Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Sounds good - I hunger some tempura

Yesterday I got rammed from behind by a guy in a Lancer, then we exchanged numbers :turned:

.

.

.

.

.

.

But on a serious note, he has no insurance and cannot speak very good English (been in the country only ten months). Luckily my insurance said they will wave my excess if I take down his details - also, since I'm not at fault, it will not affect my premium or rating :D

Still a pain in the arse having no car for a while.

disappointing lack of aussie racism in this post.

Luckily my insurance said they will wave my excess if I take down his details - also, since I'm not at fault, it will not affect my premium or rating :D

this is the complete opposite of what usually happens, non?

not at fault does not equal having no claims against your name? (in case of stolen car, accident with someone without insurance etc.)

Who says Alvin doesn't have a big banana? Dat BYC

Simon how does a company monitor employee internet usage. Are they able to monitor everything you do & how much time spend on the internet, apart from browser history?

this is the complete opposite of what usually happens, non?

not at fault does not equal having no claims against your name? (in case of stolen car, accident with someone without insurance etc.)

I was also surprised when they told me this. I checked again to make sure but apparently this is the case; there will be no affect on premium or rating.

Simon how does a company monitor employee internet usage. Are they able to monitor everything you do & how much time spend on the internet, apart from browser history?

I too would like to know this.

It all depends on how the IT systems are set up...

Small business networks are often set up just like a home network is.
Computer -> Router -> Internet

If they have a fancy router, they could install some software on it which tracks requests and links them to users.

Larger business networks are often designed with forensic options in place from day one, or as a happy side effect of proxy server caching.

Computer -> Proxy Server -> Router -> Internet

All traffic passes through the monitoring server, which can be logged against a user if required... Websites visited can be pulled from log files (or automatically made into nice reports listing the sites visited and/or time spend randomly browsing reddit)

Obviously that is just a high level view of some generic setup, there are a lot more in depth monitoring solutions out there.

Just keep in mind that "Incognito Mode" does nothing, all that does is stops records of the visited websites on YOUR pc... Once the request for the site leaves your computer there is nothing to stop it from being intercepted and recorded against you.

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Hi all, Restoring r33 series 1 rb25det. All the heater hoses were on their way out, have replaced them and put it all back together. After testing I noticed a small leak from behind the head on the actual metal water line to the turbo when cars warm. I tried running a longer hose over it but it kept leaking...   I am about to take the (stock) manifold off again😔 to change the water line does any one have any lines they recommend? I was looking at Aeroflow Turbo Oil & Water Line Set but not sure what everyone else recommends. Car is completely stock but want to upgrade turbo eventually. it looks like ill have to disconnect a lot just to replace these lines so if there's anything else recommended to do please let me know. Thank you in advance!
    • From memory, on the R33 GTSt at least, while everyone says "It's not adjustable", I found when I changed clutches in mine, it just needed a small adjustment on the rod length. But be very wary here, as you could end up trying to push the pushrod in the master too far, or blowing out the slave.   Most likely though, if the master/slave isn't bypassing internally or leaking out, then the throw out is the wrong height compared to the fingers on the clutch, so when it moves to disengage the clutch, it isn't 100% disengaged. You can check part of this out too by jacking the car up, having the engine running, put your foot on the clutch and try to engage 1st gear. If it goes in pretty easy (Compared to the ground) and/or the wheels start turning a fair bit and it takes a bit too much brake pedal to bring them back to a stop, this is likely the issue.  I'm not sure if you can adjust the height of the forks etc in these though, it's been that long since I've touched any RB gearbox.
    • That's all good, I thought I was missing some interesting feature! Maybe @PranK can double check if that is something that is meant to be operating or not.
    • I hope that is not something that bad. From what i remember he said that only first gear is "hard" to get in and that he has couple of ideas what to try next but idk 😕  hope it is not gearbox out. I will let you know.
    • If it's not the hydraulics, it is probably gearbox back out. Usually as per @Duncan's post, or otherwise associated with not getting the throwout fork positioned correctly. All the way up to catastrophically bolting shit back together without it being aligned properly and wrecking the clutch/input shaft/flywheel/something else.
×
×
  • Create New...