Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

  • 4 weeks later...

Get out for a pushie ride.

Pose Evans Lego characters around the house, and wait for him to find them.

Go round to my Mum's house when she's not there, and set the hundreds of teddy bears in sexually explicit poses throughout her house.

Still at mum's place; add random items to her shopping list, then go back later and pull them out of her cupboards and ask why she has bought them.

Follow the cat around the house with a laser pointer.

Try to fit thermo fans to my radiator. (Not recommended unless you have about a month of spare time and live close to a mental hospital).

Watch episodes of Top Gear, and eat all the rice crackers.

Edited by Daleo

Go round to my Mum's house when she's not there, and set the hundreds of teddy bears in sexually explicit poses throughout her house.

Still at mum's place; add random items to her shopping list, then go back later and pull them out of her cupboards and ask why she has bought them.

GOLD!!!!! :D

  • 1 month later...

So, whos going to own up and confess that they spent an ass load of money at a Queensland workshop and will potentially come away with the wildest M35 in the world?

Please explain?

Sounds like something Leon would do :whistling:

A workshop in Brisvegas posted on facestalk they are building a Stroked 4.2 litre, HKS T62R, Getrag 6 spd conversion M35.

Even though Leon is crazy :P I don't think he's quite that crazy.

Suspect the owner will make us wait in suspense :whistling:

A workshop in Brisvegas posted on facestalk they are building a Stroked 4.2 litre, HKS T62R, Getrag 6 spd conversion M35.

Even though Leon is crazy :P I don't think he's quite that crazy.

Suspect the owner will make us wait in suspense :whistling:

Maybe that guy who kept coming on here asking for info and posted the pic of the stripped Stagea?

I can't imagine it'd be a forum regular.

Link to facestalk page?

So, whos going to own up and confess that they spent an ass load of money at a Queensland workshop and will potentially come away with the wildest M35 in the world?

Sounds like something Leon would do :whistling:

The bold is the giveaway that it's not me, lol.

I had a look at DCDC's M35 a while ago. There was nothing to see so didn't take any pics.

It had been stripped a fair bit, but the way it was jammed in amongst a heap of other cars I could tell it was on the backburner (at least for the workshop).

Maybe things have changed by now.

Edited by Commsman

Will be great to see this car when it hopefully hits the road. Who knows where their going to put a T62R in that engine bay, but if you make enough space I guess where the airbox sits.

Good move taking the VQ35 insted of a 25. Easier to handle the cams.

Wonder if they just got a build block from the USA or if it was built here?

Saw the funniest thing on the say to work yesterday just on the south side of the city.

I pull up to the lights behind an old Van. I know this van because I've seen it before on the way to work. It has those big old sunroofs that old luxo Jap vans had. On the opposite side of the road is one of those Christmas decoration clearance places. Now the Christmas place has put people on the comers of the intersection to wave the signs. So, I pull up behind it, and there is a young bloke hanging out the top of the sunroof (I've seen them out the sunroof before when its stopped at lights). On the other side of the road is a cute girl, not stunning, but kind cute, dressed up in a short Santa costume waving this sign back and forwards dancing away. Bloke pops out the sunroof, tries to start a conversation. She turns out to be a German backpacker, and speaks no English. Problem? Nope - He speaks school boy German! Proceeds to swap numbers while hanging out a sunroof, across lanes of traffic, to a dancing girl, dressed only in a kinky Santa costume. I know a little German, so I was chuckling away in the car watching this go on.

Sometimes I love what goes on in traffic :P

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

    • @dbm7 and @GTSBoy thank you both very much! will give that a shot!
    • Sounds good. Provided the panel is flat/level I'd be happy to start the painting process.  While you are learning, for sure you could do this. Its only paint, you can always sand it all back and start again. Its only your time and money on materials, but while you're learning, really its time and money spent on your education.  Once you know how to do this bodywork and painting, you won't want to waste your time and money on frivolous activities lol. 
    • Yep I will use a guide coat after putting filler, I will do it on the whole panel as I'm a beginner so chances I've made quite a few errors. In that photo, I think that was a low spot, I just for example said to pretend it's flat but I will put filler + guide coat after to assess where I'm at. Yep with that picture, the panel is wet as it rained when I took the photo. But all those scratches are completely smooth, I went over it with 240 grit and can't feel it, even with my nail digging into it. I was legit thinking to buy a 2k can and spray primer to see how it turns out but then thought to myself it's going to be a mess doing it haha. Good mention there. Thanks for all that info I think I know what to do next.
    • Prior to laying down the primer, you need to make sure the surface is completely level. For example, based on this picture, I strongly suspect that the areas marked in blue are higher then the area marked in green.  If you spray primer over this entire area, then paint and clear it, the finished result will 100% show the low area. It will stick out like dogs balls. Unfortunately the paint won't magically level out the low areas as you lay it down.  Without seeing it in person, I expect that the green area will need to be filled, then use a guide coat and check that the entire repair area is level with a large sanding block.  With this picture, are you saying that even though you can see the scratches, the panel is in fact completely smooth and flat? If this is the case sure you could prep and paint it as it is.     The picture with the paint you described as blistering, it's hard for me to comment on from the photo alone. It looks like the panel is wet? Dunno, looks strange. Does the panel feel as smooth as glass when you run your hand over it? **** Going back to your question again, generally you would only sand the primer if you made a mistake while laying down the primer.  If the panel is prepped properly and you lay the primer down properly, you should not need to sand the primer.  This wouldn't work - Don't prep the panel. Spray primer and see how it turns out. Sand the areas where the issues appear. Spray more primer and see how it turns out. Sand the areas....... Yeah you'd go round and round in circles getting no where. 
    • That's sick, thanks for that, mine has much the same mods on a 400R. I just don't have the heat exchanger yet.   Might be worth a trip down the M1 to Syndey for a tune.
×
×
  • Create New...