Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 290
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Gah, why does it always rain when I am on the Sunny Coast, ha ha!

Other then the rain, I am having a fantastic weekend away in Mooloolaba/Noosa with the other half :D I cruised the Spit today, first car I spotted was a 35 GTR mmmmmmmmm!

Hope everyone had a fantastic weekend mine doesn't end until Tuesday, mmmm Beach tomorrow if NO rain :P

I brought a wiring HKS kit for my car ... it's purple YAY! Thought I'd let everyone know ... :)

BROUGHT

2 entries found.

1. brought

2. bring (verb)

Main Entry: brought

past and past participle of bring

BRING

10 entries found.

1. bring (verb)

2. bring about (transitive verb)

3. bring around (transitive verb)

4. bring down (transitive verb)

5. bring in (transitive verb)

6. bring off (transitive verb)

7. bring on (transitive verb)

8. bring out (transitive verb)

9. bring to (transitive verb)

10. bring up (verb)

Main Entry: bring

Pronunciation: \ˈbriŋ\

Function: verb

Inflected Form(s): brought \ˈbrȯt\; bring·ing \ˈbriŋ-iŋ\

Etymology: Middle English, from Old English bringan; akin to Old High German bringan to bring, Welsh hebrwng to accompany

Date: before 12th century

transitive verb 1 a : to convey, lead, carry, or cause to come along with one toward the place from which the action is being regarded b : to cause to be, act, or move in a special way: as (1) : attract <her screams brought the neighbors> (2) : persuade, induce (3) : force, compel (4) : to cause to come into a particular state or condition <bring water to a boil> c dialect : escort, accompany d : to bear as an attribute or characteristic <brings years of experience to the position>

2 : to cause to exist or occur: as a : to be the occasion of <winter brings snow> b : to result in <the drug brought immediate relief> c : institute <bring legal action> d : adduce <bring an argument>

3 : prefer <bring charges>

4 : to procure in exchange : sell forintransitive verb chiefly Midland : yield, produce

— bring·er noun

— bring forth 1 : bear <brought forth fruit>

2 : to give birth to : produce

3 : adduce <bring forth persuasive arguments>

— bring forward 1 : to produce to view : introduce <brought new evidence forward>

2 : to carry (a total) forward

— bring home : to make unmistakably clear

— bring to account 1 : to bring to book

2 : reprimand

— bring to bear : to use with effect <bring pressure to bear>

— bring to book : to compel to give an account

— bring to light : disclose, reveal

— bring to mind : recall

— bring to terms : to compel to agree, assent, or submit

— bring up the rear : to come last or behind

BOUGHT

4 entries found.

1. 1bought

2. 2bought (adjective)

3. store-bought (adjective)

4. 1buy (verb)

Main Entry: 1bought

Pronunciation: \ˈbȯt\

past and past participle of buy

BUY

5 entries found.

1. 1buy (verb)

2. 2buy (noun)

3. buy off (transitive verb)

4. buy out (transitive verb)

5. buy up (transitive verb)

Main Entry: 1buy

Pronunciation: \ˈbī\

Function: verb

Inflected Form(s): bought \ˈbȯt\; buy·ing

Etymology: Middle English byen, from Old English bycgan; akin to Gothic bugjan to buy

Date: before 12th century

transitive verb 1 : to acquire possession, ownership, or rights to the use or services of by payment especially of money : purchase

2 a : to obtain in exchange for something often at a sacrifice <they bought peace with their freedom> b : redeem 6

3 : bribe, hire

4 : to be the purchasing equivalent of <the dollar buys less today than it used to>

5 : accept, believe <I don't buy that hooey> —often used with intointransitive verb : to make a purchase

— buy·er \ˈbī(-ə)r\ noun

— buy into : to purchase a portion of or interest in <the TV network bought into its local football team>

— buy it or buy the farm : to get killed : die

— buy time : to delay an imminent action or decision : stall

Thought I'd let everyone know.

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

    • Sounds like you've got an interesting adventure ahead here with local support if you have trouble! My guess is that, unboosted, you will be OK with a small upgrade like -9. What will happen is that once the stock ECU sees more airflow than it expects it will add a heap of fuel and pull a heap of timing to be safe because it can't understand how it could get that much air without there being an issue. You will see clouds of black smoke and it won't pull hard through the midrange and top end. So, overall it will be a bit frustrating but should be OK. If you are still nervous set the base timing back 2o through the CAS, but it will be even more sluggish everywhere. As said above through...this is not my guarantee your engine won't be blown into a million pieces, leaving you looking for very hard to find parts A better idea is get a computer with logging ASAP, wire in a wide band O2 sensor and a use remote tuner. I've done multiple cars this way and while it is not as good as a specific tune on a dyno they can get it 90% right. I'd suggest if you can afford an R33 GTR these days you can afford an ECU and tune. And if you can't afford that you sure won't be able to afford the rebuild if it goes bad in the meantime,.  
    • Yeah it would be nice if someone took the time to put that sort of information together, but there are a lot of variations in looms. I think you are making this way hard for yourself if you just want to get it running....sourcing an SR20 with the right wiring will be a billion times easier than matching the RB loom to an S15 chassis. If you do end up going this way, you just need to trace every wire in the loom with a multimeter, 95% of them will go to a location you can confirm at the ECU.....and then post it up for the next person who needs it  
    • Just top it up with water, and keep a general idea of how much you added. It is normal for water to be pushed into and pulled out of the reservoir through the cap, and it should not be more than half full or it will be likely to overflow when hot. Any decent mechanic can do a pressure test of the cooling system to confirm if you have a leak. Keep in mind if it is only leaking a little and when hot it may well evaporate before you see it hit the ground
    • I'd ask the shop what they used and use that. Mixing coolants is sometimes OK, sometimes not, and you have know the details of each coolant to know whether it's a good idea or not.
    • Is it alright to top up with just another green coolant?
×
×
  • Create New...