Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

After owning my 1999 R34 GTT for almost 6 years, I thought I'd start a build thread. Since my car will most likely never be for sale, I wanted to share my journey of my pride and joy - the good, bad and the ugly. (Disclaimer: The car isn't or isn't going to be a 1000hp monster, but it's just a worthy street car that sometimes sees the track) :)

Like many other cars and projects out there, this wasn't a smooth sailing journey, it had lots of ups and downs, lot's of blood, sweat and swears.

I've been on SAU since 2007, started my Skyline career with a 1996 R33 Series 2 GTS, imported from Japan via J-Spec Imports, when I was 18 years old.

001.jpg

It wasn't long until I had a 'little' accident in it, literally 2 days after it was complied and registered:

002.jpg

Since then, I learned to respect the power and RWDness of the car, even though it's N/A. After having the R33 for 2 years, I felt the need for something quicker and better, soon after, the R33 was up for sale and this is her when she was sold:

003.jpg


Now the story begins...

About 1 week or so after the fund from the sale was cleared, I started looking at a new car, and I always knew I wanted another Skyline. At first, I was just going to put the fund into a Series 2 R33 GTST, but I thought it was going to be way too similar to my N/A, in terms of the look and feel. So I dug into my piggy bank and decided to get a R34 GTT. I wanted a silver R34 with an Altia kit all along, but at the point in time, they were going for around $20,000. And I was just earning $12 an hour at Safeway, so there was no way that I could afford that.

One Friday night, I jumped onto Carsales hoping some new cars would have popped up and lucky that I did, a new 1999 R34 GTT in yellow has been added 3 hours earlier, for $15,500 (in 2009). So I quickly gave the owner a call and arranged to see it the next morning (Saturday). When I rocked up at the apartment complex in Southbank, inside the dark secured car park, there she was... Sitting in a corner by herself, just glowing...

I started her up for the first time, for a test drive. Sitting in the driver's seat in awe of the more modernised interior compared to my R33, that's when I fell in love with her. Took her out into the empty streets, slightly blipping the throttle to feel what she was capable and wow, it felt incredible, the sensation of being on boost for the first time in my life lol... As soon as I got back to the carpark, I immediately arranged a deal with the seller subject to RWC. On the Wednesday the following week, the R34 was mine, I always loved yellow cars in Grand Turismo on Playstation, but I never once thought I'd actually own or drive one.

The R34 was fairly stock, it came with:

- 18" Buddyclub's, 18x8+35, 18x9+35.
- Teins Type Flex coilovers
- Blitz PowerSUS pod filter

- Blitz return flow intercooler

- Nismo front pipe and catback with muffler (very quiet on idle)

- 3" dump

004.jpg

005.jpg

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/454347-charles-r34-gtt-c89/
Share on other sites

Keep it coming mate, i always enjoy a good rwd skyline build and have noticed yours is one of the nicer 34's on the forum. We need to see the pic in your avi though! Look forward to more soon

That photo was taken on the Saturday just past, at SAU Vic's motorkhanna day, so there's gonna be roughly 6 years worth of photos before you get to see it ;)

About time :P - subscribed!

Haha yeah, just impulsively felt the need to create one after nearly putting the car into a concrete wall at motorkhanna :P

  • Like 1

First mod!

Being a uni student at the time, I didn't have bags of cash to just splash on the car, so mods came cheaply and slowly, but bare with me! It slowly gets better... A bit like the turbo lag that we experience. Nothing, nothing, nothing, then BAM!

I might have taken the car modding in the wrong direction, normally, people pull stuff a part and mod the crap out of their first car "to learn" by breaking things, but I never really modded anything on my R33, except I learned how to jack up a car and change the wheels, maybe I realised being an NA, it wasn't worth modding. But I promised myself with the R34, I wanted to do give everything a go myself and try pulling things off and mod.

So first mod to the R34... Although it's just a minor tweak, but being on P plates at the time, I needed the R34 to be stealth (how ironic right?), so I decided to take off the Blitz PowerSUS pod that came with the car, replaced with a standard airbox and to spray the intercooler matte black, to make it less obvious. That's when I learned to take off my first body panel.

006.jpg
007.jpg

And guess what? In the next year or so, I never had any police attention, although looking back now, I'm not proud of what I did and if I had to choice to go through this again, I DEFINITELY wouldn't be doing the same and as a WARING to P platers reading this, I strongly recommend that you don't do this, as police are too strict on imports and P platers these days, it's not even worth it... Just wait it out and enjoy having a turbo legitimately without always having to watch who's driving behind you..

So this is the R34 as it stands in October 2009.

The discovery of carbon fibre vinyl wrap...

Those that have been on here for awhile, might have seen some of my threads about carbon fibre wrapping or even got things wrapped by me.

Again, not having much capital to do those crazy performance mods, I had to focus my money on little mods that I can see (cosmetic). And after discovering carbon fibre vinyl wrap, I ordered a metre from the US and just started to play around with it... And next thing I know, I had half of my car wrapped. Those that has wrapped their cars, will understand how addictive this is!

008.jpg
009.jpg
010.jpg
011.jpg

And yes, that's red thing in the corner, is a JDM flare that I asked compliance to keep for me. I've also installed my Nismo Titanium gear knob that I bought for my R33 (in which I took off when I sold the car).

012.jpg

This little pad below, is a Nissan OEM knee pad, there's one on each side, to reduce the space your knees travels when taking corner - VERY rare.

013.jpg
014.jpg
015.jpg

P.S, 5 years on, those items are still nicely wrapped, the quality of 3M...

  • 2 weeks later...

Getting a bit lippy!

For a couple of months, I thought the GTT's OEM front bar looked a little tame, felt like it needed something else. Having multiple thoughts about getting an aftermarket front bar but I've seen far too many over done R34's with full aftermarket kits which turned me off a little.

So seeking for an alternative while still wanting to keep the OEM front bar, I found out Nissan made a plastic factory option lip for the R34 GT and GTT's, but at the point in time, ordering one from Nissan was just out of the question - due to price. Luckily, after days of looking, I found a 2nd hand fibreglass replica of the same factory lip for $150, and thought why not? What could go right?

After picking up the lip and taking it to my panel beater (Vu @ DT Panels), only to realise the lip wasn't the best quality and needed a bit of work to get it on :wacko: Having not much of a choice, I decided to give it a go, getting it sprayed and fitted. The quality probably wasn't from afar, but close up was a different story... Nevertheless, I was at the time happy with it; first of many panels added :)

016.jpg
017.jpg

During the same month (November 2009), I also found some Nismo style garnish for my spoiler blade, which didn't last long at all before I realised it looks a bit average...

018.jpg

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'm actually not sure - I think it was "Stealth Performance" (It really is near impossible to find a FEMALE 1/8BSPT to 1/8NPT male at ALL) but having the thing leveraged on a 90 degree angle on a small aluminium fitting is not too smart. Also in not too smart, I've drilled out the center of the broken fitting so there's maybe 0.00001mm of thread to bite into, so yeah. I may have to get it drilled/tapped/plugged entirely. Given I could conceivably tap a thread/adapter/pressure line in any point in the oil system I suppose it's feasible to run a line to the Nissan Sensor to keep the dash working. Do these exist in AN fittings and the like? Like an AN fitting that has a NPT (or other?) thread as well for putting a sensor in?
    • I would agree.  There will be an amount of boost you could run safely with an otherwise factory system, but it would be low enough to not be worth the cost.  And if you are reliving your 20s, you know a 'little bit' was never enough. Personally, if I didn't want to spend the money, then stick with NA bolt-ons, and maybe a tune.
    • Fuark, at least the motor survived. What brand was the fitting that snapped?
    • Wrong question. There's no point in spending the rather large sum of cash and effort to add turbo, without taking it to the "sensible" limit of the motor itself. If you have to upgrade injectors, etc, then so be it. That is a tiny fraction of what it will cost you to turbo it.
    • Measure voltage at the starter solenoid terminal when the key is at start and it has clicked. If it is really low, then the suspicion falls on the ignition switch (contacts or wiring thereof) as causing a voltage drop instead of sending enough volts to throw the solenoid all the way to engage the starter itself. If it is a decent voltage, then the suspicion is on the solenoid. Might have s horted coil, or might hva dirty contacts. Rip the starter off, dismantle, clean up contacts and inspect winding. It might not be possible to see if there is a short in the winding though. I have a spare starter here that I could measure the resistance of the coil, as a guide to about what it should be, if you need a comparison. <parts hoarder>No you cannot have it.</parts hoarder>
×
×
  • Create New...