Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

ahah u jus have to have a responsible right leg! lol.. but yeah i fuond that wen i was on my p plates everyone would stay away from me and keep their distance.. apart from other people who wanted to race or rev me up lol... but now on my full license its as if im driving any other car. but people still give way haha.

haha... good point...

anything can be your daily driver, but I'm after a car that behaves well as a daily driver.

It will sit in traffic like any other car if you want it to (yes, a bit noisier than a falcodore - but HEAPS better looking), i was driving mine everyday with a single plate, then got a twin plate - nothing changed, it was driven everyday :)

  • 2 weeks later...

mines a daily driver too, only 2 things that sh!t me.

every second bogan in a vs commy (with the vx clubsport kit of course), will burn past you thinkin they're the coolest man alive.

and its a pain gettin to the stock oil filter often.

but for such a hot car, they're pretty practical.

I drive mine every day and I would rate them just the same as any V8 owner driving a HSV/FPV... they chew fuel if you drive hard, wide tyres cost $$$, loud exhausts attract attention.... you just have to not only have the money to buy it... but have the money to maintain it. Any high performance car (standard or modified) will require regular maintanace, so look for a good basis (let's face it they are old now and you'll struggle to find a perfect example), look for things before they become problems, and drive it with respect.

Easy huh!!!???

Get the GTR, its a car you wont regret owning if you follow the above!

Im also a daily driver of my 32 GTR.

If you look after her and treat her right, use quality replacement parts (instead of cheap unreliable options) when things do break then you will be ok.

Just dont cut any corners with repairs otherwise you will be back as square one quicker than you think.

I love my car. Sadly im selling it.

You get that.

Mines a daily driver. Could be better on fuel but i didn't get it thinking it was gonna be fuel economical. I've had to fix a few things like suspension bushed and my front rotors but nothing major. I also had to get a new clutch but that was only because when i got it i thought the standard clutch would handle a 7k launch easily. THEY DON'T.

Whatever you get just make sure the engine is in very good condition. I haven't touched mine (apart from removing restricter) and i've never had anything go wrong with it. Thats when it becomes a money pit. When the motor starts braking.

Another daily driver here, R33 GTR.

Fuel useage is about 12l/100km if driven lightly around town.

Dudes call out from their cars, saying how cool the car is.

Those wishing thay could have a cool car hate you

fords/commo's hate you and won't race around corners. Normally the commo's want to race you in a stright line. (laugh as the $100K commo tries to round a corner to catch up to you)

Tyres aren't as bad as I expected $200 per corner for the cheaper variety

Taking kids in the back is a pain, but possible

Driving kids to school etc they love

Wife hates the small boot space

Oldies hate being througn around, taking a corner slowly.

Been pulled over by cops 4 times in 10 years, twice in the first week of owning the car. (RBT christmass)

Oil filter is a real pain to replace, without dropping oil everywhere.

Oil is real expensive and needs changing near every 2-3 months (5000km)

only uses 98 octain fuel

Parts are a pain, but probably better than any other grey imported car

Your just want the motor to do more, $$$$$

You just have to customise it. I never felt the need with the commo.

Budget for a new clutch, whats the good of a awd if you never use it for power takes offs.

Edited by a20089

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'm going to slap an old nismo logo sticker on my spare one and sell it to the land of the free for a thousand bucks
    • lol, probably should have read further!
    • Well - they have arrived.  And they are easy on the eye to put it mildly... These only have three bolts - but for a start there is a key that fits with vacuum like precision..  And as you can see by my ruler, the interface is large..   I listened to a podcast on HP Academy about Dan (KiwiCNC) and I'm more than comfortable he knows what he is doing. R35 Bearing assembly should arrive later today so can mock that up for a look. Can't wait to get these on and get some brake pressure logging too. IMG_3860.MP4
    • I would be very confident that they are the same parts (the 2 different SKUs). It seems very clear that you can drop the cam in the 2-way opening, or in the other opening. If you arrange it in the other opening in the same way that you see any other 1-way diff, ie, with the flat of the cam up against the 1° side of the opening, then it would work as a 1-way. It can only spread the ramps when driving forwards - cannot spread the ramps on overrun. It would then appear obvious that if you put the cam into the opening "backwards", that you would get the angled flats of the cam working onto the "points" of the 1° side of the opening, which would give you ramp spread in both loading directions. I do wonder if the forward direction of the 1.5-way config is equivalent to the forward direction of the 2-way, seeing as the cams are flipped and the angled surfaces on those would need to be the same on each side - AND - clearly when installed in either the 2-way or 1-1ay configuration they are not intended to work exactly the same (the ramp angles on the 2-way are 10° different between forward and backward, and the ramp doesn't exist in the 1-way config). 'twere me, I think I would rather actually have a set of rings that offered the 2-way with two different sets of ramp angles, say the 55/45 of the existing design and maybe a 45/37.5 combo for a less aggressive effect), AND another set of rings with a dedicated 1.5-way opening and a dedicated 1-way opening. The 1.5-way opening would actually have the steeper angle on the overdrive side that causes it to be less pushy than the forward drive angle, like you see in many other diffs. But really - if this Nismo thing is thought out properly and all those surfaces work on each other the way that they need to, who am I to argue?
    • I would be very confident that they are the same parts (the 2 different SKUs). It seems very clear that you can drop the cam in the 2-way opening, or in the other opening. If you arrange it in the other opening in the same way that you see any other 1-way diff, ie, with the flat of the cam up against the 1° side of the opening, then it would work as a 1-way. It can only spread the ramps when driving forwards - cannot spread the ramps on overrun. It would then appear obvious that if you put the cam into the opening "backwards", that you would get the angled flats of the cam working onto the "points" of the 1° side of the opening, which would give you ramp spread in both loading directions. I do wonder if the forward direction of the 1.5-way config is equivalent to the forward direction of the 2-way, seeing as the cams are flipped and the angled surfaces on those would need to be the same on each side - AND - clearly when installed in either the 2-way or 1-1ay configuration they are not intended to work exactly the same (the ramp angles on the 2-way are 10° different between forward and backward, and the ramp doesn't exist in the 1-way config). 'twere me, I think I would rather actually have a set of rings that offered the 2-way with two different sets of ramp angles, say the 55/45 of the existing design and maybe a 45/37.5 combo for a less aggressive effect), AND another set of rings with a dedicated 1.5-way opening and a dedicated 1-way opening. The 1.5-way opening would actually have the steeper angle on the overdrive side that causes it to be less pushy than the forward drive angle, like you see in many other diffs. But really - if this Nismo thing is thought out properly and all those surfaces work on each other the way that they need to, who am I to argue?
×
×
  • Create New...