Jump to content
SAU Community

Inner West Crew Whoretown (toowong/st Lucia/kenmore/indooroopilly And Sometimes Sunnybank?)


Recommended Posts

how about we take this battle to the hills?

hhaha

yes problem sovled martin! only a couple more smaller issues to work on then get that turbo on. I might have an idea for the pulley for the water pump

sif mount that shit.. just place it infront of u lol and bucket to catch th shit

rofl im still slightly rocking from the boat.. lol.. im like taking a piss.. thinking wow.. since when does this toilet have a swell?

Edited by Redsuns88
@john: Had to repair that power cable after looking at it mang, all 3 wires were showing copper :P . All good now :D . Seems cold.

Air con fitting day tomorrow :rant:

Win :P

Manging mangs

Work is of the ghey today. Think i might pretend to be dead and get the day off

I think you could pull it off.

mmmm, day off.

awesome.

Hai five!

Think I shall detail the car today.

Manging mangs

Work is of the ghey today. Think i might pretend to be dead and get the day off

Would kinda suck if u did that..

pretend to be dead then the next day u come in everyone are like

"skins skins!!! what happen buddy thought u was dead!??!!"

"Meh i dunno.. just started breathing again!?!"

Would kinda suck if u did that..

pretend to be dead then the next day u come in everyone are like

"skins skins!!! what happen buddy thought u was dead!??!!"

"Meh i dunno.. just started breathing again!?!"

I'd just put it down to that 24hr death bug that's going around.

I'd just put it down to that 24hr death bug that's going around.

I had that on the weekend, although mine was somewhat split into 2 x 12 hour deaths, on both saturday and sunday daytime. By night time, it was a miracle! I was alive again!

On a side note, I hear it's related to periods of heavy drinking, and can flare up immediately following a cab ride home at 5am.

I had that on the weekend, although mine was somewhat split into 2 x 12 hour deaths, on both saturday and sunday daytime. By night time, it was a miracle! I was alive again!

On a side note, I hear it's related to periods of heavy drinking, and can flare up immediately following a cab ride home at 5am.

Its highly contagious. There is only one cure and thats more of what you had the night before.

Hey Geoff

:cool:

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



  • Latest Posts

    • our good friends at nismo make a diff for it, I have one (and a spare housing to put the centre in) on the way. https://www.nismo.co.jp/products/web_catalogue/lsd/mechanical_lsd_v37.html AMS also make a helical one, but I prefer mechanical for track use in 2wd (I do run a quaife in the front, but not rear of the R32)
    • What are we supposed to be seeing in the photo of the steering angle sensor? The outer housing doesn't turn, right? All the action is on the inside. The real test here is whether or not your car has had the steering put back together by a butcher. When the steering is centred (and we're not caring about the wheel too much here, we're talking about the front wheels, parallel, facing front) then you should have an absolutely even number of turns from centre to left lock and centre to right lock. If there is any difference at all then perhaps the thing has been put back together wrongly, either the steering wheel put on one spline (or more!) off, and the alignment bodged to straighteb the wheel, or the opposite where something silly was done underneath and the wheel put back on crooked to compensate. Nut there isn't actually much evidence that you have such a problem anyway. It is something you can easily measure and test for to find out though. My money is still on the HICAS CU not driving the PS solenoid with the proper PWM signal required to lighten the load at lower speed. If it were me, I would be putting either a multimeter or oscilloscope onto the solenoid terminals and taking it for a drive, looking for the voltage to change. The PWM signal is 0v, 12V, 0V, 12v with ...obviously...modulated pulse width. You should see that as an average voltage somewhere between 0V and 12V, and it should vary with speed. An handheld oscilloscope would be the better tool for this, because they are definitely good enough but there's no telling if any cheap shit multimeter that people have lying around are good enough. You can also directly interfere with the solenoid. If you wire up a little voltage divider with variable resistor on it, and hook the PS solenoid direct to 12V through that, you can manually adjust the voltage to the solenoid and you should be able to make it go ligheter and heavier. If you cannot, then the problem is either the solenoid itself dead, or your description of the steering being "tight" (which I have just been assuming you mean "heavy") could be that you have a mechanical problem in the steering and there is heaps of resistance to movement.
    • Little update  I have shimmed the solenoid on the rack today following Keep it Reets video on YouTube. However my steering is still tight. I have this showing on Nisscan, my steering angle sensor was the closest to 0 degrees (I could get it to 0 degrees by small little tweaks, but the angle was way off centre? I can't figure this out for the life of me. I get no faults through Nisscan. 
    • The BES920 is like the Toyota Camrys of coffee machines. E61 group head is cool, however the time requirements for home use makes it less desirable. The Toyota Camry coffee machine runs twin boilers and also PID temp control, some say it produces coffees as good as an E61 group head machine.
    • And yes with a full tank it will hit limiter free revving or driving 6B6CDF6E-4094-426D-A9CB-6C553475FE36.mp4
×
×
  • Create New...