Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

6 hours ago, AngryRB said:

Whats wrong with the r33 manifold, would certainly provide good flow for the 400kw's.. 

 

On 16/12/2017 at 10:38 AM, Dose Pipe Sutututu said:

 

My very last options are to either go back to a R33 intake manifold (gay) or buy a Hypertune (over priced) or equivalent plenum such as Otaku Garage/Madcat (China dim sim sui mai spec). 

Would be gay apparently lol

10 hours ago, discopotato03 said:

There may be a slight fix depending on how much material you can mill off the manifold face of the Neo lower section .

I had a look at the face and a problem is the lack of material around the front water inlet . This would limit how much you can machine off without enlarging this water passage .

If you are prepared to work around this and reset the injector height in the mounting hole it may just be enough to clear everything for your short EV14s .

A .

Scotty has tried to modify a spacer for me which looks pretty good however he didnt have a neo manifold to test fit them so ill give em a go when they arrive.

After a bit more digging it looks like injector dynamics have a spacer however they will not sell them seperate unless you can prove to them you have a set of their injectors.

Fuel injector clinic also looks like they might have a spacer that could work but havent contacted them.

Im confident Scotty can sort it out ?

10 hours ago, AngryRB said:

Whats wrong with the r33 manifold, would certainly provide good flow for the 400kw's.. 

I'm not aiming for 400kW :)

Also no one seems to stock the China plenum labelled Otaku Garage or Madcat. They all try and say they take 4 weeks to be made in house (in house in a factory in China) lol.

Asked for trade pricing and got a quote that's pretty much RRP with free shipping. 

Anyhow R34 NEO intake manifold off and swapping the R33 homosex shit back on.

 

Happy to say ill be using the xspurt 1550cc injectors in my neo manifold ?20171229_090500.thumb.jpg.15b2180118147e3a97b5c63ec74c33cc.jpg

Scotty came through with the goods and made up an adapter that works.

It does sit the injector back a little from where the factory one seats but after having a look from the other side i cant see it causing any problems.

I did just buy another manifold to chop up to see how thick they are in that area where the injectors are, when it arrives ill do it anyway just out of curiosity.

Once again thankyou Scotty ?

  • Like 1

Hi Johnny , curious to know if its all up and running with the R33 inlet manifold .

I did a lot of searching and reading about injectors that could be suitable for the R34 Neo turbo manifold and there are a few options that aren't based on the short EV14 injectors . Thing is that the original Neo turbo injector looks more like a Bosch styled EV6 and the XR6 Turbo and R35 GTR injectors are similar or same dimensions . Luckily for us the 3/4 length EV14s are also similar dimensions . Overall I think the story is that if you want better top feeds for R33 go the half sized EV14 , or 3/4 length for the R34 Neo turbo inlet manifold . 

Starting an injector thread to keep this one on topic . 

 

We have run the "1650cc" half length injectors with the standard (well slightly modified) lower cap that is usually run on the 3/4 length extended nose "040" injectors before to get around this problem with the connector/socket fouling on the RB manifolds (other engines also have thus problem)

The "1650cc" injector has a very narrow cone spray pattern in testing and doesn't suffer from shrouding issues from having the pintle further up in an adaptor, we just put a chamfer edge on the final point to be on the safe side.

There is also a direct drop in replacement 720cc injector available for the Neo.

http://www.nzefi.com/product/bosch-720ccmin-high-resistance-top-feed-fuel-injector/

Edited by Sub Boy32

ok peeps who has the fix ?  

my car booked in for tuning kinda stressing out now 

Edited by bilk06169
added
On 13/01/2018 at 5:07 PM, discopotato03 said:

Can we get you to measure the size of that water hole please

Cheers A . 

Approx 7.5mm, i measured a few times and got a different reading every time lol but that was the average.

19 hours ago, bilk06169 said:

ok peeps who has the fix ?  

my car booked in for tuning kinda stressing out now 

How you go mate, get it sorted?

  • Like 1
18 hours ago, bilk06169 said:

scotty is getting the ball rolling for me 

You will find with the adaptors on there you will have enough space to use a 90 degree orb to dash fitting in the center of the rail so you can run it twin feed ?

  • Like 1
On ‎6‎/‎01‎/‎2018 at 6:20 PM, Sub Boy32 said:

We have run the "1650cc" half length injectors with the standard (well slightly modified) lower cap that is usually run on the 3/4 length extended nose "040" injectors before to get around this problem with the connector/socket fouling on the RB manifolds (other engines also have thus problem)

The "1650cc" injector has a very narrow cone spray pattern in testing and doesn't suffer from shrouding issues from having the pintle further up in an adaptor, we just put a chamfer edge on the final point to be on the safe side.

There is also a direct drop in replacement 720cc injector available for the Neo.

http://www.nzefi.com/product/bosch-720ccmin-high-resistance-top-feed-fuel-injector/

It took some searching but I found some info on this injector , its Bosch EV14 0280 158 235 . Unmodified BTW .

"Should" be a drop in upgrade for a modest RB25DET Neo engine , 3/4 length EV14 with the correct Denso high guide connector . From what I read it has a 9 hole diffuser plate and supposedly excellent atomisation .

I guess if you wanted to run flex and aim for only 300-320 wheel wasps these could be the Neo ticket .

https://www.bosch-motorsport-shop.com.au/731cc-min-ev14-injector~4312

http://www.bosch-automotive-catalog.com/en_GB/product-detail/-/product/0280158235

OE Audi Injector ?

http://www.vehiclepartsdatabase.com/vehicles/all/audi/a4allroadestate/20tfsiquattro/cdnc/35027/fuelinjectors/bosch/0280158235

A .  

EV14 0280 158 235 720cc.PNG

Edited by discopotato03

Fine , re railing this topic .

As has been mentioned fitting the shorty EV14s to the Rb25DET Neo is difficult to impossible depending on how close you want the injector tip to be to where Nissan has it . The OE Neo Turbo injector looks like a licence built EV6 injector but by Nippon Denso with the Japanese high guide connector sometimes called Denso or Sumitomo . These injectors are very close to the Bosch 3/4 length EV14 injector length wise .  

Now because the upper water log , bleeder feed actually , on the Neo manifold sits further out from the manifolds face AND the injector tip is closer to the manifold face - the injector hole or well is deeper than on R33 RB25 manifolds .

Short EV14s are too short to seat/seal properly whilst having their electrical connector clear of the manifold casting . If you choose to make an adapter to sit the short EV14 higher in its well then there is no physical reason why this wouldn't work . The injector tip won't be where Nissans engineers intended it to be which would be my concern but hey - to each their own .

All of this is only an issue if you limit your injector choice to shorty EV14s . I know unmodified injector choices are limited over 1000cc's . 

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



  • Latest Posts

    • Any update on this one? did you manage to get it fixed?    i'm having the same issue with my r34 and i believe its to do with the smart entry (keyless) control module but cant be sure without forking out to get a replacement  
    • So this being my first contribution to the SAU forums, I'd like to present and show how I had to solve probably one of the most annoying fixes on any car I've owned: replacing a speedometer (or "speedo") sensor on my newly acquired Series 1 Stagea 260RS Autech Version. I'm simply documenting how I went about to fix this issue, and as I understand it is relatively rare to happen to this generation of cars, it is a gigantic PITA so I hope this helps serve as reference to anyone else who may encounter this issue. NOTE: Although I say this is meant for the 260RS, because the gearbox/drivetrain is shared with the R33 GTR with the 5-speed manual, the application should be exactly the same. Background So after driving my new-to-me Stagea for about 1500km, one night while driving home the speedometer and odometer suddenly stopped working. No clunking noise, no indication something was broken, the speedometer would just stop reading anything and the odometer stopped going up. This is a huge worry for me, because my car is relatively low mileage (only 45k km when purchased) so although I plan to own the car for a long time, a mismatched odometer reading would be hugely detrimental to resale should the day come to sell the car. Thankfully this only occurred a mile or two from home so it wasn't extremely significant. Also, the OCD part of me would be extremely irked if the numbers that showed on my dash doesn't match the actual ageing of the car. Diagnosing I had been in communication with the well renown GTR shop in the USA, U.P.garage up near University Point in Washington state. After some back and forth they said it could be one of two things: 1) The speedometer sensor that goes into the transfer case is broken 2) The actual cluster has a component that went kaput. They said this is common in older Nissan gauge clusters and that would indicate a rebuild is necessary. As I tried to figure out if it was problem #1, I resolved problem #2 by sending my cluster over to Relentless Motorsports in Dallas, TX, whom is local to me and does cluster and ECU rebuilds. He is a one man operation who meticulously replaces every chip, resistor, capacitor, and electronic component on the PCB's on a wide variety of classic and modern cars. His specialty is Lexus and Toyota, but he came highly recommended by Erik of U.P.garage since he does the rebuilds for them on GTR clusters.  For those that don't know, on R32 and R33 GTR gearboxes, the speedometer sensor is mounted in the transfer case and is purely an analog mini "generator" (opposite of an alternator essentially). Based on the speed the sensor spins it generates an AC sine wave voltage up to 5V, and sends that via two wires up to the cluster which then interprets it via the speedometer dial. The signal does NOT go to the ECU first, the wiring goes to the cluster first then the ECU after (or so I'm told).  Problems/Roadblocks I first removed the part from the car on the underside of the transfer case (drain your transfer case fluid/ATF first, guess who found out that the hard way?), and noted the transfer case fluid was EXTREMELY black, most likely never changed on my car. When attempting to turn the gears it felt extremely gritty, as if something was binding the shaft from rotating properly. I got absolutely no voltage reading out of the sensor no matter how fast I turned the shaft. After having to reflow the solder on my AFM sensors based on another SAU guide here, I attempted to disassemble the silicone seal on the back of the sensor to see what happened inside the sensor; turns out, it basically disintegrated itself. Wonderful. Not only had the electrical components destroyed themselves, the magnetic portion on what I thought was on the shaft also chipped and was broken. Solution So solution: find a spare part right? Wrong. Nissan has long discontinued the proper sensor part number 32702-21U19, and it is no longer obtainable either through Nissan NSA or Nissan Japan. I was SOL without proper speed or mileage readings unless I figured out a way to replace this sensor. After tons of Googling and searching on SAU, I found that there IS however a sensor that looks almost exactly like the R33/260RS one: a sensor meant for the R33/R34 GTT and GTS-T with the 5 speed manual. The part number was 25010-21U00, and the body, plug, and shaft all looked exactly the same. The gear was different at the end, but knowing the sensor's gear is held on with a circlip, I figured I could just order the part and swap the gears. Cue me ordering a new part from JustJap down in Kirrawee, NSW, then waiting almost 3 weeks for shipping and customs clearing. The part finally arrives and what did I find? The freaking shaft lengths don't match. $&%* I discussed with Erik how to proceed, and figuring that I basically destroyed the sensor trying to get the shaft out of the damaged sensor from my car. we deemed it too dangerous to try and attempt to swap shafts to the correct length. I had to find a local CNC machinist to help me cut and notch down the shaft. After tons of frantic calling on a Friday afternoon, I managed to get hold of someone and he said he'd be able to do it over half a week. I sent him photos and had him take measurements to match not only the correct length and notch fitment, but also a groove to machine out to hold the retentive circlip. And the end result? *chef's kiss* Perfect. Since I didn't have pliers with me when I picked up the items, I tested the old gear and circlip on. Perfect fit. After that it was simply swapping out the plug bracket to the new sensor, mount it on the transfer case, refill with ATF/Nissan Matic Fluid D, then test out function. Thankfully with the rebuilt cluster and the new sensor, both the speedometer and odometer and now working properly!   And there you have it. About 5-6 weeks of headaches wrapped up in a 15 minute photo essay. As I was told it is rare for sensors of this generation to die so dramatically, but you never know what could go wrong with a 25+ year old car. I HOPE that no one else has to go through this problem like I did, so with my take on a solution I hope it helps others who may encounter this issue in the future. For the TL;DR: 1) Sensor breaks. 2) Find a replacement GTT/GTS-T sensor. 3) Find a CNC machinist to have you cut it down to proper specs. 4) Reinstall then pray to the JDM gods.   Hope this guide/story helps anyone else encountering this problem!
    • So this being my first contribution to the SAU forums, I'd like to present and show how I had to solve probably one of the most annoying fixes on any car I've owned: replacing a speedometer (or "speedo") sensor on my newly acquired Series 1 Stagea 260RS Autech Version. I'm simply documenting how I went about to fix this issue, and as I understand it is relatively rare to happen to this generation of cars, it is a gigantic PITA so I hope this helps serve as reference to anyone else who may encounter this issue. NOTE: Although I say this is meant for the 260RS, because the gearbox/drivetrain is shared with the R33 GTR with the 5-speed manual, the application should be exactly the same. Background So after driving my new-to-me Stagea for about 1500km, one night while driving home the speedometer and odometer suddenly stopped working. No clunking noise, no indication something was broken, the speedometer would just stop reading anything and the odometer stopped going up. This is a huge worry for me, because my car is relatively low mileage (only 45k km when purchased) so although I plan to own the car for a long time, a mismatched odometer reading would be hugely detrimental to resale should the day come to sell the car. Thankfully this only occurred a mile or two from home so it wasn't extremely significant. Also, the OCD part of me would be extremely irked if the numbers that showed on my dash doesn't match the actual ageing of the car. Diagnosing I had been in communication with the well renown GTR shop in the USA, U.P.garage up near University Point in Washington state. After some back and forth they said it could be one of two things: 1) The speedometer sensor that goes into the transfer case is broken 2) The actual cluster has a component that went kaput. They said this is common in older Nissan gauge clusters and that would indicate a rebuild is necessary. As I tried to figure out if it was problem #1, I resolved problem #2 by sending my cluster over to Relentless Motorsports in Dallas, TX, whom is local to me and does cluster and ECU rebuilds. He is a one man operation who meticulously replaces every chip, resistor, capacitor, and electronic component on the PCB's on a wide variety of classic and modern cars. His specialty is Lexus and Toyota, but he came highly recommended by Erik of U.P.garage since he does the rebuilds for them on GTR clusters.  For those that don't know, on R32 and R33 GTR gearboxes, the speedometer sensor is mounted in the transfer case and is purely an analog mini "generator" (opposite of an alternator essentially). Based on the speed the sensor spins it generates an AC sine wave voltage up to 5V, and sends that via two wires up to the cluster which then interprets it via the speedometer dial. The signal does NOT go to the ECU first, the wiring goes to the cluster first then the ECU after (or so I'm told).  Problems/Roadblocks I first removed the part from the car on the underside of the transfer case (drain your transfer case fluid/ATF first, guess who found out that the hard way?), and noted the transfer case fluid was EXTREMELY black, most likely never changed on my car. When attempting to turn the gears it felt extremely gritty, as if shttps://imgur.com/6TQCG3xomething was binding the shaft from rotating properly. After having to reflow the solder on my AFM sensors based on another SAU guide here, I attempted to disassemble the silicone seal on the back of the sensor to see what happened inside the sensor; turns out, it basically disintegrated itself. Wonderful. Not only had the electrical components destroyed themselves, the magnetic portion on what I thought was on the shaft also chipped and was broken. Solution So solution: find a spare part right? Wrong. Nissan has long discontinued the proper sensor part number 32702-21U19, and it is no longer obtainable either through Nissan NSA or Nissan Japan. I was SOL without proper speed or mileage readings unless I figured out a way to replace this sensor. After tons of Googling and searching on SAU, I found that there IS however a sensor that looks almost exactly like the R33/260RS one: a sensor meant for the R33/R34 GTT and GTS-T with the 5 speed manual. The part number was 25010-21U00, and the body, plug, and shaft all looked exactly the same. The gear was different at the end, but knowing the sensor's gear is held on with a circlip, I figured I could just order the part and swap the gears. Cue me ordering a new part from JustJap down in Kirrawee, NSW, then waiting almost 3 weeks for shipping and customs clearing. The part finally arrives and what did I find? The freaking shaft lengths don't match. $&%* I discussed with Erik how to proceed, and figuring that I basically destroyed the sensor trying to get the shaft out of the damaged sensor from my car. we deemed it too dangerous to try and attempt to swap shafts to the correct length. I had to find a local CNC machinist to help me cut and notch down the shaft. After tons of frantic calling on a Friday afternoon, I managed to get hold of someone and he said he'd be able to do it over half a week. I sent him photos and had him take measurements to match not only the correct length and notch fitment, but also a groove to machine out to hold the retentive circlip. And the end result? *chef's kiss* Perfect. Since I didn't have pliers with me when I picked up the items, I tested the old gear and circlip on. Perfect fit. After that it was simply swapping out the plug bracket to the new sensor, mount it on the transfer case, refill with ATF/Nissan Matic Fluid D, then test out function. Thankfully with the rebuilt cluster and the new sensor, both the speedometer and odometer and now working properly!   And there you have it. About 5-6 weeks of headaches wrapped up in a 15 minute photo essay. As I was told it is rare for sensors of this generation to die so dramatically, but you never know what could go wrong with a 25+ year old car. I HOPE that no one else has to go through this problem like I did, so with my take on a solution I hope it helps others who may encounter this issue in the future. For the TL;DR: 1) Sensor breaks. 2) Find a replacement GTT/GTS-T sensor. 3) Find a CNC machinist to have you cut it down to proper specs. 4) Reinstall then pray to the JDM gods.   Hope this guide/story helps anyone else encountering this problem!
    • perhaps i should have mentioned, I plugged the unit in before i handed over to the electronics repair shop to see what damaged had been caused and the unit worked (ac controls, rear demister etc) bar the lights behind the lcd. i would assume that the diode was only to control lighting and didnt harm anything else i got the unit back from the electronics repair shop and all is well (to a point). The lights are back on and ac controls are working. im still paranoid as i beleive the repairer just put in any zener diode he could find and admitted asking chatgpt if its compatible   i do however have another issue... sometimes when i turn the ignition on, the climate control unit now goes through a diagnostics procedure which normally occurs when you disconnect and reconnect but this may be due to the below   to top everything off, and feel free to shoot me as im just about to do it myself anyway, while i was checking the newly repaired board by plugging in the climate control unit bare without the housing, i believe i may have shorted it on the headunit surround. Climate control unit still works but now the keyless entry doesnt work along with the dome light not turning on when you open the door. to add to this tricky situation, when you start the car and remove the key ( i have a turbo timer so car remains on) the keyless entry works. the dome light also works when you switch to the on position. fuses were checked and all ok ive deduced that the short somehow has messed with the smart entry control module as that is what controls the keyless entry and dome light on door opening   you guys wouldnt happen to have any experience with that topic lmao... im only laughing as its all i can do right now my self diagnosed adhd always gets me in a situation as i have no patience and want to get everything done in shortest amount of time as possible often ignoring crucial steps such as disconnecting battery when stuffing around with electronics or even placing a simple rag over the metallic headunit surround when placing a live pcb board on top of it   FML
    • Bit of a pity we don't have good images of the back/front of the PCB ~ that said, I found a YT vid of a teardown to replace dicky clock switches, and got enough of a glimpse to realize this PCB is the front-end to a connected to what I'll call PCBA, and as such this is all digital on this PCB..ergo, battery voltage probably doesn't make an appearance here ; that is, I'd expect them to do something on PCBA wrt power conditioning for the adjustment/display/switch PCB.... ....given what's transpired..ie; some permutation of 12vdc on a 5vdc with or without correct polarity...would explain why the zener said "no" and exploded. The transistor Q5 (M33) is likely to be a digital switching transistor...that is, package has builtin bias resistors to ensure it saturates as soon as base threshold voltage is reached (minimal rise/fall time)....and wrt the question 'what else could've fried?' ....well, I know there's an MCU on this board (display, I/O at a guess), and you hope they isolated it from this scenario...I got my crayons out, it looks a bit like this...   ...not a lot to see, or rather, everything you'd like to see disappears down a via to the other side...base drive for the transistor comes from somewhere else, what this transistor is switching is somewhere else...but the zener circuit is exclusive to all this ~ it's providing a set voltage (current limited by the 1K3 resistor R19)...and disappears somewhere else down the via I marked V out ; if the errant voltage 'jumped' the diode in the millisecond before it exploded, whatever that V out via feeds may have seen a spike... ....I'll just imagine that Q5 was switched off at the time, thus no damage should've been done....but whatever that zener feeds has to be checked... HTH
×
×
  • Create New...