Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Does anyone know where I can buy the JJR coil packs i hear they are as cheap as the yellow jacket ones. Its just I don't want to wait for the yellow jacket coil packs, because of christmas it will take ages.

Most people would recommend spit fires for my R34 GTT its true to be honest but, I am not so keen on Spitfires maybe when I start doing some performance upgrades but, at the current moment very basic modifications like exhaust and boost controller so dont want to buy spitfires. Yellow Jackets cost $420 include postage any bright ideas. I cant drive the skyline at the moment until I change the coil packs.

REALLY WANT TO GET THE CAR BACK ON THE ROAD!

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/348596-coilpacks/
Share on other sites

Define rubbish?

There are some test results floating around showing they all perform the same as standard coil packs. Voltages and Amps etc.

Most of the time when a coilpack setup is claimed as rubbish, there is something else in the system wrong.

I had them in my 25/30DET, with 1.1mm gapped plugs, making a metric shit ton of torque (Un known as it wouldn't stop wheel spinning on the dyno, or track for that matter... But enough to put 69% injector duty cycle on 880 CC injectors with an 11:1 AFR...) and it never missed a beat.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/348596-coilpacks/#findComment-5604754
Share on other sites

i define rubbish as after useing 3 diffrent sets and the car still miss fired, so they were returned to buy a set of splitfires which fixed the miss fire and never missed a beat again. but that was on a sr20 maybe their rb ones are better

Edited by r32-25t
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/348596-coilpacks/#findComment-5604779
Share on other sites

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

    • Your other option is to buy a spray can of hi-fill and prime it with some pinholes. See if the primer makes them disappear. If it does, then you can leave it with pinholes of that size and they will go away when the painter takes over.
    • Ah ok. I seem to be mixing it like everyone else does so not sure what's happening. Will experiment with it more.
    • Depends on what you mean by OK. First up, was this done cold or hot? Are they reasonably consistent? Yes, they are reasonably consistent. Could be better. But unless it has had a build at some point, it is a ~30 year old engine and you'd expect some variation. Some of the difference could also be in user technique Is it good compression? Well....not numerically, no. New they were >160 psi. The one at 140 would be fine, in that context. If they were all ~140, you'd be reasonably happy. But the one that is @120 is twice as far down from the original numbers as the one @ 140. But.. (again)... technique can play a part in the absolute magnitude of these numbers, and the quality/state of repair/accuracy of the pressure gauge is not known. In the context of the above, the compression tester that was used last on my car is regularly compared to a known good pressure gauge. Not calibrated, exactly, but compared to a reference instrument that is not used for any other purpose, so cops no abuse. So we can trust the measurements off that tester. But another tester in the same workshop wasn't being compared against the standard and was reading a good 30ish psi lower. When you're reading 100 psu but the engine is really doing 130, you can make bad decisions.
    • More likely from tiny bubbles in the filler/putty. Maybe be less aggressive when mixing it. Perhaps invest in a vacuum chamber to pull the air bubbles out?** **I don't know if this is a thing for body filler. I see hardcore epoxy makers degassing their mixed resin on the regular.
    • IIRC, the speedo on these is fed from the sensor in/on the snout of the diff.
×
×
  • Create New...