Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hello everyone,

I am new to the forum (long time lurker, first time poster). I was wondering if anyone could give a an idea to a problem I'm finding myself having with my 94 R33 GTS-T.

After owning this car happily for 3 or 4 months, i noticed my car all of a sudden had a incredibly loud fan noise when I accelerated (imagine a steam train) and a lack of boost, still spooling, just a considerable amount less. Due to a busy work schedule at the time I took it to a mechanic near me. He just changed over the spark plugs and had it to me that night. Everything back to normal.

After that day due to breaking my leg, the car sat unused for 5 weeks and of course when i was fit enough to drive it, the car developed the same issues after at least 300km of driving.

I talked to my mechanic who said the fan clutch had sized and buy a new one. I had him install it as i was still unable to do so and still the same issue. Nothing fixed.

Took it to another mechanic with a dyno in their shop and they said car is supposedly running fine and dont hear anything out of the ordinary. Now I'm new to this scene (turbo cars), but I'm sure no car changes characteristics just over night.

It's been incredibly frustrating and hoping anyone can shed some light as to where I should be looking?

Cheers.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/432901-loud-fan-noise-lacking-boost/
Share on other sites

First time: Spark Plugs

Second Time: Clutch Fan from Davies Craig

Usually my thought was that the fan when car is cold should be able to turn freely when pushed, about a quarter of a rotation correct? The "new" clutch fan wont spin freely at all and has quite some resistance.

Have heard it is possible for these to be already seized out of the box due to being stored in very warm temperatures. Have had it happen to a friend once.

No. My experience with replacement fan clutches is that the ONLY ones that work on RB25s are the Nissan ones. The Delco and DC ones are both set to come on too quickly, and so end up noisy and horrible. This will change with ambient temperature, which can explain variable behaviour.

Find a good 2nd handy or spend the ~$300+ for a genuine one.

No. My experience with replacement fan clutches is that the ONLY ones that work on RB25s are the Nissan ones. The Delco and DC ones are both set to come on too quickly, and so end up noisy and horrible. This will change with ambient temperature, which can explain variable behaviour.

Find a good 2nd handy or spend the ~$300+ for a genuine one.

That could explain alot. Obviously when you have that working back to normal, then back comes the power correct? Excuse my ignorance :wacko:

Yeah, the lack of power is half real, half imaginary. You just tend to get right back off the throttle when it starts makign so much noise. And in truth, spinning those old plastic fans hard can lead to them shatterring anyway, so it's only smart to let it get in your head.

The fuel consumption usually goes to crap also.

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

    • The incentives are mostly the same, yes. Ethanol is cheap compared to the cost of doing 98-100 RON with crude oil alone. 87 to 93-94 AKI all with E10. In 2020 Canada mandated E10 as a part of their "renewable fuel standard" and is supposedly going to go to E15 in 2030. In California where there are only 8 refineries with two threatening to shut down next year it's been over 20 years now of E10 and 91 AKI maximum because there's just not enough refinery capacity or crude oil supply relative to the demand for premium unleaded fuel. And CARB's low carbon fuel standard means functionally none of the diesel available at the pump is made from crude oil anymore. It's almost all entirely 20% biodiesel blended with 80% renewable diesel (hydrotreated vegetable oil) now. The number of gasoline vehicles that support E15 or higher ethanol concentrations is surprisingly low, I can't imagine it being wise to play tricks like this without flex fuel sensors in most of the fleet.
    • It's almost certainly the same as the one next to it. Have a fish around amongst these hits https://www.google.com/search?q=surface+mount+transistor+m33&sca_esv=9cb49794e0b2005d&source=hp&ei=2vJ5aNjTB7Kw0PEPldnS8QM&iflsig=AOw8s4IAAAAAaHoA6qkfmF6XcygtrZ4Vu9f92NXF_RFd&ved=0ahUKEwjYqIPP7MWOAxUyGDQIHZWsND4Q4dUDCA8&uact=5&oq=surface+mount+transistor+m33&gs_lp=Egdnd3Mtd2l6IhxzdXJmYWNlIG1vdW50IHRyYW5zaXN0b3IgbTMzMgUQIRigATIFECEYoAEyBRAhGKABMgUQIRigAUjKCFAAWABwAHgAkAEAmAHfAaAB3wGqAQMyLTG4AQPIAQD4AQL4AQGYAgGgAuYBmAMAkgcDMi0xoAfMBLIHAzItMbgH5gHCBwMyLTHIBwU&sclient=gws-wiz
    • South Australia, which is hardly as far behind as the rest pf Oz makes out, and who is also not a paragon of progressiveness (read that as over-legislation) in the area of vehicle standards, has this to say on the subject: Adjustable coil-over suspension Aftermarket adjustable coil-over suspension components are suspension units that incorporate an external thread on the main body and corresponding threaded spring saddle that allows the vehicle's suspension height to be varied. If fitting aftermarket or coil-over suspension components you must submit an Application to modify a light motor vehicle form and a report from a light vehicle engineering signatory (LVES).
    • Hi all, Long time since I've posted here. Looking for some advice on what I can remove to further identify the cause of my issues.  I can move the passenger seat forward and back but the knob used to adjust the seat angle is pretty much free spinning, there's very little resistance.  Removing the side cover I can see that the chain is intact but the shaft for the adjustment spins without the gear attached to it moving.  What's my next step for disassembly here? Is this a common fault? Just being a little cautious as I didn't want to start removing bolts for a spring to fly out or something equally as stupid.  Cheers
    • Those above shitboxes, mediocre and above usually have a turbo strapped to them, hence the slightly higher octane is required.  
×
×
  • Create New...