Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hi all,

Selling some bits and pieces

R32 Gtr Bonnet. Has hail damage. Would suit someone looking to respray or willing to remove dents via paintless dent removal.

Id say it has 3 large dints and about 20ish smaller dints. Hard to see dents in photos.

$200

R32 Gtr Bilstein coilovers

Struts are height adjustable via circlip.

Unknown springs.

Part numbers on struts are

Front F4-B46-1471-H001
Rear F4-B46-1472-H001

No leaks or anything wrong with them

$220

R33 RB26 Long nose crank

Requires machining as it had spun a bearing.

$80

R32 RB26 Air flow meter.

Works perfect. Removed due to map sensor ecu.

$60

All items located New Beith 4124

Prefer not to ship. If shipping required you will have to organise your own courier to pack them up safely.

Cheers!!

post-15782-0-85399300-1440556376_thumb.jpg

post-15782-0-31572000-1440556495_thumb.jpg

post-15782-0-62825200-1440556588_thumb.jpg

post-15782-0-82685600-1440556669_thumb.jpg

post-15782-0-62576800-1440556727_thumb.jpg

post-15782-0-81582700-1440556789_thumb.jpg

post-15782-0-87587100-1440556890_thumb.jpg

post-15782-0-06455400-1440557023_thumb.jpg

Hey mate,

The parts are at my inlaws house and I don't want the responsibility of making sure they are safe enough to survive a courier.

So pick up really is preferred.

Cheers!

i get a lot of stuff sent with e-go.

they are useally cheap and will pick it up to your house and send it to a depot right near my house to pick up.

wouldnt think it would be any more than $70 ish?

  • 1 month later...

is the crank still for sale?

Yes it is although it has gotten a little bit of surface rust on it from sitting next to a chlorine container. (machining will clean it up) $50

Coil overs still for sale

Edited by 33SOM

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

    • Have a look at that (shitty) pic I posted. You can see AN -4 braided line coming to a -4 to 1/8 BSPT adapter, into a 1/8 BSPT T piece. The Haltech pressure sender is screwed into the long arm of the sender and factory sender (pre your pic) into the T side. You can also see the cable tie holding the whole contraption in place. Is it better than mounting the sender direct to your engine fitting......yes because it removes that vibration as the engine revs out 50 times every lap and that factory sender is pretty big. Is it necessary for you......well I've got no idea, I just don't like something important failing twice so over-engineer it to the moon!
    • Yup. You can get creative and make a sort of "bracket" with cable ties. Put 2 around the sender with a third passing underneath them strapped down against the sender. Then that third one is able to be passed through some hole at right angles to the orientation of the sender. Or some variation on the theme. Yes.... ummm, with caveats? I mean, the sender is BSP and you would likely have AN stuff on the hose, so yes, there would be the adapter you mention. But the block end will either be 1/8 NPT if that thread is still OK in there, or you can drill and tap it out to 1/4 BSP or NPT and use appropriate adapter there. As it stands, your mention of 1/8 BSPT male seems... wrong for the 1/8 NPT female it has to go into. The hose will be better, because even with the bush, the mass of the sender will be "hanging" off a hard threaded connection and will add some stress/strain to that. It might fail in the future. The hose eliminates almost all such risk - but adds in several more threaded connections to leak from! It really should be tapered, but it looks very long in that photo with no taper visible. If you have it in hand you should be able to see if it tapered or not. There technically is no possibility of a mechanical seal with a parallel male in a parallel female, so it is hard to believe that it is parallel male, but weirder things have happened. Maybe it's meant to seat on some surface when screwed in on the original installation? Anyway, at that thread size, parallel in parallel, with tape and goop, will seal just fine.
    • How do you propose I cable tie this: To something securely? Is it really just a case of finding a couple of holes and ziptying it there so it never goes flying or starts dangling around, more or less? Then run a 1/8 BSP Female to [hose adapter of choice?/AN?] and then the opposing fitting at the bush-into-oil-block end? being the hose-into-realistically likely a 1/8 BSPT male) Is this going to provide any real benefit over using a stainless/steel 1/4 to 1/8 BSPT reducing bush? I am making the assumption the OEM sender is BSPT not BSPP/BSP
    • I fashioned a ramp out of a couple of pieces of 140x35 lumber, to get the bumper up slightly, and then one of these is what I use
    • I wouldn't worry about dissimilar metal corrosion, should you just buy/make a steel replacement. There will be thread tape and sealant compound between the metals. The few little spots where they touch each other will be deep inside the joint, unable to get wet. And the alloy block is much much larger than a small steel fitting, so there is plenty of "sacrificial" capacity there. Any bush you put in there will be dissimilar anyway. Either steel or brass. Maybe stainless. All of them are different to the other parts in the chain. But what I said above still applies.
×
×
  • Create New...