Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

just want to get some facts straight.

The r31 skyline is pretty much the pintara, which hade a L20b engine. Nissan australia based the pintara and skyline on the japanese version. The skyline is basically the same car as the pintara exept an rb30de and different tail lights and frount styling (in the 3 series). The japanese version had the turbo rb30det and similar tail lights to the aussie one, but with the no plastic covers, and projector headlights. the japanese only had the gts1 and gts2.

correct me if im wrong.

oh, and does the local r31 have 4 or 5 stud rotors?

thanks

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/42032-r31-skyline/
Share on other sites

Japanese GTS-x r31 skylines had Rb20DET engines, there is no factory car that has an RB30DET engine. The only turbo RB30 is the engine in the VL Commodore turbo which was a RB30ET.

The GTS1 and GTS2 are australian.

Local R31 have 4 studs, i think that turbo jap R31 have 5 studs. Jap r31 coupes and the 4 door passage have pillarless doors.

Go to www.r31skylineclub.com , you will probably get a better response over there than here if ur talking about r31s.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/42032-r31-skyline/#findComment-860441
Share on other sites

The Pintara had a CA20E, and it (the car) was based on the aussie skyline, the only differences are: Grille/no driving lights, no centre garnish between rear taillights on sedans, aswell as the engine, gearbox and Diff (4.11 25spline instead of 3.7 or 3.889 28spline with some LSD) Interior is exactly the same.

I thought Imports had 4studs? I know of at least one that has 4 stud, maybe they were easier to convert to 5 stud so most have been changed? dunno.

Jap had GTS 2door and 4door, GTS-X 2door, GTS-R 2door, PassageGT 4door, plus a load of cooking model non-turbo rb20s that we dont see much of here (cos their shit).

Aus had Exec, GX, GXE, Silhouette, Ti and Silhouette GTS

All had RB30E's, GTS1 (white) had 130kw and GTS2 had 140kw.

also, the aussie cars had live axle diffs, and are prone to whining, and are pretty crappy considering the imports hav R180s and R200s.

...also, R31skylineclub is good :)

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/42032-r31-skyline/#findComment-860864
Share on other sites

Everything you could possibly want to know about the R31 Skyline and R31 Pintara, models, series, series differences, body styling/types, factory colours, motor types, body parts etc etc etc can be found in this thread: R31 series

:)

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/42032-r31-skyline/#findComment-861043
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

here's a quote from a book called "australian cars" i found-

"Nissan also wanted to be in on the act* , especially since it was supplying the engines and transmisions for the commodore. Its solution was to the problem of building a family car was to take its four cylider medium sized pintara, fit it with a six cylinder engine, rename the car skyline, and market it as a larger car. this seemed to have worked, as........"

My point is that the pintara was based on the JDM skyline, and the aussie r31 was based on the pintara. Is this right?

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/42032-r31-skyline/#findComment-873966
Share on other sites

here's a quote from a book called "australian cars" i found-

"Nissan also wanted to be in on the act* , especially since it was supplying the engines and transmisions for the commodore. Its solution was to the problem of building a family car was to take its four cylider medium sized pintara, fit it with a six cylinder engine, rename the car skyline, and market it as a larger car. this seemed to have worked, as........"

My point is that the pintara was based on the JDM skyline, and the aussie r31 was based on the pintara. Is this right?

*= earlier before this statement, the book was saying about how there was a battle between holden, ford and mistubishi.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/42032-r31-skyline/#findComment-873969
Share on other sites

hmm interesting

nissan would have decided on making a 6cyl skyline long before it sold the engine to holden

so that bits wrong

as for pintara being the basis for oz skyline..well i guess its true in some ways and wrong in others, it had the styling of the 1985 japanese skyline, without its pillarless design, so i guess it was a bit of both pintara and skyline.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/42032-r31-skyline/#findComment-874226
Share on other sites

also to answer some questions from your first post

only the 1985,86 and very early 87 had "uncovered" tail lights, the rest had series3 oz style lights. The difference is not just the smoked plastic cover, the lenses and reflectors are quite different to each other. Similarly, not all import r31s had projector headlights, the 85 series2 style obviously did not, and the 1986 cars also missed out, having standard headlights, like those on australian s3 r31s.

gtr69 - as far as i know all imports had r200

just for your own interest racsov500.... my own car is a 1986 gts coupe, with updated projector headlights and original gts uncovered tail lights (black as opposed to passage grey). It also has the updated front grille, with GTS monogrammed into the left hand side. The 1986 versions had a central GTS badge. These cars came with the NICS rb20det, which i binned for a r32 rb20det silvertop.

i hope u succeed in owning your own r31 in the next few years

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/42032-r31-skyline/#findComment-874232
Share on other sites

Here's something interesting that just hit me, has anyone seen a japanese r31 without the series 3 healights/guards? Can't say I have.

Could the s1 & 2 fronts be australian only?

I'm looking to do a diff converion to my s3 wagon. Some skyline sedans had a h195 live rear end. Don't hear about them much though.

To save you the reply, I know the springs mount differntly on the wagons, just haven't had a good look at a h195 to see if it will be doable yet.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/42032-r31-skyline/#findComment-874912
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


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • You just need to remove the compressor housing, not the entire turbo. I would not be drilling and tapping anything with the housing still on anyways. 
    • So, I put my boat on a boat. First of all, I'm going to come out and say it. Why is Tasmania not considered a holy goal, an apex that all road-legal modified cars go to, to experience? This place is an absolute wonderland of titanic proportions. If people are already getting club runs for once in a lifetime 30 person cruises to Tassy then I've never seemed to see it. It is like someone replaced the entire place with an idyllic wonderland for cars, and all of the people living there with paid actors who are kind, humble, and friendly. Dear god. After doing a lap of almost all of the place I've found that it's a great way to find out all of the little things that the car isn't doing quite right and a great way to figure it all out. All in all, I drove for 4 hours a day for a week and nothing broke. I didn't even need to open the engine bay. This is by all means a great success, but it has left me with a list of things to potentially address. I also now have a 3D printed wheel fitment tool which annoyingly hasn't got any threads in it to actually assemble it. I might be able to tape it together to check the sizing I actually want to use, but it'll likely involving pulling the shocks out to properly measure travel at least at the front, and probably raise the car while I'm at it, at least in the rear. I scraped on quite a few things and I'm not sure how else to go about it. I was taking anything with a bump at what felt like 89 degree angles. And address those 10 other tasks. And wash the car. God damn it is dirty. And somehow, the weather was perfect the entire time - And because I was on the top of Mt Wellington it turns out it was very much about to freeze up there. I did something I typically never do and took some photos up there in what must have been -10 and the foggy felt like suspended ice, rather than mere fog. If you own a car in Australia, you owe it to yourself to do it.
    • Damn that was hilarious, and a bit embarrassing for skylines in general 😂 vintage car life ey. That R33 really stomped. Pretty entertaining stuff
    • Hi, I have a r32 gtr transmission. Does any of you guys have an idea how much power it will hold with the billet center plate and stock gearset? At what power level and use did yours brake with or without billet plate? Thanks, Oystein Lovik
    • Saw this replica police car based on a Mitsubishi Starion XX parked next to a 'police box' (it's literally a box) in Hirohata, Himeji City in Hyogo prefecture the other day. It's owned by Morii-san who is a local Mitsubishi Starion enthusiast. According to a local radio station blog post, he always wanted to make a police car himself based on ones he saw in his favourite Manga comics.  As it's illegal to modify a car to look like a police car and drive on the road, Morii-san tried many times to get permission from Aboshi police station headquarters nearby. They refused initially by after they got tired of that they granted him permission. However, the car can only be displayed on private property and obviously can't be registered as long as the police livery is present. The car was completed at a cost of 1.5 million yen (US$ 10,000) in addition to the car cost. A location was chosen outside Hirohata Police box where the car can easily been seen from the street. Morii-san has two other Starion road cars, both widebody GSR-VRs.
×
×
  • Create New...