Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 40
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

i have a new petrol navara, great tow car power and speed wise good for 150 kph odd with trailer behind! lol

but absolutely sh!t house for fuel consumption! :D

why'd you buy a petrol one? i assume your talking about the d40 models?

my old man had a diesal d40. 2.5ltr 4 cylinder diesal. GREAT car seeing over 650 from a tank when driving in the city. fuel consumption can go down below the 9 ltr per 100km average on highway driving. consumption barely changed an with my old sil80 and a trailer you almost would notice it was there.

the old saying goes if your gonna tow go diesel

man, some good replys. thats given me some good ideas. i hear u gary re: the 4wd is needed in muddy situations. im still looking arround though. the ordfay sounds like the best option so far.

it seems as though the 2.6 petrol mazda bravo wont cut the mustard without some extra heavy duty work done to the rear end. not to mention load bareing tyres. found out it was easy enough to go out and buy a 2.5 tonne tow bar and assembly 2nd hand easily enough for the bravo though.

i was being told by a hard to understand serbian fellow at work today that the lpg systems on cars need to have checkups regularly. he says that once a year isnt good enough and that most people dont even do it that often. he's an ex taxi driver. he said that their cars were inspected on a 3 month basis. i dont know how true that story is re: road cars.

how often do AU fords need a rebuild? id expect them to go to 500,000klm no probs with regular oil changes and being treated right. all of the ones in my price range are at the 200,000klm mark.

yeah dunc go diesel ! we dont see anymore than 300/350 kay when towing on 80 litre tank!

spencer and I use his navara STR turbo diesel. it is awesome to tow with. it's a 4 door with 5 usable seats, has a hard top for the tray (down side is limits storage badly, upside is it locks) and has towed the GT3 cup car, my GTR, his group NC Alfa and dozens and dozens of others over the last couple of years. it even fit my big ass sony LCD tv in the back (just!). also being turbo diesel we cranked up the boost a bit and got a chip for it too. goes pretty well now but fuel consumption is not exactly stellar. but it can tow at a pretty rapid pace easy well past 110. :banana: chirps seconds too.

got the petrol , because it goes like a rocket and i can deal with the fuel economy.

also i didnt like the noisy diesel and didnt want a manual (the auto diesel was twice as noisy, always reving on the convertor)

  • 2 weeks later...

I've towed most of my working life and tried them all, Utes are ok but there is the afore mentioned security and lack of passenger room. Landcruisers are good too, Just not as bombproof as toyota would have you believe.

The best tow vehicle I have used and still use is the Nissan patrol.

I have owned the 3 litre variant, the 2.8 litre td jobbie, the 4.2 petrol and my current worker is the 4.8 petrol.

They all performed a stellar job, even the smaller engined units worked well above their weight and both ran up many hundreds of thousands of kays before i moved them on.

The 4.8 laughs at any load I care to pull with it. It likes a drink but that has been minimised with some custom pipework. an ecu and a dyno. Its big, comfy. power to burn and refuses to fail. (it will also tow a loaded car trailer faster than that too Russ :D )

The other advantage to using 4b's is the weight over the front axle. rwd utes etc are ok but still subject to rock steer even on a well set up balanced trailer package. You start hitting some undulating road and the weight transfer to and from the front of the tow vehicle is far more pronounced in the rwd. The heavier fronted 4wd virtually eliminate this phenomina.

The only other option that I can see is the even bigger ford/chev pickup truck style vehicles but cost becomes a real limiting factor there.

  • 2 weeks later...

I have the 2200kg tow kit put onto my VZ V6 commadore sedan and it tows great, probally does abot 15ltrs/100klms with the car on and can sit on 110klm/h very easily.

Even going up Mooney Mooney it sits on 100klm although reving the guts out of it.

Big boot for the tool box and jack bt and pieces and luggage, rear seat for the passengers and usally put spare wheels in the car that is being towed.

I used to have a VS commadore V6 which also did a stellar job but recomend getting the tow kit with the bags which i have in the VZ as you can lift the rear of the car up so it is not dragging it's arse on the ground.

You could pick up a second hand commadore for fairly cheap so maybe this is an option (could go a station wagon if you want).

Matt

if you get a navara, dont get one of the newer shape. theyre faarked

if anything, get a D22, nissan brought them back because the new was no good

new D22 runs the patrol 3L diesel

or something like a patrol, you can get them in 4.2L turbo diesel (ST-6 i think?)

what wrong with the d40 model (new shape) i know of at least 3 (one being my parent's that i drive regulary) that haven't had any real issues at all? all are used for towing and four wheel driving and just general town driving?

thier only downfall is they are pretty big and lack of ground clearance. but you don't buy a new 4wd to go do harcore four wheel driving do you

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

    • One thing I can tell you is, do it properly the first time. If you encounter unexpected problems just let the car sit for a week or two if you have to get some other parts or figure stuff out.  I'd have said go and use as many OEM parts as possible but since you want to change the turbo later on a custom kit is probably the better choice. Since I have no experience with RB25 just compare parts diagrams and images before buying a line kit and it should be easy to see if it has everything you need. Amayama has very good parts diagrams and part number lists, that is what I used a bunch to figure out what I might need. And don't forget to plan ahead and possibly renew other stuff that's easy to get to while you're in there doing the turbo lines. Happy wrenching
    • Update 4:   Hi all, good news. Engine is running and all the gaskets and seals seem to be working as intended. No leaks so far, even the JB Weld seems to hold. I flushed out the old coolant a few times and put in fresh coolant, not Nissan stuff, I decided to try the Ravenol Protect FL22, they claim it works for a wide variety of JDM cars and the opinions on it by some people were pretty good. And it has the nice poison green color! And man am I glad I bought a coolant system tester earlier this year, vacuum filling works wonders on this engine. I can definitely recommend this to anyone still doing it the old school way. All you need is compressed air supply. Will have to do a small test drive as soon as I can, I removed the gauge cluster again as the tacho needle was still bouncing around a bit but it was much better than before already.  I also found some cracks on all 4 tires inner and outer sidewalls. Apparently these tires should 't be parked on for extended periods or be kept under 0 degrees during storage, which I did not know. Clearly the previous owner didn't look into those details either, he probably bought them just cause they are cool semi-slicks. I'm just wondering how tf I am supposed to reach 30-80 degree tire temperatures on the public road consistenly, these tires were never going to work for my use case. I'll probably order Continental SportContact7 ones as these are the best allround summer tire available right now and I don't think I'll need anything crazier for now. Do let me know if you have experience with various tires and which ones you recommend.
    • You have no idea how many goddamn boxes I received these past three months haha Most have been put to use by now though, luckily
    • Not going to pretend I didn't do a bit of junky work this time around, but mostly due to the fact that some things I am not willing to spend days fixing right now, like wiring. I try to do most things properly the first time around.
    • Regardless of neglect or incompetence, fixing either is tedious and annoying. Most of the neglect on my car is definitely rust. I hope I can at least pass inspections later on and they won't fail the car due to slightly corroded hardlines. I was generous with rust converter and wax and it looks ok, most lines in the rear are hard to see properly anyways.  Definitely will test them though to make sure they don't rupture under pressure, in that case the car isn't going anywhere this year.
×
×
  • Create New...