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Everything posted by Kinkstaah
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Please verify quote by mechanic
Kinkstaah replied to jorgo90's topic in Suspension, braking, tyres and drivetrain
Having recently done this exact job, the parts quote is actually quite fair, the subframe bushes and diff mount bushes are quite expensive. The amount of labor to remove this from the car, do the job, refit the subframe to the car, it could quite easily be a days work. It may be slightly less than a days work, but you're talking between 8 hours and 6 hours depending on how amazing and determined the mechanic actually is, most people who do this swear they will never do the subframe bushes again and up their prices the next time. Maybe he has just done it before ? -
Wheel Sizes & Offsets For Skylines
Kinkstaah replied to Sydneykid's topic in Suspension, braking, tyres and drivetrain
Its theoretically possible, but you need custom/different guards. No, you can't flare it to fit that much, not without getting them repainted etc etc. The cheapest way is to replace the guards. You're about 15mm too far out as it stands. I was able to fit a 9.5 +27 inside my R34 GTT guards. Sell and buy some different wheels. The LMGT2's do actually come in 18x9 +32. I would have bought a set of these but they don't clear my (much larger than OEM) brakes. http://www.importmonster.com.au/shop/product_info.php?products_id=2190&osCsid=e79e232cd40b61bcc04cab09633119d6 -
The easiest way is to get under the car and check and see re: cats. Yes, without a cat you know about it. If people following you get headaches in the hills, you have no cat. It is possible to have a really rich tune and have rear bar discoloration etc with a cat, so ideally you'd be checking both the tune and the state of your exhuast.
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Wheel Sizes & Offsets For Skylines
Kinkstaah replied to Sydneykid's topic in Suspension, braking, tyres and drivetrain
You can't. What size are the rims? -
Above is the GTX3582 and below is the 7670. The 8374 is going to be bigger. The 3582 fit barely well enough on a damn stock RB25 manifold that it was too close for comfort to pretty much everything (hence going high mount, after!) Without knowing what car it is it all comes down to how much room you have and how much bigger it is than a R32/33/34 because its complete guesses either way. At least on a 34, a stock manifold which is about as compact as it gets was struggling with a 3582. Get the G Series, if ONLY for its compact size.
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Bills 33 Gtst Streeter/track Car
Kinkstaah replied to admS15's topic in Members Cars, Project Overhauls & Restorations
Racechrono Pro is suprisingly OK to do this, all you really have to do is get the raw video (from any source) and get it onto your phone for the app to see it. You can then overlay them on top of one another to sync them up. Then Racechrono Pro will export the completed video to another file on your phone which you can then copy off and upload etc. Other than moving the file to/from your phone to actually merge them, it's quite intuitive to actually use -
Low mounting a 8374 is lol. It is a huge turbo, in the context of low mounting one in a RB. My 7670 was much, much, much larger than a GTX3582 and that was a squeeze to low mount. (The GTX3582, the 7670 low mounting was a non-option) The answer on low mounting a single nowdays would have to be the Garrett G series - They are much more compact for the power they put out. Definitely 100% without any doubt ever that is the turbo you want to get if for some reason you demand it to be low mounted.
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Dba xtreme performance brake pads
Kinkstaah replied to danny14's topic in Suspension, braking, tyres and drivetrain
I agree, after using them on the track I had this problem after half a session pulling back into the pits But some people use them with little to no issues After I discussed the above photo with Brakes Direct, they sent me a set of DBA XP, but they also said they didnt have a great deal of info on them either, They should at least work for the street, but they are rated a bit tougher than the A1RM but fill the segment the A1RM is 'supposed' to be filling. If you have them, and have nothing else its worth a go. Worst that can happen is you buy another set of pads for track days which is hardly the worst plan to have.. -
Dba xtreme performance brake pads
Kinkstaah replied to danny14's topic in Suspension, braking, tyres and drivetrain
They are actually a new pad designed by DBA to enter into that market. I got a set for free from Brakes Direct due to my Forza pads taking near forever (7 months!) to ship from Italy, which was an issue on the Forza end, not the Brakes Direct end. However, I haven't tried them as my car is laid up right now. They SHOULD sit in that light track/A1RM/FP3 kind of segment. They should be well into the whole "Well I'm about to go to the track for the first time but want something semi-streetable..." kind of thing. -
This is where I say buy Jussi's sedan and sell commodore, etc etc.
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Honestly, the best way to do it is buy someone's project you can vouch for. There are no unmolested virgin R34's, nor should there be, and the ones that may exist are absolutely not worth the $.
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Kerbs are not really your friend on a racetrack. Not really. They do stuff like that more often than they don't, every track has a couple of 'safe' ones and yeah the rest uh.... avoid to .. avoid stuff like the above happening!
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+1 for this. That said, have used WITHOUT gps receiver, still gets pretty good/usable/awesome data. Would try it on its own first nowadays with updated/modern phones.
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I have to ask, what wheels and size are those? The original ones. The ones you were replacing. The OEM+ look you're referencing looks really nice. From experience, 450rwkw + reliable is uh.... it's going to be a tough ask depending on what you refer to as 'reliable'. Consider selling a child or two or maybe a house to get there.
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oil R 34 GTT OIL AND WATER TEMPERATURE
Kinkstaah replied to PETEGTT's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
Is this car actually stock? I saw this behaviour when I had a R34 GTT and someone had replaced the standard triple gauges (in the center) with aftermarket gauges. However they had just repurposed the OEM wiring and sensors, so all the gauges read incorrectly. Given the car does NOT have a stock temperature gauge that reads (in C) how hot the car is, it makes me wonder if these are aftermarket gauges that are setup incorrectly. But I definitely remember the oil one - It read very similar numbers to that until I changed the sender to the correct sender. -
My gf has a MX5 with Famous which met an unfortunate end. The claim process was actually really quite painful, to the point of us having to submit news articles and information from the bureau of meteorology that it was actually raining the day of the accident, even though there was a pretty obvious tree-shaped hole in the front of the car. (She hit a tree on a nature strip!) They did eventually pay out the insurance, though, but for some reason they went full audit on her particular claim in a way I've not really seen from any other insurer.
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Engine loom confusion between s1 and s2 neo6
Kinkstaah replied to Jakeeyjones's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
^--- almost certainly yes. Keep in mind the NA car has quite a few other things missing from the turbo one. Bracing, Traction control, various other sensors, triple gauge cluster in the center for things like you know, a boost gauge, oil temp. The NA car's oil warmer/heater block has no provision for a Oil temp sensor, etc, blocked from factory. I say this as I originally had a NA Series 2 and put a turbo engine into it. The thing is the information isn't there online as you've probably found. When you start doing things that noone has done before, or decided against they are often the wrong thing to do. The ECU is the same so it stands to reason that the pinouts and wiring for the loom will be the same. With all the issues I had over the years, not one was a "Hmmm maybe the S1 loom is different" then again, I may have not actually had a S2 Neo in my car anyway. The differences are that slight you'd almost never be able to truly know. This kind of stuff is why "Buy a turbo car" is the answer. You'd then know 10000000% that the loom does match up, and it's already wired, and correctly running, you have the extra gauges you need and the various chassis bits under the car to cope with the turbo motor. The biggest problem with these cars is the amount of time people spend figuring out how to make it work with them sitting in garages, instead of being out on the road enjoying them. -
Engine loom confusion between s1 and s2 neo6
Kinkstaah replied to Jakeeyjones's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
Well, it's easier if it's a manual. The easiest way, for sure, no doubt, and still the best thing to do is move all of the cosmetic mods into a Turbo car. I had/have a S2 car and there's quite a few things that 'the internet says should be the same' but aren't. That said, I can't actually recall too many of them, things like indicator stalk plugs etc are different. However, if you have the technical know how to swap a motor and swap a loom and ECU then the differences on a plug's moulding aren't going to stop you. But to return to the first point... if you DO have the technical know how to swap a motor and swap a loom and convert an ECU, you'd know that the best way to approach this is swap the bodykit over to the turbo car 10/10 times. -
I have had things fail in 1-2 stops. I had the same problem mentioned above with a1rm's in a 5 minute session at Broadford, and Sandown is far tougher.. Road is not track. Most tracks don't come close to the torture on a car's cooling and braking systems that Sandown does. I can't see toooooo many comfy OEM manufacturers putting pads on any car that are great for Sandown. I'm not saying don't give it a go, but there's a chance that if you do, you may do one session and leave because it's pointless continuing... so if you can get ahead of it, its worth looking into. Even if you buy track pads and such to swap out for the day then go about merrily on road pads afterwards for the road.
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Engine loom confusion between s1 and s2 neo6
Kinkstaah replied to Jakeeyjones's topic in R Series (R30, R31, R32, R33, R34)
Dumb question, but is it Manual? -
+2 or +3? to Sandown, I would not trust stock hardware there. Even as a STI, I would be changing pads, Fluid and Tyres to 200TW anythings, at a minimum before even thinking about entering. Unless it came from the factory with a crate for track specific stuff, or an OEM roll cage, OEM stuff + Sandown = no good. No good to the point of doing 1-2 semi flying laps and realizing you have burned your money not-good.
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R34 Diff Ratio's
Kinkstaah replied to TokyoTaxi's topic in Suspension, braking, tyres and drivetrain
Can we at least all agree that 20in non-performance tyres are going to cause unwanted skids tho ? 245/255/265 in Yokohama AD08R Nitto NT05 Michelin Pilot Sport 4S (245 only in 18) Hankook RS4 Federal RS-RR Problem solved. ? -
R34 Diff Ratio's
Kinkstaah replied to TokyoTaxi's topic in Suspension, braking, tyres and drivetrain
Width and Brand of tyres is not the only thing. If you somehow do not have grip you have chosen very badly when it comes to tyres and perhaps the rims that said tyres sit on (limiting choices of good tyre) No major engine mods means maximum 180kw. You should be able to maintain the car hooking up to the ground under full noise at nearly double that power. That's how far away from a "good" tractive setup your setup currently is. When people recommend sticky tyres and 18's or 17's the difference would be astronomical. You shouldn't be able to do a power skid on a stock power R34 pretty much ever. -
I bought one recently (and have for sale, they are fairly expensive). Smashing the fan into something and then causing sound is a problem. You can usually see the fan not spinning straight on the hub if its fked. If its louder than the exhaust genuinely (and absolutely ISNT hitting anything.....) then yes replace it ASAP.