Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Played around with my mate's lenses last night. Still need to lip the guards, install some camber arms, and get a wheel allignment. Stupid apprentiship wages :)

IMG_6878.jpg

IMG_6876.jpg

IMG_6875.jpg

Nice wheels, just dont try to strip the paint yourself, its a bitch.... :D

Was back in Japan on business and sorting out sending my car to Oz and came across this for sale..

Sorry pics are a bit dark as weather was a shitty day in Toyko

JF0S3578.jpg

JF0S3579.jpg

JF0S3577.jpg

JF0S3576.jpg

JF0S3575.jpg

JF0S3574.jpg

JF0S3580.jpg

JF0S3572.jpg

JF0S3571.jpg

JF0S3573.jpg

Oh Hell Yeah! R33 4-door GT-R!

Can I have it? Just put it in your luggage please!?!?!?

Here's my new r33 Series 2 Gts-t Spec M 40th Anniversary i just bought on the weekend

post-74768-1277890861_thumb.jpg

LOL, if you were living in NSW, you'd have to change your name to something ending in inks to fit in - three of the 40th Anniversary versions here are owned by Kinks (Geoff), Links (Anthony) and Tinks (Kasey)!

Cheers mate! I'm not loving them atm, want some 18s. Hopefully I'll get some new wheels soon with a much more aggresive offset, and not white. Sooo over white wheels, this is my second car with them!! Lol

i hear ya...mine were white but got a ding in the front wheel chipped a big chunk of paint..thought i could strip em myself.

3 tins of paint stripper and shitloads of buffing later...But i love em now... ....I tried 18s but it didnt look as low anymore so i stuck with the 17s ..

064.jpg

Edited by Arthur T3
Oh Hell Yeah! R33 4-door GT-R!

Can I have it? Just put it in your luggage please!?!?!?

$33,000 odd dollars and its yours !!

Had 75,000 odd km's on the clock and interior was pretty mint.

At first, it looked a bit weird but it grows on you pretty quick.

Would'nt mind one in my garage

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 have no hard data to report, but I have to say, having driven it to work and back all week, mostly on wet roads (and therefore mostly not able to contemplate anything too outrageous anywhere)..... it is real good. I turned the boost controller on, with duty cycle set to 10% (which may not be enough to actually increase the boost), and the start boost set to 15 psi. That should keep the gate unpressurised until at least 15 psi. And rolling at 80 in 5th, which is <2k rpm, going to WOT sees the MAP go +ve even before it crosses 2k and it has >5 psi by the time it hits 90 km/h. That's still <<2.5k rpm, so I think it's actually doing really well. Because of all the not-quite-ideal things that have been in place since the turbo first went on, it felt laggy. It's actually not. The response appears to be as good as you could hope for with a highflow.
    • Or just put in a 1JZ, and sell me the NEO head 😎
    • Oh, it's been done. You just run a wire out there and back. But they have been known to do coolant temp sensors, MAP sensors, etc. They're not silly (at Regency Park) and know what's what with all the different cars.
    • Please ignore I found the right way of installing it thanks
    • There are advantages, and disadvantages to remapping the factory.   The factory runs billions of different maps, to account for sooooo many variables, especially when you bring in things like constantly variable cams etc. By remapping all those maps appropriately, you can get the car to drive so damn nicely, and very much so like it does from the factory. This means it can utilise a LOT of weird things in the maps, to alter how it drives in situations like cruise on a freeway, and how that will get your fuel economy right down.   I haven't seen an aftermarket ECU that truly has THAT MANY adjustable parameters. EG, the VAG ECUs are somewhere around 2,000 different tables for it to work out what to do at any one point in time. So for a vehicle being daily driven etc, I see this as a great advantage, but it does mean spending a bit more time, and with a tuner who really knows that ECU.   On the flip side, an aftermarket ECU, in something like a weekender, or a proper race car, torque based tuning IMO doesn't make that much sense. In those scenarios you're not out there hunting down stuff like "the best way to minimise fuel usage at minor power so that we can go from 8L/100km to 7.3L/100km. You're more worried about it being ready to make as much freaking power as possible when you step back on the loud pedal as you come out of turn 2, not waiting the extra 100ms for all the cams to adjust etc. So in this scenario, realistically you tune the motor to make power, based on the load. People will then play with things like throttle response, and drive by wire mapping to get it more "driveable".   Funnily enough, I was watching something Finnegans Garage, and he has a huge blown Hemi in a 9 second 1955 Chev that is road registered. To make it more driveable on the road recently, they started testing blocking up the intake with kids footballs, to effectively reduce air flow when they're on the road, and make the throttle less touchy and more driveable. Plus some other weird shit the yankee aftermarket ECUs do. Made me think of Kinks R34...
×
×
  • Create New...