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i have been told the "SLIP" is for traction control and flashes sliding but when does the "4WD" gets used? i thought it uses it when you loose traction in the back wheels and then uses the fronts like the GTR.it has never been used yet.does it get used when it looses complete traction with the back wheels?

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since i own a gts4 ill help out

it has no traction control, its just a slip warning light, cause sometimes your slipping and you dont even know it

4wd is working 100% of the time

so if all goes well you should never see the 4wd light

the only bad thing bout those lights is i cant find the illumnated dials to fit the gts4

the 4wd isnt working all the time

the car has a eletric senser that throw the power to the frunt wheels as the harder u punch the right foot the more power gos for wood thats y u can pull out the fuse and dino the car on a 2wd dino if it was 4wd all the time u wood not b a bell to do this well thats haw a r32 gts4 is set up dont no haw the 33 is

Originally posted by Ryan D

it has no traction control, its just a slip warning light, cause sometimes your slipping and you dont even know it

got that right, once on a wet night on a long straight stretch on the freeway doing 140 on fifth, when the slip light come on...wtf? real spooky...didn't even know there's any wheelspin...probably very mild. took it easy after that...

the 4wd isnt working all the time

the car has a eletric senser that throw the power to the frunt wheels as the harder u punch the right foot the more power gos for wood thats y u can pull out the fuse and dino the car on a 2wd dino if it was 4wd all the time u wood not b a bell to do this well thats haw a r32 gts4 is set up dont no haw the 33 is

-

Wouldnt that require a variable diff? im pretty sure is all time 4wd

cause many people have told me that it is. and it sure handles like it is. Cause even at top speed i can fly round sweeping bends that are a little harder than average

Doesn't the R33 GTS4 have a torque-split gauge? The R32 version certainly does - it indicates how much torque is being applied to the front wheels. Most of the time, it sits on '0'.

The Nissan 4WD system uses G-sensors and the ABS sensors to determine if / when any power should be fed to the front wheels, either because of wheel slip (ABS) or acceleration loads (lateral / longitudinal G-sensors)

The transfer case has a hydraulic clutch fed from the reservoir in the boot (RH rear corner), to apply 4WD as required.

R33s (GT-Rs at least) tend to go to a sort of limp-home mode if you pull the 4WD fuse.

If the R33 is anything like the R32, then you can't simply bolt a RB25DET from a RWD in the 4WD version. In the R32, the sump pans are different between the RWD and 4WD versions of the RB20DET engine, I'm just guessing the same with the R33, but I could be wrong.

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