Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

after blasting up and back the hume every weekend for a couple months I cannot believe just how bad it is currently.

I know it's end of summer so city folks doing their last weekend away in vic for the year but damn that Lane etiquette is gone.
always seems to be a Black SUV sitting at 105 in the right lane.


On the bright side, NSW are enforcing right lane hoggers.

We need to do the same here.

Oh and the Hume is rough af, much better in NSW.
2 hours ago, Count Grantleyish said:

 


For sure and Hume too.

Hume at 110 is boring as f**k.

 

Not in a slammed car in the rain...

 

/mohsen

1 hour ago, HEKT1K said:

Posting from within CBD skyscraper, come at me

2nd'd

When is a good time to call it a day with a car build before moving on to something else?

When youre happy with where its at and have enjoyed it? When you have "finished" it and eager to sink teeth into something else? Or just once you fall in love with a fresh idea that you cant apply to your current car?








Asking for a friend.

On 2/28/2017 at 5:52 PM, emts said:

how can there be such a lack of supply when there are just so many new houses going up.

every house sold here has been knocked down to turn into 2-3-4 town houses 

I didn't think our population increasing just that fast? 

 

highest population growth on record.. and also the issue is how CBD centric everything is so people want to be close to it 

When is a good time to call it a day with a car build before moving on to something else?

When youre happy with where its at and have enjoyed it? When you have "finished" it and eager to sink teeth into something else? Or just once you fall in love with a fresh idea that you cant apply to your current car?








Asking for a friend.


Selling the Pulsar?
1 hour ago, Leroy Peterson said:

When is a good time to call it a day with a car build before moving on to something else?

When youre happy with where its at and have enjoyed it? When you have "finished" it and eager to sink teeth into something else? Or just once you fall in love with a fresh idea that you cant apply to your current car?








Asking for a friend.

Car projects are like games of monopoly - full of fresh excitement, opportunity and fun at the start. Then half way through you've given all your money into some flamin mongrel with nothing to show for it, slowly draining you of your motivation to continue, at which point free parking becomes the only way out.

  • Like 1
5 minutes ago, Birds said:

Like starting a game of monopoly - full of fresh excitement and hope for fun. Then half way through you've given all your money into some flamin mongrel with nothing to show for it, slowly draining you of your motivation to continue, at which point free parking becomes the only way out.

 

http://richard_wilding.tripod.com/monorules.htm#freeparking

 

"Official Monopoly® Game Rules
The following page is a copy of the rules as printed in the Monopoly® Rule Book."

"FREE PARKING
A player landing on this place does not receive any money, property or reward of any kind.
This is just a "free" resting-place."

 

Selling the Pulsar?

Not the pulsar. Keep getting bad ideas about convertibles.

 

Not for a while yet, but if planning to move on in the next 2 years (for example) makes you consider how much and what mods you're going to install moving forward to try and finish the project.

 

Luckily with the Gloria, not much workshop stuff. Mostly mild stuff done by myself and friends.

 

And at least with changing wheels, you can sell them relatively easily (for a smallish loss) *

 

*decent 5x114.3 wheels only

 

  • Like 1
22 hours ago, Birds said:

What is your field?

Again, this is where business needs to be decentralised.

Rules of free market say that if it's truly unsustainable travel time then employees will find work elsewhere or rent closer to it...

Business Analysis / Project Management. While there are "some" jobs in the outer suburbs, they are usually poorly paid and for average companies. All of the digital agencies and interesting work is still in the CBD. The pay is also important, it's hard to find jobs that pay 6 figure salaries in the suburbs.

I'd love if there were more companies like this in the south east suburbs, but since these positions usually deal with other large organisations they are situated in the CBD for close client contact.

 

 

3 minutes ago, viper2002 said:

Business Analysis / Project Management. While there are "some" jobs in the outer suburbs, they are usually poorly paid and for average companies. All of the digital agencies and interesting work is still in the CBD. The pay is also important, it's hard to find jobs that pay 6 figure salaries in the suburbs.

I'd love if there were more companies like this in the south east suburbs, but since these positions usually deal with other large organisations they are situated in the CBD for close client contact.

 

 

I work in the same field, make 6 figures - and live in country VIC.....you're looking in the wrong spot.

  • Like 1
1 hour ago, joeyjoejoejuniorshabadoo said:

 

http://richard_wilding.tripod.com/monorules.htm#freeparking

 

"Official Monopoly® Game Rules
The following page is a copy of the rules as printed in the Monopoly® Rule Book."

"FREE PARKING
A player landing on this place does not receive any money, property or reward of any kind.
This is just a "free" resting-place."

Please don't post this shit as if I'm one of those retarded socialists who felt the need to give monopoly a touch of welfare / a leg up to shitty players by putting taxes and penalties in the middle of the board so they could wind up richer than Mayfair.

22 minutes ago, viper2002 said:

Business Analysis / Project Management. While there are "some" jobs in the outer suburbs, they are usually poorly paid and for average companies. All of the digital agencies and interesting work is still in the CBD. The pay is also important, it's hard to find jobs that pay 6 figure salaries in the suburbs.

I'd love if there were more companies like this in the south east suburbs, but since these positions usually deal with other large organisations they are situated in the CBD for close client contact.

 

 

I don't know enough about your industry to argue otherwise, but this still sounds like choosing the city over suburbia because of a relative pay difference and a perceived better work / career path available. I think patience and persistence are required to find the good suburb job, but they are definitely there. Otherwise, if the city job doesn't pay enough to sustain buying property close to work, then it's not sustainable work IMO and you find a job elsewhere or change industry. For as long as employees are prepared to travel an hour to work and/or rent inner suburbs me CBD, these companies won't change their operations to accommodate.

1 hour ago, Leroy Peterson said:

And at least with changing wheels, you can sell them relatively easily (for a smallish loss) *

*decent 5x114.3 wheels only

 

If you buy them 2nd hand in the first place then no loss

27 minutes ago, Birds said:

Please don't post this shit as if I'm one of those retarded socialists who felt the need to give monopoly a touch of welfare / a leg up to shitty players by putting taxes and penalties in the middle of the board so they could wind up richer than Mayfair.

What were you on about then?

1 hour ago, joeyjoejoejuniorshabadoo said:

If you buy them 2nd hand in the first place then no loss

What were you on about then?

It was a play on words because scrapping a car project frees up parking space and free parking is also one of the only refuges left on the board when everything is owned.

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

    • This is where I share pain with you, @Duncan. The move to change so many cooling system pieces to plastic is a killer! Plastic end tanks and a few plastic hose flanges on my car's fail after so little time.  Curious about the need for a bigger rad, is that just for long sessions in the summer or because the car generally needs more cooling?
    • So, that is it! It is a pretty expensive process with the ATF costing 50-100 per 5 litres, and a mechanic will probably charge plenty because they don't want to do it. Still, considering how dirty my fluid was at 120,000klm I think it would be worth doing more like every 80,000 to keep the trans happy, they are very expensive to replace. The job is not that hard if you have the specialist tools so you can save a bit of money and do it yourself!
    • OK, onto filling. So I don't really have any pics, but will describe the process as best I can. The USDM workshop manual also covers it from TM-285 onwards. First, make sure the drain plug (17mm) is snug. Not too tight yet because it is coming off again. Note it does have a copper washer that you could replace or anneal (heat up with a blow torch) to seal nicely. Remove the fill plug, which has an inhex (I think it was 6mm but didn't check). Then, screw in the fill fitting, making sure it has a suitable o-ring (mine came without but I think it is meant to be supplied). It is important that you only screw it in hand tight. I didn't get a good pic of it, but the fill plug leads to a tube about 70mm long inside the transmission. This sets the factory level for fluid in the trans (above the join line for the pan!) and will take about 3l to fill. You then need to connect your fluid pump to the fitting via a hose, and pump in whatever amount of fluid you removed (maybe 3 litres, in my case 7 litres). If you put in more than 3l, it will spill out when you remove the fitting, so do quickly and with a drain pan underneath. Once you have pumped in the required amount of clean ATF, you start the engine and run it for 3 minutes to let the fluid circulate. Don't run it longer and if possible check the fluid temp is under 40oC (Ecutek shows Auto Trans Fluid temp now, or you could use an infrared temp gun on the bottom of the pan). The manual stresses the bit about fluid temperature because it expands when hot an might result in an underfil. So from here, the factory manual says to do the "spill and fill" again, and I did. That is, put an oil pan under the drain plug and undo it with a 17mm spanner, then watch your expensive fluid fall back out again, you should get about 3 litres.  Then, put the drain plug back in, pump 3 litres back in through the fill plug with the fitting and pump, disconnect the fill fitting and replace the fill plug, start the car and run for another 3 minutes (making sure the temp is still under 40oC). The manual then asks for a 3rd "spill and fill" just like above. I also did that and so had put 13l in by now.  This time they want you to keep the engine running and run the transmission through R and D (I hope the wheels are still off the ground!) for a while, and allow the trans temp to get to 40oC, then engine off. Finally, back under the car and undo the fill plug to let the overfill drain out; it will stop running when fluid is at the top of the levelling tube. According to the factory, that is job done! Post that, I reconnected the fill fitting and pumped in an extra 0.5l. AMS says 1.5l overfill is safe, but I started with less to see how it goes, I will add another 1.0 litres later if I'm still not happy with the hot shifts.
    • OK, so regardless of whether you did Step 1 - Spill Step 2 - Trans pan removal Step 3 - TCM removal we are on to the clean and refill. First, have a good look at the oil pan. While you might see dirty oil and some carbony build up (I did), what you don't want to see is any metal particles on the magnets, or sparkles in the oil (thankfully not). Give it all a good clean, particularly the magnets, and put the new gasket on if you have one (or, just cross your fingers) Replacement of the Valve body (if you removed it) is the "reverse of assembly". Thread the electrical socket back up through the trans case, hold the valve body up and put in the bolts you removed, with the correct lengths in the correct locations Torque for the bolts in 8Nm only so I hope you have that torque wrench handy (it feels really loose). Plug the output speed sensor back in and clip the wiring into the 2 clips, replace the spring clip on the TCM socket and plug it back into the car loom. For the pan, the workshop manual states the following order: Again, the torque is 8Nm only.
    • One other thing to mention from my car before we reassemble and refill. Per that earlier diagram,   There should be 2x B length (40mm) and 6x C length (54mm). So I had incorrectly removed one extra bolt, which I assume was 40mm, but even so I have 4x B and 5x C.  Either, the factory made an assembly error (very unlikely), or someone had been in there before me. I vote for the latter because the TCM part number doesn't match my build date, I suspect the TCM was changed under warranty. This indeed led to much unbolting, rebolting, checking, measuring and swearing under the car.... In the end I left out 1x B bolt and put in a 54mm M6 bolt I already had to make sure it was all correct
×
×
  • Create New...