Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

This car represents great value at $24,500.
I'm not looking for swaps or time wasters.

Contact: 0408257613

I've moved onto different hobbies and the car rarely gets driven, as you can see by the amount of KM I have put onto it since importing. 

Located Canberra, currently registered however will need to go over pits for the name change.
I have the stock exhaust to help with this. 

YEAR: 2000
MODEL: SERIES 2
COLOUR: Pearl White (rare)
KM: 138,000KM (Imported with 97,000)

INFO:
I'm the first and only Australian owner, the car was imported through Iron Chef Imports in 2013, with only 97,000km, Grade 4B. Stock sleeper look, nothing flash in the engine bay. Regularly serviced by Import Parts and Mechanical Canberra. Unfortunately, no service log book as originally the servicing was done by myself and mechanic friend. 

TUNE:
Full flex tune thanks to DVS Tuning Newcastle
E85 power output: 287rwkw
Pump 98 power output: 255rwkw
Boost 20PSI and tapers to 16PSI

HEART:
Adaptronic ECU
Manifold air temp sensor (nice and safe)
MAP sensor tuned (nice and safe)
Hypergear ART45SAT turbo
Zeiotronix flex fuel gauge
Flex sensor
NPC HD Organic Clutch (rated to 350rwkw)

FUEL SYSTEM: 
Walbro 255 E85 fuel pump
1000cc E85 rated Bosch injectors
Aeroflow micron fuel filter (suited to E85)
Splitfire coilpacks

EXHAUST/INTAKE/COOLING:
3inch, with mufflers and high flow cat
Blitz return flow intercooler (legal no holes cut)
Apexi Power Intake Panel Filter
Turbosmart Kompact Plumb Back Blow Off Valve
Thick Alloy Radiator

WHEELS/SUSPENSION:
Varrstoen ES2 rims (very nice stance)
Federal 595 tyres 
Rear MCA blue coilovers (brand new set ready to go in the front) 
Front HKS coilovers 

OTHER:
Xenon headlights (expensive and rare) 
Aftermarket front bar with air vents
Imobaliser and alarm system

DAMAGE etc: 
Few scratches and the classic gravel chips on the front bar
Dint on the bonnet as seen in the picture, not substantial. 
Rims have gutter rash
Tyres are worn and should be replaced
Classic wear on the side of drivers seat as seen in the picture
Wear on the gear shifter
Timing belt is whiny sometimes, however was replaced at 100,000km

EXTRAS NOT INSTALLED - you can have these with the sale:
Original series 2 front bar 
Original stock exhaust
Original reo bar 
Original intercooler
Front strut brace
New magnaflow muffler 
Oil temp, oil pressure and water temp sensors/gauges
HID kit (will perfectly compliment the Xenon headlights)
Wideband 02 sensor (will perfectly compliment the tune)

0.jpg

1.jpg

2.jpg

3.jpg

4.jpg

5.jpg

6.jpg

7.jpg

8.jpg

9.jpg

10.jpg

11.jpg

12.jpg

13.jpg

14.jpg

15.jpg

16.jpg

17.jpg

18.jpg

19.jpg

20.jpg

22.jpg

23.jpg

24.jpg

25.jpg

26.jpg

27.jpg

28.jpg

29.jpg

30.jpg

31.jpg

After looking more into the current market and prices, I'm going to be dropping the price down to $22,000 

The original price of $24,500 probably was a bit outside of what they seem to be currently going for. 

Open to offers, just not swaps.

  • 2 weeks later...

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

    • 12+ months passed so they have no obligation to do a warranty claim. It leaked from the rear circuit. Front circuit was fine, but I tried many times to bench-bleed and in-car bleed (wasted 1L of Penrite racing brake fluid) to no avail. Threw my old BM50 or whatever the standard R32 GT-R BMC is, brakes went back to normal. So from my very limited anecdotal experience, I cannot recommend HFM, even though a lot of their products looks good. Just my experience (I have a genuine Nissan BM57 in a box waiting to be installed now).
    • How dare you sell your unreliable Skyline and buy a reliable, Toyota/Yamaha car with a strong gearbox, torsen LSD and Toyota reliability. At least you won't need to worry about oil pumps, big catch can, oil restrictors, blowing off power steering belts, sheering off 3rd gear, failing ABS relays/pumps, etc.
    • Hope you aren't too sore after that one, might take a day or 2 to notice yet and I guess it is a loooooong drive home. On the bright side, tube frame front end is a thing at superlap, right?
    • https://www.facebook.com/share/p/18rmVb1SKB/ 
    • The chart of front pressure to rear pressure (with one being on the x axis and the other being on the y axis) is not a straight line on a typical proportioning valve. At lower pressures there is a straight line with one slope, and at higher pressures that changes to a lower slope. That creates a bend in the line at that pressure, called the knee point. If you do not change the proportionng as the pressure gets higher, you will suffer excessive pressure (at one end of the car or the other, depending on which way you look at the proportioning action) and then get lockups at that end. The HFM BM57, from my memory of previous discussions, is based on the BM57 from a different car (to a Skyline), with a different requirement for the location of the knee point and the distribution of pressure front to rear, and so is not a good choice for an upgrade on a Skyline. Here's a couple of links to some old posts, one from here, one from elsewhere. A lot of it pertains to adjustable prop valves, but the idea is the same. There are plenty of discussions on here about this issue from al the many years of people wanting a cheap/accessible option. https://grassrootsmotorsports.com/forum/grm/learn-me-brake-proportioning-valves/236880/page1/ https://grassrootsmotorsports.com/forum/grm/learn-me-brake-proportioning-valves/236880/page1/  
×
×
  • Create New...