Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hey Guys I haven't been on here for a while and just wanted some advice about my plan;

I've got a healthy R31 silhouette manual that I wanted to throw a twin cam head on.

My plan is to buy a complete Neo motor with all sensors ecu etc. Bolt the head onto the RB30 block and ride off into the sunset.

-Use everything from the neo motor except the bottom end

-Fix the vct oil feed issue as is well documented

The Questions I've got are;

1. Will I have issues with the RB30 pistons clearing the twin cam head? (valve recesses etc?)

2. I'll end up with a higher compression ratio which is ideal but will it be excessive?

3. What have I forgotten?

I am quite competent doing heads/timing gear/ welding/ machining etc so am not afraid of the process but thought you guys could point out some glaring pitfalls I have missed?

Thanks - DAVE

  • Like 1
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/457524-budget-rb30-neo-head-build-advice/
Share on other sites

Assuming you are sizing the turbocharger to suit capacity increase, injectors ECU etc. And put a RB25 spec oil pump on the bottom end plus a crank collar to get full drive engagement on the pump.

There haven't been any reported difficulties running stock 30E pistons with the Neo head, although diligence should dictate that you measure up to ensure nothing clashes.

Static CR shouldn't be through the roof considering the R33 spec head achieves in the 8.3-8.4 range with a very light facing of block and head.

Thanks for the reply guys.

What's the purpose of the oil pump swap? I didn't plan on going turbo initially but if you aren't running oil squirters where does the additional need for oil come from? Since it seems cheapest to buy the full motor I could definitely steal the oil pump off the RB25 but I was hoping to leave the RB30 pump in place.

If you're not going fully balanced 8000rpm I believe people do keep the stock bottom end including pump without drama. You would need the Neo ecu and loom and probably nistune the ecu. If you can keep the neo block intact there should be a market for it.

Some people have literally bolted the new head on with the minimum mods to make it work but I think most people strip the block and do rings and bearings (and preferably little end bolts with line boring).

Leave oil pump as is, and shim the pressure relief valve with a couple of washers ( I used 2 6mm spring washers and my pressure is 4 bar on start up and about 2-3 once running), if I was to do it again I would probably put 3 washer in maybe 4.

  • 2 months later...

Cool thanks for the advice. At this stage I'm hoping the bottom end of the donor car will be healthy enough. I figure that since it's an N/A build it should be ok since it won't see the stress of a boosted version.

I've finished rebuilding the head and making all the oil supply and drain mods.

Next job is to start hacking up the wiring loom to remove extra wiring plus integrating with the R31. Should be some head scratching going on!

I should be clear, I'm not building on a budget. I am challenging the idea of how cheaply can you build one of these motors?

At this stage it's looking like I should be able to get the R31 running on a neo head with R34 n/a ecu for about $1100 all up.

I've given this a bit of thought and it really should run OK on the standard ecu. I'm not going to go near the afm resolution limit, the 270 cc injectors will flow plenty. The only issue I can see is that it will be accessing load points in the map that the rb25 was not supposed to see. Knowing Nissan tuning it will result in a rich top end. You're probably right that if I added a nistune I could pull fuel out of the top end and free up a few more killer wasps.

Can anybody help me out with a wiring/ecu question? What will the Neo ecu do with no knock sensors connected? Will it think there's no knock and run as normal or will it spit the dummy and go into limp mode? The reason I ask is because the knock sensor loom is not in the engine loom and I had planned to leave all r31 loom on the lower half of the motor. I've already stripped and rewired the engine loom and I spotted this afterward.... Derr

Awesome thanks for the quick reply. I do plan to add the knock sensor loom into my chopped down engine loom but just forgot so it's good to have an option.

Is there any other items in that loom that may be crucial to getting the ecu running as per normal? Oil pressure sender? any of the alternator wiring?

Altenator, injectors, coilpacks, CAS, AFM, TPS should be enough to get it running. You need to get the bosses on the RB30 block machined if you want to use knock sensors. The provisions are there on all of them but only turbo blocks actually had a hole drilled and tapped.

When you say machined, they are just a blind hole in the block on a small spot face right? If so can't I just drill and tap to the correct depth? If I had to I could probably throw it up on the mill but would have thought as long as you can get your pilot drill started you should be able to step up the hole carefully to the tap pilot size. I'm guessing they are a 1/8 or 1/4" BSP parrallel so should be right?

Can you see any benefit in reusing 1 of the knock sensors in the centre location in the RB30 block and then running the resistor on the other?

Yeah I've got all the other sensors/connectors sorted via resurrecting the ECM/COIL relay as well as the couple of items on the IGN relay.

Yes you can just drill and tap. I got my tensioner hole done at a machine shop so I just got them to do the knock sensor bosses as well.

I would drill and tap the two knock sensors and run both personally. It's pretty easy to get them both working and could be a huge advantage.

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

    • Started sifting thru my brakes to decide which ones I will run on Clem   Made me think I should just put them all on Silver...for when brake fade just isn't an option   Should be able to bump rotor up from 343x32 to 348x36 off Supra. Not sure if the Supra annulus is right for the Alcons or APs but trying g to find a used Supra\M4 rotor to test fit The Alcons seem to gain 1-2mm clearance which all helps  
    • So car is getting a few mods to the cage and some jacking points welded in Meantime Ol Silver gets a new gearbox and shiny clutch.  Old Box is being set aside for Clem  
    • Probably speedometer itself if the odometer is ticking. If the needle is stuck from a bit of grease or something that can cause it to stay at 0. Or a cracked solder joint in the speedometer can do it too.
    • Thanks Fella’s   to take this off topic and to elaborate a bit more. I have an rb25/30 going into a r32 GTST.. expected to make around 600-700hp. Would you?   A) R34 GTT box   B) CD00#?  I’ve seen a few posts about the CD swap and sounds fairly involved with making it fit etc but if it’s worth the work then I’ll go that way
    • Lower at the hubs. Funny I forgot to mention that part. Do this pull here I turned the camera off too soon but the graph shows a drop at the top and that was because the pipe from the turbo blew off. The tuner said we could’ve made possibly another 15 whp. He also added if I switched to ethanol we could up the boost some more as well. I was comfortable capping it at the most of 20 pounds. Turns out the turbo pipe just needed a new worm clamp. Got home replaced that then did a third gear pull from 3k to 7200 rpm and the power was great to the top. I just got an ecu mounting bracket from IEE that I need to try and get everything to fit well. It’s a PITA to get the harness and ecu fit properly behind that kick plate 
×
×
  • Create New...