Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I’m proud to announce that Victorian Drift Club will be hosting a Drift Practice day on the 11th of March 2006 @ Winton Motor Raceway.

For those of you that have joined Vicdrift.com Here is the link where there are details about the event: Victorian Drift Club Practice Day @ Winton Motor Raceway

For those of you that haven't joined VicDrift.com please do so, otherwise you wont be able to view the information about the event.

Look forward to seeing you all out there!! And get those cars ready!!

Cheers Lukeyz :)

Post more information for the punters, and the level of support will increase. Please don't take this the wrong way, i'm not having a go. Just trying to help the scene, as you will most likely see me hit some of these events in a gemini of some description. I know some things were discussed at the VIC meeting, but not all members were at the meeting.

For example I would like to know..

1. Cost of the event?

2. Who is backing the event and insurance coverage?

3. How do you plan to run the event?

4. What kind of instruction for beginners is going to be avaliable on the day?

5. What level of cars can enter? Does the car need to be registered?

Thanks

Im the guy with all the questions form the other night....and will; when i get my car back be doing a few of these for fun. But will say, have a look at who you are trying to attract to the events, which clubs etc. And see if its at all possible to try and nto double book weekends.

I want to have a bit of fun at Winton, but given the choice a of a drift practice at Winton, or an SAU/WRX Sprint round at PI, well im tryign to get my car ready for PI on the 11th March. (probalby too soon though)

..and perhaps just highlight the sectionsof the track that are going to be used.

Post more information for the punters, and the level of support will increase. Please don't take this the wrong way, i'm not having a go. Just trying to help the scene, as you will most likely see me hit some of these events in a gemini of some description. I know some things were discussed at the VIC meeting, but not all members were at the meeting.

For example I would like to know..

1. Cost of the event?

2. Who is backing the event and insurance coverage?

3. How do you plan to run the event?

4. What kind of instruction for beginners is going to be avaliable on the day?

5. What level of cars can enter? Does the car need to be registered?

Thanks

Thanx Buddy,

1. Cost of the event?

$130 for Vicdift members, $160 for public

2. Who is backing the event and insurance coverage?

Event Insured By AASA

3. How do you plan to run the event?

Details are on VicDrift.com

4. What kind of instruction for beginners is going to be avaliable on the day?

We will have trained drivers available for beginner instruction, they are there with you in your vehivle to help and assist in your driving skill's. There is absolutely no pressure for beginners as we all start somewhere.

5. What level of cars can enter? Does the car need to be registered?

Vehicle class is open, so bring your skyline/gemini/silvia/commodore anything. The cars will be scruitineered, details of requirements are on VicDrift.com.

Car does not have to be road registered to enter.

We will also be having a Live DJ/ party atmosphere for spectator entertainment, and a top 16 drift battle at the end of the day

Chris

Any questions please email me: [email protected]

VicDrift Club Meeting

Date: Thursday 2nd March

Where: Bells Hotel

Moray Street South Melbourne

Time: From 7pm for meals and get to know everyone, (good food)

Meeting Starts 8pm

Please come along to the meeting, committe votes will be taken and more information released on event calendar.

The Bells Hotel have been very generous in giving us the room so please come along and have dinner at the venue as this will allow us to continue to hold meetings there.

If you have any questions please email me: [email protected]

Chris

Edited by APLAYA
  • 2 weeks later...
Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • This. As for your options - I suggest remote mounting the Nissan sensor further away on a length of steel tube. That tube to have a loop in it to handle vibration, etc etc. You will need to either put a tee and a bleed fitting near the sensor, or crack the fitting at the sensor to bleed it full of oil when you first set it up, otherwise you won't get the line filled. But this is a small problem. Just needs enough access to get it done.
    • The time is always correct. Only the date is wrong. It currently thinks it is January 19. Tomorrow it will say it is January 20. The date and time are ( should be ! ) retrieved from the GPS navigation system.
    • Buy yourself a set of easy outs. See if they will get a good bite in and unthread it.   Very very lucky the whole sender didn't let go while on the track and cost you a motor!
    • Well GTSBoy, prepare yourself further. I did a track day with 1/2 a day prep on Friday, inpromptu. The good news is that I got home, and didn't drive the car into a wall. Everything seemed mostly okay. The car was even a little faster than it was last time. I also got to get some good datalog data too. I also noticed a tiny bit of knock which was (luckily?) recorded. All I know is the knock sensors got recalibrated.... and are notorious for false knock. So I don't know if they are too sensitive, not sensitive enough... or some other third option. But I reduced timing anyway. It wasn't every pull through the session either. Think along the lines of -1 degree of timing for say, three instances while at the top of 4th in a 20 minute all-hot-lap session. Unfortunately at the end of session 2... I noticed a little oil. I borrowed some jack stands and a jack and took a look under there, but as is often the case, messing around with it kinda half cleaned it up, it was not conclusive where it was coming from. I decided to give it another go and see how it was. The amount of oil was maybe one/two small drops. I did another 20 minute session and car went well, and I was just starting to get into it and not be terrified of driving on track. I pulled over and checked in the pits and saw this: This is where I called it, packed up and went home as I live ~20 min from the track with a VERY VERY CLOSE EYE on Oil Pressure on the way home. The volume wasn't much but you never know. I checked it today when I had my own space/tools/time to find out what was going on, wanted to clean it up, run the car and see if any of the fittings from around the oil filter were causing it. I have like.. 5 fittings there, so I suspected one was (hopefully?) the culprit. It became immediately apparent as soon as I looked around more closely. 795d266d-a034-4b8c-89c9-d83860f5d00a.mp4       This is the R34 GTT oil sender connected via an adapter to an oil cooler block I have installed which runs AN lines to my cooler (and back). There's also an oil temp sensor on top.  Just after that video, I attempted to unthread the sensor to see if it's loose/worn and it disintegrated in my hand. So yes. I am glad I noticed that oil because it would appear that complete and utter catastrophic engine failure was about 1 second of engine runtime away. I did try to drill the fitting out, and only succeeded in drilling the middle hole much larger and now there's a... smooth hole in there with what looks like a damn sleeve still incredibly tight in there. Not really sure how to proceed from here. My options: 1) Find someone who can remove the stuck fitting, and use a steel adapter so it won't fatigue? (Female BSPT for the R34 sender to 1/8NPT male - HARD to find). IF it isn't possible to remove - Buy a new block ($320) and have someone tap a new 1/8NPT in the top of it ($????) and hope the steel adapter works better. 2) Buy a new block and give up on the OEM pressure sender for the dash entirely, and use the supplied 1/8 NPT for the oil temp sender. Having the oil pressure read 0 in the dash with the warning lamp will give me a lot of anxiety driving around. I do have the actual GM sensor/sender working, but it needs OBD2 as a gauge. If I'm datalogging I don't actually have a readout of what the gauge is currently displaying. 3) Other? Find a new location for the OEM sender? Though I don't know of anywhere that will work. I also don't know if a steel adapter is actually functionally smart here. It's clearly leveraged itself through vibration of the motor and snapped in half. This doesn't seem like a setup a smart person would replicate given the weight of the OEM sender. Still pretty happy being lucky for once and seeing this at the absolute last moment before bye bye motor in a big way, even if an adapter is apparently 6 weeks+ delivery and I have no way to free the current stuck/potentially destroyed threads in the current oil block.
×
×
  • Create New...