Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Some of the R34s had the speed sensor on the diff. These diff housings are different, (as far as I know).

Otherwise though, a Nissan CW&P set from one R200 will work equally well in another R200 housing. The bearings should also be the same.

Some R34s were helical, not viscous. I cannot vouch for whether the side bearings on these are the same as their crappy brethren, but there's not real reason why they should be different.

  • 2 weeks later...

AFAIK know.

R33 GTST:

ABS has speed sensor on nose - diff housing is longer

NON-ABS has no speed sensor and shorter diff housing

All have 29mm, 30 spline output shafts (same as S13-S14, R32)

R34 GTT:

All have speed sensors on output shafts. Diff are the same length as R33 NON-ABS.

Series 1 have viscous

Series 2 (manual, turbo ONLY) have helical centre

All have 30mm, 31 spline output shafts (same as S15 BUT 5-bolt).

Therefore you CAN swap a R34 GTT diff into an R33 as long as the R33 is non-ABS. You CANNOT swap the centres from an R34 into anything R33, R32, S14, S13 as the output shafts are 1mm larger on the R34 and S15.

Some of this is, as yet, unconfirmed.

Edited by simpletool

Just to throw some confusion into all that.....I put a helical centre that was supposed to have come from an S15 (had S chassis 3.7 gears on it) that strangely came in an S14 housing into my R32 housing, using 4.11 gears from an R34 VLSD.

Granted, I used the 3x2 stud half shafts that came with the helical centre, so I don't know for sure if the spline count and diameter were different from the R32/3/4 sized ones. But it went into an R32 housing OK.

If it helps I put an R34 manual GTT diff into my non-abs R33 yesterday. Fitted up no problems.

Well actually there was a problem because the whiteline pinion mount bushes were slightly too small ID but it all got sorted with the help of an angle grinder.

Thanks simpletool... I have the series 1 GTT, I know the half shaft's on the the S15 are different, but can I put the diff centre from one into my GTT? I think their helical, does that matter?

Apparently this does work. As both diffs have the 30mm, 31 spline output/half-shafts, which the centres on S15 and R34 are made for. I have no real proof of this however, but it is something I am also looking at doing one-day.

  • 1 year later...

What exactly do I need to fit a s15 helical centre into my S1 stagea diff then? Centre only, or are the stub axles different too? And what about the c/w bolting up? Same size bolts? I'm assuming I should be ok if I use the centre, bearings and stub axles?

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

    • I don't. I mean, mine's not a GTR, but it is a 32 with a lot of GTR stuff on it. But regardless, I typically buy from local suppliers. Getting stuff from Japan is seldom worth the pain. Buying from RHDJapan usually ends up in the final total of your basket being about double what you thought it would be, after all the bullshit fees and such are added on.
    • The hydrocarbon component of E10 can be shittier, and is in fact, shittier, than that used in normal 91RON fuel. That's because the octane boost provided by the ethanol allows them to use stuff that doesn't make the grade without the help. The 1c/L saving typically available on E10 is going to be massively overridden by the increased consumption caused by the ethanol and the crappier HC (ie the HCs will be less dense, meaning that there will definitely be less energy per unit volume than for more dense HCs). That is one of the reasons why P98 will return better fuel consumption than 91 does, even with the ignition timing completely fixed. There is more energy per unit volume because the HCs used in 98 are higher density than in the lawnmower fuel.
    • No, I'd suggest that that is the checklist for pneumatic/hydraulic adjustable systems. I would say, based on my years of reading and complying with Australian Standards and similar regulations, that the narrow interpretation of Clause 3.2 b would be the preferred/expected/intended one, by the author, and those using the standard. Wishful thinking need not apply.
    • Yes they do. For some maybe. But for those used the most by abusers, ie Skylines, the numbers are known. The stock eyebrow height for R32/3 Skylines is about 365/375mm or thereabouts. The minimum such heights are recorded in adjacent columns in the database.
    • Hmmm, interesting. Makes me wonder whether there is bias as well. It's the cheapest fuel, so it is used for all kinds of ill-maintained shitboxes which are bound to have issues regardless. Nicer cars tend to require higher octane rated fuel and can't use it anyway. FWIW, the official NSW E10 facts page is decent. 
×
×
  • Create New...