Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

No airbags for me so def going a full face.

Should have new rims in a week or so and then i just need to remove backing plates from the brakes (Makes a huge difference) Grab some spare pads, then install my new gearbox, get new Z32 then get tune checked. Change fluids then good to go. Taking the GTST out this time giving the GTS4 a rest. Keen to see how many Rb25's the little 20 can out perform :whistling:

  • Replies 412
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

All you NEED is an Australian Standards helmet. Which is a motorbike helmet, and you can go to any bike shop.

Autosport are doing open face helmets for $99, and that will be fine for most people.

You spend the extra money on an FIA approved helmet and itll be lighter, and probably more comfortable, but if youre only doing a couple of track days a year an AS helmet will be fine.

Cheers - hopefully late night shopping tomorrow night :P

I would advise highly on getting one if you are thinking of tracking your car. I have been running one on mine since the first track day and has not missed a beat. Oil temps seem to linger around the 90-100 degrees mark so it seems like my $200 cooler is doing its job after 6 consecutive hot laps

if you do not choose to run an oil cooler make sure you take some oil with you on the day and when you get to the track overfill your oil this will help prevent a spun bottom end bearing.

I would personally not go out to the track without one. :thumbsup:

I'd advise getting an oil cooler.

They definitely help keep temps stable. i've been using my Autobahn oil cooler kit, and it works no problems!

i havent had any issues with leaking or over heating.

people will tell you many different things like you need a thermostat because otherwise your oil is running too cool.

i dont have a thermostat and my oil temps are fine, obviously you dont go blasting the car when its cold! but if the temps are around the 50 degree mark its usually fine.

plus i assume when my temp sensor at the relocated oil filter is reading 40-50 degrees, the temp of the oil inside the engine is probably a little hotter than that?

Like Krishy said his $200 cooler is doing fine, so is my $400 cooler & relocator setup.

so its your call how much you wanna spend, but i definitely wouldnt risk not running one at the track. your car will be pushed so much harder than it ever would on the road.

Definately reconmend using one. On a hot lap after 3 cool down laps I was still seeing temps around 80 - 90 degrees

Interesting. After 6 hotlaps my temps were rouhgly 95-100 degrees mark and after one cool down lap it would drop to 70-80 mark.

if you do not choose to run an oil cooler make sure you take some oil with you on the day and when you get to the track overfill your oil this will help prevent a spun bottom end bearing.

I would personally not go out to the track without one. :thumbsup:

Anything is better then nothing, so even if you can get hold of a cheap cooler is better than not running a cooler at all :D

Good power steering cooler probably isn't a bad idea either.

I've never seen my oil temps push over 90. And I keep my cooler smack in the middle of my rad and intercooler.

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

    • Por que no los dos? At least my euro brawler is reliable - unlike the JDMs I've had. Sheraaz you look familiar, did you ever come to an SAU VIC meet aaaaaages ago?
    • Drove to Cape Schanck to try to get a nice clear southern view over the ocean to see the lights a couple of days ago... instead got crappy cloud cover. Photo of a diorama of Hong Kong street scene. Taken on an iPhone 13 Pro Max.
    • Stock RB fuel pressure is near enough 43.5 psi, so the latency in that table at 31.6 will be close. You can see that 7 or 8 psi equates to about 0.4µs extra latency. So if you wanted to interpolate between the 31.6 and 39.9 psi values you could say you're going up about 2 psi out of those 8, so add about 0.1µs, which is barely worth talking about and is quite possibly wrong because ideally you would fix the latency while running at the appropriate conditions on the dyno, with a wideband sniffing its butt.
    • The pressure, is what you set the fuel pressure to. If you have the factory fuel reg, you'll need to find the factory spec. I don't know it off the top of my head, but someone else might.
    • For others, what GTSBoy states here should be paid attention. Why? Well lots of people play with different engines, and they LOVE to change things like remove AC, or steering pumps etc, and it lends to them needing to move the tensioner too. You want your tensioner, particularly those that are sprung or hydraulically tensioned, to be the first thing after the harmonic balancer, or technically the "last" pulley in the chain. By saying last pulley, I mean look at the direction the crank spins when the engine is running, follow the belt from where the crank is pulling the belt FROM, and keep following that until you're between the last pulley/accessory on the belt and about to reach the crank again, this is the spot where you put the tensioner. This is the area that will always end up with slack. This is worked out exactly the same way for chains too, as the physics is the same for them. The crank pulley is where all the force to drag the belt around comes from. You will never ever get rid of the slack that appears, especially under load. The tensioners job is to keep the belt loose enough when stationary that there shouldn't be out of sync movement in slow movement, and then be tight enough when running, that the belt can't jump off any gear and get damaged. Too tight, bad things happen, too loose, bad things happen. Have a tensioner (mainly sprung/hydraulic one) in the wrong spot, it can't actually do anything about keeping the tension.
×
×
  • Create New...