Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Do NOT spray water straight out of a hose and into your engine bay. Neo's seriously do not like it.

Use a cloth and lots of elbow grease.

Out of curiosity, what would be the consequinces if I hosed it directly? Can I use a small container to pour water and soap away?

or take the coil cover off, hose away to your hearts content, then get an air gun and blow all the water out of the coil valley and then go for a decent drive to boil off any left over water before you put the cover back on.

To reach the coilpacks in the R34 neo's you would need to take off the manifold and some piping, which would take ALOT of time and effort to dry out if you got water in there.

So as people mentioned, elbow grease and a cloth should be the better option.

This is my tried and tested method on both my current 34s, and has been on all of my vehicles for 15 years and mates cars, never had a drama!

Cover your intake, jam an old rag in there or tie a plastic bag over the pod filter, lay some old towels over the rocker cover/valley top of the engine area just to be safe. (if no valley cover is fitted be extra careful to avoid water getting into the coilpack wells) same would apply to old carburator and dizzy setups!

Buy 6-10 cans of degrease and a can of electrical conctact cleaner from autobarn/supercheap!

Go hard and hit all the areas of the bay with the degrease, it will not matter if you spray the engine loom or any of the plugs as long as the key is not in the igntion ON position. Hit all the hard to get to areas like the fuel rail and injectors, the fuse box external connectors (these always get serious build up can take a few cans to move it all away) get right down/under the sides of the block areas (the drivers side is always more dirty than the passenger side) you can spray anywhere below the rocker covers really and it will not cause you any dramas, even spray the powersteerring box and plugs on the passenger side at the rear of the bay.

You can hose down the engine bay as long as you have a controlled hose head and turn it to the jet position, just make sure that you give some distance between the parts you are spraying down and the water and don't constantly aim at the same place, just wave the water around the areas you want to hose off, dont use a high pressure water gun! (I do but am familar with this process) Just avoid spraying above the rocker cover/gaskets and you will be fine!

Once done hosing down let the bay dry for a while and start wiping it down to remove the grease buildup that may not have come away (use a rag dipped in degrease for this), water cannot get in anywhere as there are gaskets and 0 rings which prevent this. To finish off make sure that all your plugs contacts are clean and water free, just unplug all connectors and give them a good squirt with the electrical contact cleaner, this is something that should be done anyway periodically.

You should now have a gleaming engine bay and it will be nice to work on!

Think of it like this, 4 wheel drive vehicles fitted with a snorkel can almost be submerged up to the bonnet and no water ever gets into the actual engine! The only reason a car would stall in this scenario is because the air intake has sucked in water!

Think of it like this, 4 wheel drive vehicles fitted with a snorkel can almost be submerged up to the bonnet and no water ever gets into the actual engine! The only reason a car would stall in this scenario is because the air intake has sucked in water!

But these cars are usually diesel and have simple ignition systems. Old girls only have a single wire feeding the fuel solenoid and the rest is mechanical. Our skylines are more sophisticated. People have dramas with coil packs when they are dry let alone adding water to the situation.

But these cars are usually diesel and have simple ignition systems. Old girls only have a single wire feeding the fuel solenoid and the rest is mechanical. Our skylines are more sophisticated. People have dramas with coil packs when they are dry let alone adding water to the situation.

^^^this

What is simple about a Petrol 4X4 NISSAN PATROL with fuel injection and a turbo system, infact it is way more sphisticated than a 1998 skyline in every way/form.

Well a complex petrol patrol can't just sit in water running for long. Need to prevent/reduce water getting into the dizzy. Loosen belt for viscous fans. Guys who do it regularly have taken preventative measures and even then it only reduces incidents not prevents them.

Your method has worked for you but people are simply recommending not to hose down incase something goes wrong and OP has problems with his car. it might be fine, but has caused many people dramas before

I owned an RB30 EFI patrol and that thing got fully submerged above the bonnet almost daily through winter, worst problem I ever had was if it sat for too long. As for engine bay cleaning I usually stuff rags soaked in WD40 around the coil packs, spray degreaser everywhere bar the coil packs and use a pressure washer to spray the crap out of the engine bay. At worst I get rough running for a bit till shit dries out. It's never bothered me though.

Yep I used spray degreaser on the engine bay and use a high pressure washer but just make sure I dont spray too hard core are spark plug valley & air intake, I have the motor running while rinsing I do it so it dries quicker, heats up grease and oil to come off a little easier and also if the motor sound changes I know Ive soaked an area too much...

I owned an RB30 EFI patrol and that thing got fully submerged above the bonnet almost daily through winter, worst problem I ever had was if it sat for too long. As for engine bay cleaning I usually stuff rags soaked in WD40 around the coil packs, spray degreaser everywhere bar the coil packs and use a pressure washer to spray the crap out of the engine bay. At worst I get rough running for a bit till shit dries out. It's never bothered me though.

coil packs on a RB30? are you running after market ecu and ignition as factory 30s run a single coil mounted in a position where they are not sitting in water

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

    • Brooooo Please send ABS control unit schematic Please! R33 gts25t ABS (Its two plug ecu, black and white) wire colors possible? [email protected]
    • Don't even try to run it on the stock ECU if you're going to have the boost controller bring boost above ~10 psi. I've already told you that. If you use the Nistune ECU, you will need to CAREFULLY read the available documentation for Neo tuning, and read some threads on the Nistune forums, to discover the various things you have to do to prevent the ECU from going bananas when the boost is too high. The is a table associated with th boost sensor that must be modified to prevent it from shitting the bed. This is just one of the things that you will need to do to the tune in Nistune, because the Neo turbo ECU will be expecting to see a number of things (such as the TCS) that are not there, and you have to block the DTCs on those. It is totally not surprising to me that you are having the problems that you are, but the solutions to these problems have been known for >15 years. So just get it done.
    • Hi. Sry iam not a mechanic and iam not at the car atm so i dont know 100% but they told they measure those and even try to change those. AFM they have two. Coils are new a they have my old one too. Plugs too. ECU...we have 25 NEO stock and Nistune 25 NEO.   But i dont know if any one those could be the problem and why/if/what can cause this, Only thing they did not check is fuel...but that walbro 255 is new(like 1,5 years)... That fuel pressure gauge idk...but i let them know Any suggestions?   EDIT: how can they know if it is like you say he ECU pull power when it reaches a specific boost level that is too high? Tha car has boost controler
    • Can you clarify what you mean by boost cut, do you mean it misfires both when under load (driving) and when stationary and out of gear? Or does the ECU pull power when it reaches a specific boost level that is too high (boost control issue)? Does it occur at idle with no throttle? When you say "the ECU is OK", what ECU is it and why do you think it is OK? Have you used the NEO ECU, and if so do you have a MAP sensor attached? Same for the AFM, why do you think it is OK? Do you have any way to put a fuel pressure gauge on it (even just a mechanical one between the fuel filter and fuel rail)?
×
×
  • Create New...