Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hi all,

Just thought we would share our Drift Sil80 Build Project for those who are interested.

It involves Myself, Tim and Russel; along with Campbell and Johnny who are also lending a hand or three here and there.

The car was originally owned by Tim and another one of our mates, where it was stripped of all its awesome parts; coilovers, 2 way, SR running gear and 2871R.

The original plans for it were to put a CA back in it and sell it off but it never happened.

Then one day Russell came up with an idea; before we knew it, myself and Russell bought out the other mate and therefore we ended up with the Sil80 3some-3way Drift Project! A 1/3 of the cost each and 1/3 of the work each. Works out good.

We are doing absolutely everything ourselves! From the cage install to paint to tuning. The budget for this build will be as tight as possible. The plans are:

Put a SR back in

Install a full roll cage

TR29 Turbo highmount with Tial Copy gate

Greddy copy plenum

V-Mount setup

PowerFC

Oil cooler

Welded diff

G4 drift spec coilovers

Hydro e-brake

Pump the guards a little (well maybe alot)

Bright Orange paint

Big kit

Black roof, mirrors and Bonnet Vent

We have most of the required parts, some of which we had lying around (yes, you ask why on earth the TR29 turbo! - a bad decision on tims part a few years ago...) ready to go and have sold off all of the unwanted crap such as interior parts etc to form a 'kitty'.

So far weve stripped the entire car and all of the sound deadening and have purchased a cage kit from Brown Davis which we are currently working on.

Once the cage is in we will paint the inside of the car and the engine bay, and fit everything back in that needs to go in.

After its running we will paint the outside panels to finish it off.

Feel free to give us any helpful pointers and/or helpful comments. If you want specific pictures let us know.

We will do our best to keep the thread updated with pics a plenty.

Cheers!

Mat.

post-17897-1266564824_thumb.jpg

post-17897-1266564840_thumb.jpg

post-17897-1266564858_thumb.jpg

post-17897-1266564887_thumb.jpg

post-17897-1266565026_thumb.jpg

post-17897-1266565046_thumb.jpg

post-17897-1266565061_thumb.jpg

post-17897-1266565091_thumb.jpg

post-17897-1266565105_thumb.jpg

post-17897-1266565128_thumb.jpg

  • Replies 135
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Quick question, what happens when/if one smashes it-do all 3 pay for damage?

I had this thought in 2004 with a mate but we never went through cause I knew he'd stack it and never pay to fix it

ive always wondered what a multiple owned drift car would be like.

who pays for brakeages?

ive been in shares with cars for other forms of motor sport but they were a lot cheaper cars and a lot less likely to brake.

BTW i love sil80's

It will be a full 6 point by the time were done with it.

Ill post up a pic of exactly how its gonna look soon.

With Johnnys help, we are using CAD to assist us with all of those tricky fishmouths!

  • 2 months later...

Ok, some prgress, last week I took the car down to Brown Davis again for them to bend us up some roof diagonals, as we wanted them to hug the roof for plenty of headroom.

We also bought all of the required material for the rest of the diagonals.

So this weekend we will give it a good nudge and try to get most of them in.

Also the CAD drawing is tweaked and finished, well be using it to help us do the fishmouths, more on that later.

Thanks again to Brown Davis for looking after us, and providing us with the much needed knowledge of cage building! Cheers guys!

post-17897-1271983090.jpg

MEN-AAAAA-GE'!!!

1139_4lo.jpg

and the one who prangs it will owe the other one a 10sec car.. and if they have to... over night parts from japan.

lol! Classic. This project looks great! Sil80's are the shit!

Keep em coming!

Well the weekend was a success wasnt it Timmy!

We started Saturday at 9am and finished up at about 9pm, then Sunday was another long one from 11am to 11:40pm!

We had the computer print us out some lovely flat patterns of all of the fishmouths, which I think halved the time taken to cut the damn things out.

Basically what we did is take each member, cut a slit down the entire pipe, and unroll it into a flat piece. Chuck that on a drawing at 1:1 scale, print it, cut it out, and trace them onto the pipes :thumbsup:

post-17897-1272280056_thumb.jpg

post-17897-1272280120_thumb.jpg

So we did that for all 13 pipes! Of course we thought about it all and planned how to do it in a way to enable us to have access to the joins to get fit the welder in there!

We started with the roof diagonals, cut them and fishy-ed them, tacked them in.

post-17897-1272280804_thumb.jpg

Then we removed our rear boxes and dropped the whole front section of the cage down through the holes in the floor to be able to weld ontop of the cage.

post-17897-1272280289_thumb.jpg

Once that was done we re-positioned the cage back, installed the side intrusions and then and welded the entire front section and the boxes fully into place for good.

We then went about putting the rest of the bars in the front section, the main hoop diagonal and the horizontal bar.

post-17897-1272280648_thumb.jpg

The rear was a little more tricky, we had to tack in the lower rears, tack in the upper rears and weld them fully to the lowers, then break the tacks off and fully weld in behind the strut where we couldnt get to.

post-17897-1272280457_thumb.jpg

Then fully welded both of those assemblies in and moved onto the strut bar/harness bar.

post-17897-1272280552_thumb.jpg

post-17897-1272280876_thumb.jpg

post-17897-1272281004_thumb.jpg

Next was the rear diagonal; the last pipe for the day BUT! we kinda forgot what time it was (night and late), the cops showed up and demanded that we halt production of our Sil80 cage! At that stage it was about 20 minutes to 12am...

We were shattered that we were so damn close to finishing it off but oh well....today I finished it off and put that last one in, so its all done. Although I dont have a pic of the rear diagonal in.

post-17897-1272281315_thumb.jpg

We enjoyed a hard-earnt beverage at the conclusion of the weekends festivities:

post-17897-1272281242_thumb.jpg

Now just to reinforce the A and B Pillars to the side of the cage, give it some prep, and a quick spray inside!!

Mat.

That's the gear Mat! Good write up brother.

post-17897-1272280457_thumb.jpg

^^Gee he's a good looking bloke!^^

Next was the rear diagonal; the last pipe for the day BUT! we kinda forgot what time it was (night and late), the cops showed up and demanded that we halt production of our Sil80 cage! At that stage it was about 20 minutes to 12am...

(11:40pm) It's the police!!!!

We enjoyed a hard-earnt beverage at the conclusion of the weekends festivities:

post-17897-1272281242_thumb.jpg

Yes we did...

Good sliding times ahead!

MEN-AAAAA-GE'!!!

1139_4lo.jpg

and the one who prangs it will owe the other one a 10sec car.. and if they have to... over night parts from japan.

Now I understand haha

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

    • Lets say I wanted to buy this, specifically for this purpose. How do I actually perform the function. Can I still buy a Consult-1? Am I about to be burned by the fact my car is a 2000 model Series 2 R34 and thus will be some stupid other system? Do I just need this -> https://obd2australia.com.au/product/nissan-consult-14-pin-to-usb-ddl-diagnostic-interface-with-ftdi-ft232r-chip/ And with what software?
    • That's probably OK. That's a face to face compression joint between two surfaces with the clamping load provided by those bolts. So.... it's unlikely that the bolts will end up feeling that load in shear, unless the clamping surfaces are not large enough, bolts not got enough tension on them, etc etc to prevent the two faces from moving wrt each other. Which... I would hope the designers have considered, seeing as it's probably one of the most important things the upright has to do apart from resist collapsing in its own right. But yes, it would definitely be worth asking them what their safety factor on that part of the design was. I tend to think that the casting, being a casting, is not necessarily the strongest bit of material in the world. It's about an inch square, and when you think about the loads that are being put into it, you have to wonder what safety factor the Nissan boys (and every other OEM engineer who has designed all the millions of other uprights that look essentially the same) used to account for defective casting, aging, severe impacts on the wheel, etc etc. 
    • Those bolts would be orders of magnitude stronger that cast aluminium though.  And its mainly clamping force, not shear they are dealing with?
    • Except all that twisting force that is breaking a cast piece, appears to be going through 4 bolts in the picture Johnny posted of the BryPar one...
    • The smart approach is to use the gearbox loom from the manual car. Makes it a lot easier - just plugs into the switches on the box and plugs into the main loom up near the fusebox. Then you only need to deal with bypassing the inhibit switch. The other approach requires you to use the wiring diagram to identify those wires by colour and location, perhaps even indulging in a little multimeter action to trace them end to end to make sure, and then.... you will have the answers you need. The R34 wiring diagram is available on-line (no, I do not have a link to it myself - I would have to do a search if I wasn't able to go to the copy I have at home).
×
×
  • Create New...