Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I'm upgrading from T517Z 10cm's. I made 399.6rwkw with the T517Z's on a bone stock(internally) 26 on 98.

I like my trust intake, charge and dump pipe kits and I want to stay with low mounts.

Car will be used for everything! Drag(pb 10.6@138), open circut and lots of street duties.

Has anyone made numbers with the T618Z kit?

Dyno sheets?

On road driving experience?

From first hand experience, how do they compare to HKS GTR'S?

Cheers

J

post-22624-1243198012_thumb.jpg

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/271587-gtr-t618z-kit-go-no-go/
Share on other sites

how much more power do you want? and how much more do you reckon the stock motor will take on 98RON with old factory internals?

I mean if you can't squeeze any more out of the 517s and you need more power then the 618s are the logical choice really as like you say you can keep all your current intake and exhaust gear.

Ive done a few sets of T618Z's and usually against my recomendations, the engine work required to make them work is extensive... but for your application they might fit the bill.

The T618z's are designed for drag and circuit use and i have personally been in a GTR with the 618's on a well setup TRUST car and it was awesome (700+ps @ 1.8bar), i supplied TRUST's receipe to a shop out sunbury way, including all the parts about 4-5 years ago but due to reasons i cant post it never performed.... shame as it was a waste and had heaps of potential.

Big cams, port work, big boost (they are rated 1.5 - 1.9bar) and rpm are needed to make them work, a nice white street / ciruit GTR here in melb (creatd built) has run low to mid 10's with a custom pair of garrets built by rotomaster to T618z specs... again with a built motor to suit... expect to turn your motor inside out.

Edited by URAS
Heres a dyno shit from autobarn.

post-9955-1243211766_thumb.jpg

HAHA i supplied the information for that flyer years ago....when i was doing the buying for their stores (TRUST / BLITZ / APEXI etc) I DID NOT supply the fit times though :cheers: ..... i think if you look at the Td06-l2 kit flyer for SR20 they just stole it from that :P

some of the said receipe is included in that flyer.

Edited by URAS

Thanks for the input thus far guys.

I should have stated that a built motor is on the way.

AND on that note, has anyone tried sleveing a stock block with good results???? I want to keep the origional block and head in the car if I can, but I know it willl split at 500rwkw at 2 bar + .

hey whats the finned alloy doo dacky in the braided above the intake runners for cylinder 1&2 ?

That's a super, metabolic, fuel particle, atomatizer device to keep the molicule chains in a row and the fuel atonomous.

Fuel filter..

I upgraded my T517z to a T618Z a while back.

I lost a bit of bottom end and gained a lot more at top end as expected.

It's on a 3L so it's not laggy at all.

I would love to know how these compare to the HKS GTRS though.

When do you start making usable boost with the 3lt? What was the diffrence in respose roughly? 300-500 rpm???

Don't suppose you have a dyno sheet?

Cheers

J.

I had to sleeve a block a while back to keep standard size bores....I can't imagine any other reason you would do it though. the standard block, properly prepped, will make to 500+ you are talking about

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

    • 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.
    • majority aftermarket is an10 yes, but majority of OEM is An12 r35 OEM cooler lines at close to an 12, the hard line that car uses is almost 20mm  Porsche OEM is also AN12   i figure, if our power levels are close to 1000hp, then AN12 should be a must if many OEM standard power vehicles use AN12
×
×
  • Create New...