happen too.
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MLR's Bogan cruise ship
Kinkstaah replied to The Bogan's topic in Members Cars, Project Overhauls & Restorations
WHAT IF I TOLD YOU........ That said, for 'fun cruising' there nothing that beats a MX5. 2.5L N/A would be just peak. Nobody needs anything more, and nearly nothing is more fun. Reject what other people say and go with your heart, if nobody is watching... EVERYONE likes a MX5 with the roof down, if they fit in it. Commo great if you want to shuttle multiple people around in comfort and hear rumble. If you do not need this facility, then, well... -
Mistakes were made, my R34 Story
Kinkstaah replied to Kinkstaah's topic in Members Cars, Project Overhauls & Restorations
It appears that work has commenced and this work shop is doing work, and selling that work for money, like some kind of a work shop. Bare metal vents and fenders are no longer bare metal, which is great with that whole 'turning into rust rapidly' problem. The panels look to be fitted, though I don't know how permament this is. Given I drove by a few days ago and saw the whole side of the car sanded down (but no panels fitted) they are probably permamently affixed now: Rear bar and skirts look like they fit and line up as god intended, which is nice. Rear lip has been removed and filled in, and can see the templates they are using to mount the wing back there, instead of just drilling and eyeballing it which is nice lol. And I did buy the brake light for the S1 which lines up with the OEM hole, Nissan just uses some tunnel thing to get the light to the light inside the lip which isn't really a light, directly. I was smart enough to test this before I dropped the car off :p They have also installed (this is temporary tac welds for testing) the bracket I came up with, and made something for the other side, in the event that some idiot cut those brackets off to fit an intercooler at some point in the past. They also have moved my oil cooler back, so that it is no longer hanging off the headlight support. There was a bit of forcing the front bumper on there in the past. I mentioned it to them because I can see paint people finally finishing up a front bar then wincing if they have to force the damn thing on in a weird way. Now there's plenty of clearance for OEM levels of fitment and gaps which is just nice. I do wonder how low that will actually sit with a bumper on and such, but it wouldn't be a massive task to move it up a little, or a different angle in the future given there is literally nothing in this space for now. Until I get talked into getting a dry sump tank made and fitted in that entire space, after going to WTAC... -
MLR's Bogan cruise ship
Kinkstaah replied to The Bogan's topic in Members Cars, Project Overhauls & Restorations
Oh btw, if you are looking to sell this car, I know someone who is looking to buy it. (after missing out on the QLD one with all this already done to it, like you did :p) He's still trying to track that car down though. -
You can always use the Red's for street use, to get them consumed. Mate of mine loves Red Stuffs, claims he has no fade, but has only done a few track days in his BMW. Oh, his BMW is a 1000kg E21 with about 200kw. :p For Skylines, I've always thought that the MINIMUM for track adventuring was orange, or significantly higher. But I am a noob and brake way too hard and have melted nearly every pad in like 1-2 laps. You may need a more abrasive track pad to wear down brake pad deposits, so if you do get track pads, run them on the street for a little bit of time to clean up your rotors, then put your road pads on and bed them in. Sounds silly, but does work.
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I'd just guess at the usual suspects really. There's not that much to a braking system movement wise and everything has to be right or you get shudder or what feels like warping. In my case we were talking the wheel moving 100mm in every direction 5 times a second (it was ROUGH), like driving over train tracks continuously or something. I used to get gnarly shudder when pads got warm, and it turns out the actual pad was the wrong (yet also compatible?) size. This probably isn't your issue, and another issue should feel something through the pedal, - fade if the pads are way too hot, or a spongy pedal if your fluid has got way too hot etc. Also because BMW it could be weird BMW abs shit
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As it currently stands, you have a S15 rear end. Keep in mind if you do something fancy like put R34 GTT shafts back there you may need to do something fun with your wheel speed sensors to keep ABS, as the GT has a different ABS setup to the GTT. (it is like the S15). The simplest way is to put a helical diff in there from a S15. A more sturdy way given what you have is to consider a Nismo diff of appropriate lockage (i.e get the pro with different cams to go between 1 and 2 way). The final way is to convert to something else, but keep in mind what you'll need to do with wheel speed sensors (i.e you will need to do what S15 people do).
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Well, when it's time to get really serious at the track, you now know you have enough adjustability!
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MLR's Bogan cruise ship
Kinkstaah replied to The Bogan's topic in Members Cars, Project Overhauls & Restorations
Fab9 kit is bolt and away you go. You'd be crazy to consider another motor and that motor not be a 2.5 if you want N/A! -
The controller works by measuring your current boost from a boost source. It *has* to be connected to a source of boost. Without this, it cannot function. You cannot boost a car without this either. It is a requirement to have a boost source for a boost controller to function. Boost controllers function by sensing a level of boost, and diverting a portion of that air pressure away from the wastegate. So your charge piping may be at 25psi, but as far as your wastegate knows, it is being fed 15psi, where the spring starts to open. This is how your engine gets fed 25psi as opposed to 15psi which is known as 'spring pressure' or 'gate pressure'. If you get your source from the turbo housing, or before the intercooler, you will see less boost in your manifold, because the controller is going to be using that pre-cooled, pre-pressure lost source as it's source of truth. To avoid this, you get a source after your intercooler has done it's thing, but it HAS to be before the throttle body, which is why people almost universally use a nipple on the charge piping, before the throttle body. You do not want your boost source to be seeing vacuum inside the manifold itself, this is to avoid your boost controller trying to do much when it sees your "boost" at a negative value. Like most things car tuning, you want the tuning to be doing as little as possible, for maximum accuracy.
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My answer is NEITHER. Get a G series Garrett. They are physically smaller. They will mount low. They will easily outperform either. G30-660 or something similar. Done. https://www.efisolutions.com.au/garrett-g-series-g30-660-turbo-t3-flange-0.83-a-r
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If you want to be pedantic and justify it. Higher pressure means it needs to be a higher temperature to boil over. In the real world, it absolutely won't matter at all. You can also tell yourself that an alloy radiator can handle higher pressure than one with 20 year old plastic tanks (it will).
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I'm gonna go with don't get a radiator cap... get a radiator. You'll need one eventually like any 20 year old plastic heat cycled thing :p
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Severe lungeing at carpark
Kinkstaah replied to ChrisW434's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
I mean ideally trims are there because base tables are never 100% accurate. You want them to be as accurate as you can possibly get them, but temperature variations, different altitude, heat, everything likes to mess with how accurate a base table can be. Fuel trims and Narrowband/Wideband fuel control exist to realistically fill this gap/fuzzy factor, and do their job great. But while they will drag your AFR/Lambda to a target, you want them to have to do as little work as possible. Don't tweak any of this stuff without a wideband. Unless it's something like "Disable 'Ghost Cam' because it's very obvious when looking into the Tune", you are guessing with regards to your AFR. You are absolutely right and it's far better to spend the money on a Wideband controller (especially with haltech) and the fab to get it plumbed in NOT where the narrowbands sit (it is supposed to be 1 meter from the turbo), and teach yourself all this little finicky stuff. This is stuff no tuner can ever really be expected to get perfect, but the owner of the car will see SO much livability improvements by learning and tweaking these things - With the proper tools. It IS the difference between "Oh yeah my tuned car drives a bit like a tuned car" and "My car drives like a factory car" It does take a lot of time and tweaking and fun, but you'd never want to be paying $150 an hour for someone else to spend that much time on it. -
Engine efficiency issue?
Kinkstaah replied to ChrisW434's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
The easiest way I can explain it (and it's not a good explanation) is that you're creating backpressure. In effect, when you plumb your wastegate in you're effectively running a smaller exhaust than someone who isn't. We'd like to all think that it doesn't or shouldn't make a difference, but merging the pipes *does* make a difference. Even if you merge it waaay back. It just makes less difference. It will always flow better if the air from the screamer literally never re-enters the exhaust stream. A turbine wheel isn't exactly the most free-flowing of things when you think about it. What you 'want' is JUST enough exhaust flow to spin the turbine wheel up, then EVERY OTHER PIECE OF AIR to absolutely get out of the way of the exhaust stream. If it were me, I'd talk to a local fabricator and turn your merge into a removable screamer. Try it out and see.