Jump to content
SAU Community

Cool/rare Shit For Sale On Yahoo


Nic_A31
 Share

Recommended Posts

Chasing the auto headlight sensor ( right hand side of the dash )

The hole that is there gets to me something cronic.

Please help

is that what it is? it eats me up inside as well... what is the point of it?

im after one too.

just for clarity: so the left hand side one is the sun sensor right?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

is that what it is? it eats me up inside as well... what is the point of it?

im after one too.

just for clarity: so the left hand side one is the sun sensor right?

just threw my old dash in the bin haha

Link to comment
Share on other sites

No idea what the left side one is for.

At day time, chuck your wallet over the one of the left, auto headlights turn on.

At night time, turn on your phone's flashlight or light up the screen and aim it at the left sensor, auto headlights turn off.

The far left one might be sunlight sensor. Sometimes at sunrise / sunset, while it's fairly well lit up but starting to get dark, park/running lights come on but no headlights.

Anyway little bits like that are a bitch to find.

I've got 2 laying around in my shed somewhere but the clips are broken.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...
  • 3 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...

thats one cheap laurel

1st one i've seen with wantanabe's (sp?) seems to suit

lets just hope no aussie buys it for drift matsuri......

more pics here

http://photos.yahoo.co.jp/ph/shakotan_8/lst?&.dir=/e3fb&.src=ph&.begin=9999&.view=t&.order=&.done=http%3a//photos.yahoo.co.jp/ph/shakotan_8/lst%3f%26.dir=/e3fb%26.src=ph%26.view=t

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

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
 Share




  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Transmission synchros feel pretty bad at this point in my car and sometimes the clutch feels like it has an inconsistent engagement point in the pedal travel. I figure if I'm going to swap in a new transmission I may as well also put in a new clutch. Obvious candidates are ATS's pull-type twin plate carbon clutch, Nismo Super Coppermix Twin, or some organic clutch option I haven't figured out yet. I have searched this stuff to death at this point and still don't feel all that confident in making a decision. Target power is not much. ~330 kW at the wheels max. I ballpark the torque spec at 600 N-m. The stock clutch feels a little light so a little heavier is ok but I would say no more than 15-20% additional pedal effort. For some reason most clutch manufacturers want to keep this stuff a secret but the Coppermix Twin is 950 kg clamp load so I figure it can't be too much heavier than stock. The hang-up I have is some people mentioning that the clutch is very grabby which sounds like a pain. The stock clutch is almost too easy to modulate so I don't mind if it requires more precision than that but I don't want to deal with something that feels like I'm getting rear-ended at every traffic light. Also I see some mention of the release bearing carrier sizing requiring some work which sounds like something that might complicate installation? It would be good to know exactly what is needed here for a 1995 R33 GTR. The ATS clutch is supposedly the best but I've seen some complaints that they wear out easily and also slip when cold. I don't know how much of that is true but the cost is also huge compared to even the Nismo Coppermix twin plate. It's also unsprung which normally I would reject immediately but supposedly carbon clutches don't need it. The higher clamp load at 1300 kg is also a little concerning but to me more clamp load seems like it inevitably means more pedal effort and also more strain on the engine crank thrust bearings.  This is a street car and despite being a weekend car I seem to spend a lot of time crawling in severe traffic congestion with it anyways so I will gladly pay to have something that is easy to drive on and will hold the power with no unexpected headaches. I really don't want to do a clutch twice.
    • Grease the poly bushes as your first order of business. Moly grease. Spanner check everything else. Inspect LCA inner bushes.
    • It's usually associated with a muffler. Often in the middle of the muffler, sometimes at an inlet. Not removable by just slipping something out. usually needs butchery (read outright replacement of the muffler). There's absolutely nothing magic about any Jap exhaust brand. Totally generic. Totally replaceable with anything else that will do the job. I've replaced the centre muffler in mine a couple of times.
×
×
  • Create New...