Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Engine:

N1 24U block (own modifications done) race prepped

Fully balanced and blue printed

Chemically cleaned/crack tested and washed

Torque plate bored honed & decked

All new welsh plugs

Tapped oil gallaries

Fully balanced/detailed crank and grub screwed

New Ross harmonic ballancer

Race prepped crank gurdle

Shot peened/prepped standard rods with ARP bolts

Full ARP bottem end stud kit

Ross Racing forged pistons (ceramic coated)

ACL race bearings mains & rods

N1 oil pump (modified)

N1 water pump

Genuine Nissan gasket kit

Fully port & polished head

Match ported intake

Brass valve guids

Standard valves

Upgrade valve springs

Standard cams

Greddy adjustable cam gears

Gates timing belt

New genuine exhaust studs & nuts

Garrett GT3082r .82 turbo polished front cover

Braided oil lines

Speedflow fittings

Tial 44mm wastage

Ebay spec manifold modified

Greddy twin entry air intake pipe

2 x RB25 Air flow meters

4" dump pipe

4" catback exhaust

4” high flow ballistic cat

600x300x115mm Greddy style intercooler

Custom PBR clutch

Nismo lightened flywheel

Nistune ECU

Sard fuel pressure regulator

custom fuel rail

r33 gtr lift pump

044 fuel pump

2L surg tank

3/8" Aluminium fuel lines

Heap of speed flow fittings & push lock hose

Sard 700cc injectors

Alloy dual core radiator

Silicone radiator hoses

Silicone heater hoses

Exterior:

Full colour change

18x9 18x10 roh drift r's

carbon exhaust shroud

carbon top secret bonnet painted

genuine gtr front bar and gtr grill

rear drift lip

nismo b pillars

tein coil overs

Inerior:

gtr dash cluster

autometre boost guage

hybrid boost controller

greddy turbo timer

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/256366-final-stages-d/#findComment-4420116
Share on other sites

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

    • Yep, there's a very minor drift left that happens a few seconds after letting go of the steering wheel, but not enough to bother me. Enjoying the car still!
    • Got you mate. Check your email!
    • I see you've never had to push start your own car... You could save some weight right now...
    • Sounds good.  I don't 100% understand what your getting at here. When you say, "I keep seeing YouTube videos where people have new paint and primer land on the old clearcoat that isn't even dulled down" do you mean this - there is a panel with factory paint, without any prep work, they paint the entire panel with primer, then colour then clear?  If that's what you mean, sure it will "stick" for a year, 2 years, maybe 3 years? Who knows. But at some stage it will flake off and when it does it's going to come off in huge chunks and look horrific.  Of course read your technical data sheet for your paint, but generally speaking, you can apply primer to a scuffed/prepped clear coat. Generally speaking, I wouldn't do this. I would scuff/prep the clear and then lay colour then clear. Adding the primer to these steps just adds cost and time. It will stick to the clear coat provided it has been appropriately scuffed/prepped first.  When you say, "but the new paint is landing on the old clearcoat" I am imagining someone not masking up the car and just letting overspray go wherever it wants. Surely this isn't what you mean?  So I'll assume the following scenario - there is a small scratch. The person manages to somehow fill the scratch and now has a perfectly flat surface. They then spray colour and clear over this small masked off section of the car. Is this what you mean? If this is the case, yes the new paint will eventually flake off in X number of years time.  The easy solution is to scuff/prep all of the paint that hasn't been masked off in the repair area then lay the paint.  So you want to prep the surface, lay primer, then lay filler, then lay primer, then colour, then clear?  Life seems so much simpler if you prep, fill, primer, colour then clear.  There are very few reasons to go to bare metal. Chasing rust is a good example of why you'd go to bare metal.  A simple dent, there is no way in hell I'm going to bare metal for that repair. I've got enough on my plate without creating extra work for myself lol. 
×
×
  • Create New...