Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Item:RB25 Gearbox's, one has a full conversion kit one is a box on its own

Age:no idea

Condition:not sure on the condition, they were fine before the cars crashed

Price:$1200 for the box on its own, and $1800 for the whole manual conversion kit (has a good clutch on it)

To Fit:r33 gtst or whatever you like (What car)

Location:Newcastle

Contact:me by PM

Comments:

I am wrecking a whole black r33 gtst, has a decent sized turbo on it and injectors and some 17" SSR wheels (look like jap wheels) $600 for the wheels with legal tyres

Haltech e11v2 computer, comes complete with plug and play harness for R33 GTST and map sensor and air temp sensor, am looking for $1700 for the computer ONO.

I am not pulling the car appart to list parts individually, but you are more then welcome to request parts in this thread. no front end parts are available as it was hit very very hard. pics comming soon.

Can sell the turbo and dump and oil / water lines & injectors & computer & fuel pump all together if someone wants a power upgrade which made 300rwkw on 14psi

Edited by Guilt-Toy
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/217108-rb25det-5-speed-gearbox-x-2/
Share on other sites

the turbo looks like its a VG30 rear with a .70 comp cover and massive wheel in the front.

injectors are red, might be nismo 740's

Do you know what the turbo and injectors are?

added pics of the wheels and other bits

Blitz BOV $200

leaving the wheels at good same price, even though they are good quality jap wheels they could do with a paint job, some gutter scraping on it but it only chipped the paint.

post-1240-1209598796_thumb.jpg

post-1240-1209598831_thumb.jpg

post-1240-1209598868_thumb.jpg

post-1240-1209598889_thumb.jpg

post-1240-1209599012_thumb.jpg

Edited by Guilt-Toy

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

    • You can set hard reserves on your battery system, and it can't be discharged past that.  
    • That sounds like an excellent idea. But total self-sufficiency means exactly that. You have no-one else to blame when your system faults out and you have no power for a week or two while it gets fixed. You'd have to go the whole hog and get a diesel genny and all the switchover gear, to get you through such times. And, despite the fact that over 20 years, my system has been pretty reliable**, I have seen so many inverter explosions (or less dramatic deaths), panel and roof JB fires, and so on, over that time, to know that the stuff is the same as any other bulk Chinese manufactured stuff. The failure rate is well above zero - both on the equipment and on behalf of the meth addled installation labour force. And then..... warranty and means of redress against the supplier you bought the gear from. Best I can tell is that only a handful of solar companies are still around within 5 years of starting their advertising pitch. They disappear and phoenix like crazy. So, as per 1st paragraph, I suspect the only way to is go balls deep and spend maybe 2-3 times as much as you might think, so that you have every base covered. Plus, know and understand your gear intimately, so you can diagnose problems, sort them out yourself, etc, etc. Plus, probably have to consider upgrading various parts as the years pass, to maintain compatibility with newer stuff, performance and reliability, etc, etc. Whereas, remaining attached to the grid has an ongoing cost that keeps going up even if you use bugger all power from it. But it does provide the fallback in case of the worst case with your own gear. You either pay up front or as you go, I suspect.
    • Add more solar panels to the array. Call the electricity company and tell them you're moving out... Live off grid electric wise
    • Hi Jasmine. How's the war going?
    • I'm extremely suspicious of the VPP stuff. Best I can tell, you surrender any and all control of your panels and battery to the VPP, because there's no way that anyone could write a sufficiently useful set of "rules" as to how much you would be willing to let out of your export meter at any given time. If one of your main interests is to have enough in your battery every evening to get you through the night without having to import, you could easily find yourself with nothing in your battery at the end of the day, or part way through the night, and then be paying import pricing instead of paying nothing. I cannot see how this cannot come to pass.
×
×
  • Create New...