Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Item Description: Pearl White 1998 R34 Skyline 25GT-T Sedan

Location: Croydon, VIC.

Kilometers: ~148,000

Item Condition: Excellent

Reason for selling: Importing another daily driver, don't need 3 cars.

Price and price conditions: $15,500 neg. with RWC and Rego. Number plates 'GTT4DR' (GTT Four Door) included in sale price. All inspections will be welcomed. Please bare in mind this car will not be for sale for approx. 2-3 months.

Extra Info:

As you may have seen I'm currently importing a new daily from Japan. As such, my beautiful daily of the past 2.5 years will be for sale in about 2-3 months time. I am the first owner in Australia and I have treated the car very respectfully. Services have been carried out around the 5,000km mark, far earlier than the recommended service interval of 10,000km's. I'm quite pedantic. Currently sitting on ~148,000km's but don't let this deter you. These are genuine km's, not 'wound-back-in-Japan-before-hitting-Australia' km's. The engine runs like a dream, idles beautifully, doesn't use any fluids, etc. Diff is wonderfully quiet, transmission works well. No accident history, beautifully straight car.

Some facts about this car:

2.5L Inline 6cyl Turbo (RB25DET Neo) - Engine is stock. Plenty of power but potential for plenty more if desired.

Automatic with steering wheel and tiptronic shift

Very rare factory Pearl White. This is not common. Most white R34's are not pearl. This is a limited edition colour. Paint is shiny and in excellent condition.

Rare factory Nismo Lip Kit (it's plastic, not fiberglass)

Nismo Clear front and side indicators

Electronic Folding Mirrors

Factory HID headlights

Driving Lights

De-winged

Privacy Glass

Excellent condition interior

Traction Control

ABS

4 Wheel Steering (damn easy to park)

Old-school turbo timer (as old as the car hehe)

Factory dash gauge-pod

Digital Climate Control

Factory weather-shields

Factory floormats

Fujitsubo stainless steel turbo-back exhaust

Nismo lowered springs

Stock Wheels in good condition

Carbon fiber-look pillar trims

JVC CD/MP3 headunit. The cool thing about the R34 - no external aerial, it's built into the rear windscreen :P

Fire Extinguisher

Massive boot

Timing belt was changed at 98,000km's. Due again at roughly 200,000km's.

Items replaced in my ownership aside from service items:

*Brand new genuine rear hub assembly

*Brand new genuine A & B shift solenoids

*Brand new Iridium Spark Plugs

Any negatives? Not many. Just cosmetic.

One crack at the of each side-skirt. The de-wing job in Japan wasn't that great. Small rust bubbles on bootlid and indentations where the wing sat. Either fix and respray or replace the bootlid - both options around the $300 mark. I never got around to bothering to fix them as they didn't annoy me that much. Has none of the common rust that the majority of R34's suffer on the rear end.

Pictures:

IMG_6661.jpg

IMG_6660.jpg

IMG_6659.jpg

IMG_6665.jpg

IMG_6663.jpg

IMG_6664.jpg

IMG_6662.jpg

P5120010.jpg

P5120030.jpg

IMG_0325.jpg

IMG_0326.jpg

(more available on request)

Thanks for that. Indeed, not many stock examples around these days. It'll be a little sad to put her up for a sale in a few months as she's been the most reliable car I've ever owned, but time to move on.

  • 2 weeks later...

No worries. My Cubic hasn't left Japan yet so realistically this car will be available for sale in ~2 months time. In the meantime it'll get another service >_<

I'll also endeavour to get some better photos of the whole car (inside and out) closer to the time I'm ready to sell.

  • 3 weeks later...

Your car is 100% sex on wheels! It's gorgeous!

You guys are right don't find to many Skylines let alone R34's that haven't been molested by a P plater (I'm allowed to say that cos I am a P Plater). It's a shame really because they seem reliable cars.

My boyfriend was looking at Skylines before he got his (Mitsubishi) FTO and they were all screwed.....and I discounted Skylines when I was first looking for a car to replace my BMW, cos there is very few that aren't screwed....same with FTO's unless you get a good example you're asking for trouble.

What's with the Nissan Cube though??? They're little boxes

  • 2 weeks later...

The Cube's landed in Sydney, I'd be hoping it's complianced and on the road end of this month/start of next month. I'll be putting the car in for another service just before I put the car up for sale. So early October should work for me :action-smiley-069:

  • 4 weeks later...

Getting a bit closer to being ready for sale now as my other car is nearly here.

Service booked in for next week, I'll probably spend all of next weekend thoroughly cleaning her and I'll get some new photos and a new thread up once she's ready.

You've still got another couple of weeks before I start aggressively advertising it (Carsales.) My Cube should be registered next week, I'll give it another week and at that point if there's minimal interest on forums I'll put it up on Carsales. You'd be welcome to inspect and test drive it next week.

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

    • Have a look at that (shitty) pic I posted. You can see AN -4 braided line coming to a -4 to 1/8 BSPT adapter, into a 1/8 BSPT T piece. The Haltech pressure sender is screwed into the long arm of the sender and factory sender (pre your pic) into the T side. You can also see the cable tie holding the whole contraption in place. Is it better than mounting the sender direct to your engine fitting......yes because it removes that vibration as the engine revs out 50 times every lap and that factory sender is pretty big. Is it necessary for you......well I've got no idea, I just don't like something important failing twice so over-engineer it to the moon!
    • Yup. You can get creative and make a sort of "bracket" with cable ties. Put 2 around the sender with a third passing underneath them strapped down against the sender. Then that third one is able to be passed through some hole at right angles to the orientation of the sender. Or some variation on the theme. Yes.... ummm, with caveats? I mean, the sender is BSP and you would likely have AN stuff on the hose, so yes, there would be the adapter you mention. But the block end will either be 1/8 NPT if that thread is still OK in there, or you can drill and tap it out to 1/4 BSP or NPT and use appropriate adapter there. As it stands, your mention of 1/8 BSPT male seems... wrong for the 1/8 NPT female it has to go into. The hose will be better, because even with the bush, the mass of the sender will be "hanging" off a hard threaded connection and will add some stress/strain to that. It might fail in the future. The hose eliminates almost all such risk - but adds in several more threaded connections to leak from! It really should be tapered, but it looks very long in that photo with no taper visible. If you have it in hand you should be able to see if it tapered or not. There technically is no possibility of a mechanical seal with a parallel male in a parallel female, so it is hard to believe that it is parallel male, but weirder things have happened. Maybe it's meant to seat on some surface when screwed in on the original installation? Anyway, at that thread size, parallel in parallel, with tape and goop, will seal just fine.
    • How do you propose I cable tie this: To something securely? Is it really just a case of finding a couple of holes and ziptying it there so it never goes flying or starts dangling around, more or less? Then run a 1/8 BSP Female to [hose adapter of choice?/AN?] and then the opposing fitting at the bush-into-oil-block end? being the hose-into-realistically likely a 1/8 BSPT male) Is this going to provide any real benefit over using a stainless/steel 1/4 to 1/8 BSPT reducing bush? I am making the assumption the OEM sender is BSPT not BSPP/BSP
    • I fashioned a ramp out of a couple of pieces of 140x35 lumber, to get the bumper up slightly, and then one of these is what I use
    • I wouldn't worry about dissimilar metal corrosion, should you just buy/make a steel replacement. There will be thread tape and sealant compound between the metals. The few little spots where they touch each other will be deep inside the joint, unable to get wet. And the alloy block is much much larger than a small steel fitting, so there is plenty of "sacrificial" capacity there. Any bush you put in there will be dissimilar anyway. Either steel or brass. Maybe stainless. All of them are different to the other parts in the chain. But what I said above still applies.
×
×
  • Create New...