Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

A mate of mine who lives just down the road from me has a 33 the same as mine GOT STOLEN TODAY!

WHITE s2 R33 Gts-t type m.

STOLEN FROM GILLMAN AREA AROUND 3:45 - 4:45

stock wheels. very clean car.

REGO : CC 310G

please keep an eye out...

thanks guys!

Ryan

Edited by Ryanrb25
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/176996-yet-another-today-stolen/
Share on other sites

  • Replies 69
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

A mate of mine who lives just down the road from me has a 33 the same as mine GOT STOLEN TODAY!

WHITE s2 R33 Gts-t type m.

STOLEN FROM GILLMAN AREA AROUND 3:45 - 4:45

stock wheels. very clean car.

REGO : CC 310G

please keep an eye out...

thanks guys!

Ryan

hey did he have a alarm Gillman area, ottoway area a high risk area for getting your car stollen check this site out http://www.carsafe.com.au check how safe your area is anyway bak to this.

i lived at ottoway just ove eastern parade had 3 break-in attempts on my car so i moved 1st time was a b!@tch completley stuffed my door lock and handle they didnt get in looked at the alarm the sensetivity was almost off so turned it up now if a bird lands on the roof it goes off 2nd time alarm went off no visible damage 3rd time no visible damage .

New area no attempts yet!!!

my sis lives down that way ill tell here the rego number and to keep an eye ill keep a eye out also hope you find your mates pride and joy best ove luck :D

why would sapol want to help???? they are probably thinking........its one less import on the road............who cares how the owners feel??? there must be a way that maybe we could approach sapol and say something to them perhaps????

does anyone know what these buggers are actually doing to steal them?

do they unlock the doors eg - with thick steel wire to hit the passenger door unlock button on the drivers door main switch panel? -thats one of those things you'd be stupid not to disconnect. but then again if they try long and hard enough, they could probably even unlock the drivers door lock itself.

and what do they do to start them up? it is just like hotwiring any car?

one would think immobilizers actually do something...!

this is fking madness! i would love to catch one of these c*nts!

goto your auto electrition and get him to re-wire that switch so that it only works with the accesories on

once your in its just like stealing any other car, all cars are the same cant say anymore may have said too much

no, its just Adelaide.

no one gives a f**k about anyone else these days.......

lived here my whole live and Im watching the city slowly becoming a real shithole.

ppl want something they take it. how do you stop that ?

oh be quiet, lol. our car is in the top10 list of being stolen, so its not a matter of being the same as any other car, its a matter of time and oppurtunity for theives, all of them know what their doing, most of them, so you dont need to tell them how to steal a car.

Have a look at a Mitsubishi 380. Only way to steal that car is to car jack someone, honestly. Its so secure. Emulate it somehow.

Edited by Pauly33GTS-t
oh wtf seriously.

Im just as much angry at thieves as i am with SAPOL about not doing enough on this matter.

Er....Sapol arnt there to keep a lookout for every car on the road every second...All they can do is keep a lookout for if one of them sees it out.

why would sapol want to help???? they are probably thinking........its one less import on the road............who cares how the owners feel??? there must be a way that maybe we could approach sapol and say something to them perhaps????

I wish people would stop police bashing. "ZOMG my ricerz been defectzored!!!11!!!" Who u gunna ring when u need help? Ghostbusters?

does anyone know what these buggers are actually doing to steal them?

do they unlock the doors eg - with thick steel wire to hit the passenger door unlock button on the drivers door main switch panel? -thats one of those things you'd be stupid not to disconnect. but then again if they try long and hard enough, they could probably even unlock the drivers door lock itself.

and what do they do to start them up? it is just like hotwiring any car?

one would think immobilizers actually do something...!

this is fking madness! i would love to catch one of these c*nts!

Yes lets all post up on the interweb about how to steal a skyline

U cant stop anyone breaking into a car. All u can do is not leave shit in eyes view (gauges, controllers) and make it harder for them (hidden alarms, 2 manual cutoff switches) to increase the time they have to fark with it.

If u have full comp insurance, sit back and dont worry.

is it me or do most cars stolen are stock. what im getting at is this, done up cars means money spent on it means good/best alarm to prevent it from getting stolen. whilst stock means i dont give a fk, it runs and its a skyline, thats all that matters equates to easy target. im obviously generalising, sure there are sleeper. anywho, way off topic.

to the point, more details please. as skyline drivers, we would like to be educated (or at least I do) about these things. What time, alarm (if any), contact details if we seen it etc etc would go a long way.

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

    • hello! does anyone have a schematic that shows how to test the blower motor resistor for the vac system? i believe the part# is 27761-15U00. I think the resistor is toast, but would like to be able to test it somehow before i embark on the journey to find a new one. cheers! 27761-15U00
    • I don't know the answer to this, but did you have a look at the parts diagrams on amayama.com and see what they list around it for your car? As an example this should be it on my car. That's how I would check for required clips and things like that. But, I take no responsibility for you ending up with a box full of random OEM hoses, washers and clips after going down that path a few times. This definitely has never happened to me  
    • Most driving should* be done on one side of single lane divided roads. In the RHD world, you drive on the left side of the dividing line and the road is probably cambered equally on both sides. So your side of the road slopes away to the left. The same is true for the LHD world, just everything swapped to the other side and opposite slope. With a perfectly neutral, straight ahead wheel alignment designed to drive straight on a perfectly flat surface (or at least one that is level on the left-right axis, even if it has some slope in the fore-aft axis) you will not be able to drive on a cambered road without the car wanting to drift down the camber. You will need to add steering input in the opposite direction all the time. This is annoying. The solution has always been to set the camber and/or the caster to produce a continuous turning force in the opposite direction of the camber. The car will drive straight on the kind of camber for which it was set up, presumably as described in the top paragraph. But.... when the car is set up this way, as soon as you get into a lane, usually on a multi-lane surface road or highway, where the camber is not as presumed during setup, the car will usually pull to one side. In the RHD world, if you are in the fast lane on a big divided road, you are probably on the opposite camber compared to what the car was set up for (ie, sloping down to the right) and the combination of the setup and that camber will make the car want to go right pretty hard. Even a perfectly flat lane will tend to want to go right. There's no getting around it. Civil engineers who know their stuff (which is not an assumption that can always be made) will attempt to keep the variation in camber across a multi-lane road as small as possible, and if they can will attempt to make the fast lane as close to flat, or even cambered in the same direction as all the other lanes. This takes a lot of planning for drainage, control of levels, ability to deal with the elevation changes that occur at road junctions, etc etc. So it's not trivial to get it right. When they do make it work, then the annoyance is reduced, along with tyre wear, fuel consumption, etc. In theory, the civil engineers are supposed to worry about those aspects of road design also. * This used to be true, but now with very large highway systems, even just multi-lane surface roads running everywhere, it is less true now than it was, but the old assumption is the basis for describing the phenomenon, so let's just run with it for the moment.
    • I think the consensus was that's normal. Sloped road surfaces or something? I remember @silviaz went through this before. It might be one of those things you never notice until you pay attention to it.
    • Im not entirely sure exactly what or where its leaking from, he started to pull the boots to swap to my new tie rods + ends and it just vomited fluid, so he closed em up up, swapped the rod ends to the old rods and let me know so I can figure a solution out, im guessing its all origional as as I passed 103k miles earlier this year im sure its just in need of a full overhual/rebuild anyways.    If i could just yank it off and be good it wouldn't be an issue to ship it out and wait for the turnaround but the guy I work with doesnt really have space to keep my car for a week or two at a time, would rather drop it off and have a replacement ready to drop in
×
×
  • Create New...