Jump to content
SAU Community

Help! What Breed Is This Body Kit?


Recommended Posts

Well the story starts off like this i once had a running 32 and then some drugo c**ts stole a car went around my neighbourhood trying to ram raid cars and mine got done. damage not to bad and insurance is covering it but two days later that little knock in the engines sounding a sht load worse, nek minnet shrapnel hits the firewall and metal shards bouncing off the road behind me and have a con rod just chilling in the engine bay haha.

so since the insurance is being so nice and giving me a new paint job I want to replace the front kit, the kit on it was already pretty fcuked. but does anyone know what breed of kit this is??? i was looking through old school receipts and there could be a chance the front might be different but it looks the same style. but meh any info you give would be a useful.

just want it back on the road again and back in its form of gory :D

post-108717-0-65891200-1363072512_thumb.jpg

post-108717-0-44706400-1363072516_thumb.jpg

post-108717-0-97320000-1363072618_thumb.jpg

post-108717-0-30378600-1363072678_thumb.jpg

post-108717-0-19535500-1363072750_thumb.jpg

post-108717-0-63751600-1363072792_thumb.jpg

post-108717-0-59414300-1363072888_thumb.jpg

post-108717-0-97768700-1363072955_thumb.jpg

Edited by defectnotice
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Can't really identify it from the little pictures and damaged front bar. Looks like just a fiberglass aussie knock off of something japanese though. Any cheap BN, GP Sports, Origin or Dmax knock off front bar should work fine with the existing kit

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

    • Trail braking done right, should have the rear unsettled, such that you're actually turning the car by a noticeable amount WITH the brakes, and hence noticeably less steering input.
    • No you don't. Just no more driving in the wet, and clean your window manually before you drive
    • I'm not sure if they tick your boxes, but Haltech would be my pick. I'm an Adaptronic guy from way back, and Haltech acquired Adaptronic to basically get Andy, AND his IP on how he does things like fuel modelling etc.
    • Just on this, as there's a huge issue in your assumption Dose.   The logic you've given, is the same logic old school NA guys give for "needing back pressure" in an exhaust. If you free up an exhaust system, and keep injecting the same fuel in etc, at the same timing, you'll typically drop power. Freeing the exhaust will often make an engine want a little bit more timing, and even sometimes a little more fuel, but then it'll make even more power.   There's many mods people do and "get no extra power" when running a comparison on the same tune. Imagine a car tuned for 91, but now we say put 98 in it, see no difference. But as we now have 98 fuel, you can run more timing, and make more power, as the 91 was knock limited.   So just be very wary in your claim of "don't retune it and do a back to back and you'll see". The correct approach would be tune the car with stock manifold, swap the manifold to aftermarket, and retune it again. But no one wants to do that, and all the results we get are "this was stock, and this is manifold changed and tuned" and people put it all down as just the tune doing it.
    • Unplug ECU. Unplug TPS. Unplug boost pressure sensor. Now, all the wires, placing your ground (black) multimeter lead at the ECU end, measure resistance of the 5V line at the boost sensor plug. Then do the same to the TPS plug. Then do the same for all the other wires that relate to the TPS, or boost sensor.   All of your measurements should be very very low. You're looking to see if wiring is out of wack here.   Secondly, from memory on the R33 (not a neo motor, so I'm assuming an r34) the ground wire for the TPS and boost sensor are NOT equal to ground of the car/battery. IE, DO NOT connect ground of the sensor to the engine/body of car. You'll get a ground loop, and/or potentially screw shit up. In electronics, ground for a circuit, is not necessarily equal to ground of another circuit.   So this leads me to ask, when measuring your 5V, how are you getting 1.5V? Where are your multimeter leads touching for both the red and black lead on the multimeter?   If you're measuring power on the sensor wire, and putting ground on the car chassis or negative battery terminal, that could be all of your issues in "getting 1.5v". Electronics engineers can do some funky stuff with circuits, and when both sensors are on, it's enough laid to alter how the ECU is functioning.
×
×
  • Create New...