Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

It's not a photoshop. These were pictures from a motorsport event on a Japanese website.

It looks like a hatch from an N13 Nissan Exa, I think. There was a rarer "wagon" version of the EXA in japan, the back end shape on them was quite similar to that one... So I think maybe they've custom fitted the EXA Hatch to it......

With enough money, you can do anything.

This would be patently clear with the various 'fake' 4WD Autech R33 GT-R sedans made from the four door RWD 33 GTSt.

Obviously this is not a cheap exercise.

What about the variety of idiotic conversions you see...

Station wagon Aston Marton DB7's, the 4 door AND station wagon Ferrari 456 - that little weld on hatchback on a $40,000 GT-R would be a snap.

T.

Guys, guys... it's nothing much. If I remember correctly, it's an R33 GT-R that "Dai" from Option magazine did up about 6 or 7 years ago. I'm not sure where the hatch part came from, but the car was featured in an old playstation game called Option Tuning Car Battle Spec R wich came out in May 2000.

As far as I know, it had something like 600ps... and not much else worth worrying about other than that wagon bit...

to me just looks like a giant wing and slight trick in the photo just by the angle so it looks weird at the back??
'Tis a wagon... like I say, it was even featured in a Playstation game.
Stumbled accross this in my japanese googling adventures. I may be blind but this appears to be some sort of R33 GT-R hatch. Looks weird! No back pic sorry!

P7070011-1.jpg

Anyone seen this before?! o_O

it just doesn't look right dimensionally, i know u said it was a real pic,

...looks digital to me(?) ,but ppls have done stranger things!

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

    • Yeah they charge a little extra for mods , last year I noted no mods but I did have an exhaust fitted after that so  better to let them know cause these kinds of things can cause the policy to be void if you ever need to claim.
    • Hello, just just bought an 1999 enr34 with a stock rb25neo and I'm looking to upgrade the engine to 500whp I know some basic things but wondering if there are things I'll need to do to upgrade the stock block and all the bits and pieces to achieve this.
    • Thanks everyone for the replies and suggestions. Got the seats out (hoping I could find some existing grommets but no such luck). By tapping and measuring etc. I could figure out where I could drill through if needed. But first I borrowed an inspection camera and managed to go through factory holes in the chassis rail and could see that the captive nut was holding steady which is why it could retighten. So it was indeed a stripped section of thread, so I applied downforce by levering the bolt head with a screwdriver and went slowly back and forth until it came out. Camera helped a lot cos I could monitor that the captive nut was holding tight. Now I just have one very seized main subframe nut to tackle 馃槄
    • BOVs do have a purpose, if you ever log pressure before and after the throttle body, you will see a spike pre throttle on lift off from a WOT condition. Enough to bend throttle blades / damage e-throttle motors or simple assist in blowing off cooler pipes. FWIW, the above on really applies to those running at least 2 bar of boost. OP shouldn't have an issue, on the other hand, here are some videos of my shit box over a decade ago with some succulent dose with the airbox on and off. That shit box is unrecognisable these days 馃珷    
    • I've tried all different combinations of BOVs/ no BOV and stock bypass valves over the years, on gear changes the stock bypass valve seems to get the car back on boost quicker because in part the turbos wheel speed isn't being slowed down by reversion, although they have issues holding boost much over the stock setting. Most aftermarket BOVs you can adjust the spring, tighter will make it open later and close sooner, but in my experience it'll cause a bit of flutter at low load/rpm anyway. I've also got some input into this whole no bov causing turbo wear, never had an issue on any on my turbos HOWEVER, I got my R33 GTST with 200k kms on it, with from what I can see still has the original turbo, no lateral shaft play but has about 4-5mm of play in and out which to me seems like a worn thrust bearing from years (100-150k kms?) of turbo flutter running no bov, so maybe there is some truth to it in the long run. But that'll never stop me loving the Stutututu while I have the car.   OP just wants to know if he can run a atmo vented BOV with no major issues and the answer is YES, plenty of people do it, there's no harm in installing it and seeing how it runs before spending $$$ on an aftermarket ecu, last time I bought a Nistune it was $2400 for install and a tune , unsure of todays prices but you get me. Crazy money to spend just to fix the minor inconvenience of stalling that can be overcome by letting the revs come down to near idle before putting the clutch in or a little bit of throttle to avoid it. You're better off leaving the ecu and tune for after a bigger turbo/injectors have been installed to take full advantage of the tune and get your moneys worth.   Let OP have his Whoosh sound without trying to break his bank haha
  • Create New...