Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

A 1978 Gemini sedan, had it for a few yrs then did it up, candy red paint, rebuilt and no way near stock motor, man that thing did 14.5 1/4 mile times but it got stolen from my work carpark!!! ahh those were the days :P

  • Replies 61
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

vh commodore...

89 corolla

33gts

and now ....04 fiesta ....my god i drive the balls off this thing ...

its so fun :P ...although id give my right leg to have my skyline back ...actually ...no i wouldnt..then i couldnt drive it ...

id give my left testicle :P

99 Toyota corolla Karanda Green....manual sedan forgot the code...

00 Toyota corolla Silver manual sedan AE112R

98 R34 GTT (current)

Wouldnt mind getting another corolla as a run about.....with the amount of driving I do each day (approx 120km) it really leaves a massive hole in my wallet with the price of fuel these days.

But then again ive always wanted to turbo charge one of them new sportivos.....so yeah maybe not.....will get caught up in another project which I have no money for !

Edited by shonen

well my first car was a 1989 corolla Seca CSX

2) 1994 R33 Skyline GTS

3) 1994 Bluebird Attesa SR20DET AWD

4)And this afternoon i'll be picking up a R34 GT-T...

My r33 gts ;) love it to bits :yes:

As a matter of fact it recently came back from the repair shop, I made an arrangement with the repairer to get a new aftermarket front bar, 400R, instead of the factory one. :banana:

Below is a shot of it.. All I need now is some wheels.. and it lowered a teeny weeny bit.. :banana:

rvkcva.jpg

Edited by ignuz

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • I hadn't thought about the variable power steering assist. Presumably, it will always be the same level of assist as you get in an S14. The R32/3/4 are either helliishly heavy (at low speeds) if the solenoid is not powered at all, or hellishly too light (at high speed) if it is powered all the time. I presume that it is PWM controlled on those cars. I hadn't thought about the S cars not having variable assist. ugh. What crappy plebby cars they must be!  
    • Hmm yeah that is a good point. It looks like it'll just bolt in with no real issue besides maybe the bushings being different. My other concern was that 2 pin plug that I assume is used in some way to control the rack solenoid depending on the speed signal from the ecu. The DMAX rack doesn't even have that plug though so, don't think it'll matter. Might just order the rack and see how it goes. Will update this when I figure something out
    • I'd say it's a fair bet that the feed and return fluid lines will be in different enough spots that you would need to come up with a way to cut the originals short and adapt with new hard line adaption or braided teflon hoses or somesuch. But really, you have the car, you have the photos of the DMAX rack - you should be able to go out there and see for yourself whether they're in the same or different spots.
    • I've been doing some looking around and honestly was just considering throwing a new rack at it. I saw that the dmax silvia rack bolts up into the 33 with the silvia bushings but not sure if the high pressure lines will sit in the correct spot. I believe other version of the 33 rack are the same/similar to the racks that can be opened up without as much fuss so I assume the dmax rack would fit but any ideas?
    • I've never played with one, but I would expect that you are correct. That slot looks like it is intended to be used to unscrew the end, and the flats on the body would be better than grabbing it around the round bit with a pipe wrench. So, yeah, probably unscrews. You'll probably have to make a tool to drive in that slot.
×
×
  • Create New...