Jump to content
SAU Community

New Toymota "sports" Car


Recommended Posts

  • Replies 355
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

Just letting yall know, i work at a toyota and nissan dealership - 86 will have a supercharged trd variant in 6 months confirmed with some crazy side guard intake where the current 86 logo is and the New supra is confirmed for 2015

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just letting yall know, i work at a toyota and nissan dealership - 86 will have a supercharged trd variant in 6 months confirmed with some crazy side guard intake where the current 86 logo is and the New supra is confirmed for 2015

I'm sure the new supra would look crazy good.

Suppose to be AWD also.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just letting yall know, i work at a toyota and nissan dealership - 86 will have a supercharged trd variant in 6 months confirmed with some crazy side guard intake where the current 86 logo is and the New supra is confirmed for 2015

i saw a magazine the other day in woolies (may have been the new MOTOR magazine, can't remember) and it had something about a tuner version of the 86 that was twin charged. immediately it made me think that toyota would bring out a TRD version that was supercharged, since they did a supercharged aurion.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeh they do look pretty hot in real life ^^^^.

Heard we will be getting a trd one in the next 6 - 8 months too but I'll believe it when i see it. Most trd specials haven't sold too well but then they have not been the best base cars ie hilux and aurion.

Hopefully the trd 86 will be a decent car and not just some aero upgrades.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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

    • Hello, The dog bone wont have much to do with this - the calliper applies a load about the disc - the outside of the calliper is more flexible than the inside by virtue of it not haveing the big torqued down bolts, additional metal structure on the caliper itself, and mostly not being cantilevered. So the outside of the calliper is pushing away as its more bendy and brining the inside with it as an equal pressure on both sides of the caliper looks to cause more flex on the outside - which makes sense. I have done this same thing with the calliper unbolted from the dog bone - same thing happens. Although id have to watch more carefully to see how much more the outside moves than the inside in this case. Im guessing there is a point in the pedals travel where the pressure is not actually increasing in the system - its just volumne displacemnt - and because the outside of the calliper is more flexy, it receives that volume. Have gone back to Alcon again - but beyond a resolution there I would stay clear of this calliper and possibly any of the lighweight type of callipers - especially if you have the smaller 15/16" master cylinder. Cheers.
    • Yes, you can very clearly see from more than one angle that it is the whole caliper moving left-right, not deformation of the caliper. The top moves, the bottom moves. Equally. It should be possible to see where the movement is occurring. Just need to look more closely.
    • Hi Folks, my 2009 Skyline 370GT “Crossover” wagon is losing water and has been diagnosed as needing a water pump replacement (it’s an internal timing-chain driven unit, not the usual electric type that seems to be used across many manufacturers). Am looking for any repairer recommendations in the Sydney /Wollongong region who can be trusted and are experienced in this sort of work on the VQ 36 engine. Many thanks….Bill
    • While all of the above makes sense, we're not talking about some Ling Long calipers of AliExpress; Alcon would have to be one of the top 5 caliper suppliers in the world and these are not their budget units. If there were manufacturing defects in the caliper causing this issue I'd be very disappointed. Having re-watched the video a few times I think it's dog bone/mount related. The caliper moves independently to the rest of the suspension and brake assembly which suggests to me that it's not mounted rigidly. I know this sounds stupid, but have you got enough thread on the retaining bolts or are they a poofteenth too long and it's not super tight? For axial movement to be occurring without deforming the caliper that can be the only answer.
    • Extra torque will wear it out. The clutches won't be to the same spec as those on the turbo box, and the shift speeds possibly won't suit handling more torque either. Autos in R34s are a nightmare. 8HP conversion is the only sensible option.
×
×
  • Create New...