Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

It's nice... but 34k for an almost 20 year old GTT? :s Suppose if you were baller and wanted a fun car already done

Wasteland group buy

http://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/450632-1995-r33-vspec-for-sale-melbourne/

cheap gtr (so you can go on gtr cruises)

Edited by UNR33L

Considering people pay that for clapped out 34GTRs I'd take the two wheel drive with nearly a litre more capacity that appears to be rebuilt from the ground up!

  • Like 1

Considering people pay that for clapped out 34GTRs I'd take the two wheel drive with nearly a litre more capacity that appears to be rebuilt from the ground up!

Would be one hell of a ride in that car, the torque would be insane

Considering people pay that for clapped out 34GTRs I'd take the two wheel drive with nearly a litre more capacity that appears to be rebuilt from the ground up!

Thats true I didn't think of it that way.

Goddamn I want that 34

I would make an exception and drive a 34 gtt for that engine

Impressive mod list

So much powah, probably too much on the street. Maybe some daily AD050's in soft might take the traction lol

I'm going to guess it would spin them in 4th with semis

Would depend on road surface & tyre temp a fair bit - But I reckon doable.

Think about all the drag cars that run insane power in that '10.5" radials' class

Edited by UNR33L
Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • After using a protractor for an actually accurate assessment of what is required,  and by NOT using my uncalibrated eyeball I worked out I need a 25° silicone bend from the TB ro the MAF, but, my choice was either a 30° or a 23° (23° is a weird spec), so I grabbed the 23° one from Raceworks I also grabbed 1mtr of 3" straight from Just Jap, I needed 350mm, but they only had 300mm, or 1mtr lengths....meh Also ordered a 1/2" hose bulkhead fitting from fleabay, this has a smoothish mushroom looking head (they are designed for below the water line of boats) that will fit inside the bend, the hose bit and threaded bit looks to long, but nothing that a hacksaw cannot fix if required, the hose will then just get jamed on the threaded bit up to the retaining nut Fingers crossed and the unsightly amount of hose clamps will be reduced down to 4 once all the parts arrive 
    • Oil change does not trigger code 21. Code 21 is for coilpacks primary side connection. You can try to clear the code with a battery disconnect, hold down the brake pedal to drain capacitors through the brake lights with the ignition on for 10-15 seconds before you reconnect the battery. I have seen R35 coil conversion permanently cause this code with no ill effects so it might be the resistance it wants to see isn't quite right on one or more coilpacks. Could be inside the ECU, could be the harness, could be a coil. You can test it all if you want or just ignore until the car actually starts misfiring.
    • I forgot you have a Nistune ECU. Use Nistune to do all the tests I mentioned instead of faffing with 30+ year old electrical connectors. You can read MAF volts off that too, there are reference values in the service manual to tell you roughly what it should be in different conditions.
    • No. I think it might be the AFM. Hence the use of the terms "swaptronics", which implies the use of swapping out electronics for the purpose of diagnosis. It's about the only way to prove that a small/niggling/whatever problem with an AFM or a CAS or similar is actually caused by that AFM/CAS/whatever. A known good item swapped in that still gives the same problem is likely to be caused somewhere else. They're all the same. Spraying AFMs with cleaner is an each way bet between cleaning it and f**king it.
    • Oh wow! This might actually work amazingly. Do you know the ratio of the diff? I was told the only thing you need to make sure of is if the front & rear diff ratios are the same. Ours is a 4.083 Thanks!
×
×
  • Create New...