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The insurance just gives you piece of mind.... yeah if you have a bumper bingle or get something stolen its cheaper to fix yourself for sure.... but in the case of a total write off or the car gets stolen its good to know that you will get something back.... granted after excesses and such come out the payments always look a little sad but it beats have absolutley nothing... appart from a pile of twisted metal perhaps...

ummm

titan! it's a corrosive for the oven

as soon as i got it in there

i was like ****kkkkkk my eyes are gonna get eaten!

hehee

but it

it's all good now!

ahhhh i can't go to the gym today nooooooooooooooooooooooo!

:P

adrian :(

look at my car. sometimes i would prefer twisted metal :( j/k

yeah i understand that.

LOL jerry funny. this guy was cheating on his girl with her best freind. and now he has just found out that the two girls have been sleeping to gether for longer than he has been sleeping her best freind

Psiker

i'll be in that city later on today! :(

yell out if u see a black dude

with two chicks!

adrian :P

psiker i was scared lol coz i got this stuff on my arm before and i have a scar on my arm coz it ate through my skin! i never new it was that bad so i left it on my arm and within ten mins it ate my hair and skin off! so when i got it in my eyes last night i was shitting!

adrian :D

miss me? aghhh im so getting fustrated - there are so many what-ifs and maybes - i just want someone in this place to tell me straight whether i do or do not have a job on monday! its messing with my head!!

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    • There's plenty of OEM steering arms that are bolted on. Not in the same fashion/orientation as that one, to be sure, but still. Examples of what I'm thinking of would use holes like the ones that have the downward facing studs on the GTR uprights (down the bottom end, under the driveshaft opening, near the lower balljoint) and bolt a steering arm on using only 2 bolts that would be somewhat similarly in shear as these you're complainig about. I reckon old Holdens did that, and I've never seen a broken one of those.
    • Let's be honest, most of the people designing parts like the above, aren't engineers. Sometimes they come from disciplines that gives them more qualitative feel for design than quantitive, however, plenty of them have just picked up a license to Fusion and started making things. And that's the honest part about the majority of these guys making parts like that, they don't have huge R&D teams and heaps of time or experience working out the numbers on it. Shit, most smaller teams that do have real engineers still roll with "yeah, it should be okay, and does the job, let's make them and just see"...   The smaller guys like KiwiCNC, aren't the likes of Bosch etc with proper engineering procedures, and oversights, and sign off. As such, it's why they can produce a product to market a lot quicker, but it always comes back to, question it all.   I'm still not a fan of that bolt on piece. Why not just machine it all in one go? With the right design it's possible. The only reason I can see is if they want different heights/length for the tie rod to bolt to. And if they have the cncs themselves,they can easily offer that exact feature, and just machine it all in one go. 
    • The roof is wrapped
    • This is how I last did this when I had a master cylinder fail and introduce air. Bleed before first stage, go oh shit through first stage, bleed at end of first stage, go oh shit through second stage, bleed at end of second stage, go oh shit through third stage, bleed at end of third stage, go oh shit through fourth stage, bleed at lunch, go oh shit through fifth stage, bleed at end of fifth stage, go oh shit through sixth stage....you get the idea. It did come good in the end. My Topdon scan tool can bleed the HY51 and V37, but it doesn't have a consult connector and I don't have an R34 to check that on. I think finding a tool in an Australian workshop other than Nissan that can bleed an R34 will be like rocking horse poo. No way will a generic ODB tool do it.
    • Hmm. Perhaps not the same engineers. The OE Nissan engineers did not forsee a future with spacers pushing the tie rod force application further away from the steering arm and creating that torque. The failures are happening since the advent of those things, and some 30 years after they designed the uprights. So latent casting deficiencies, 30+ yrs of wear and tear, + unexpected usage could quite easily = unforeseen failure. Meanwhile, the engineers who are designing the billet CNC or fabricated uprights are also designing, for the same parts makers, the correction tie rod ends. And they are designing and building these with motorsport (or, at the very least, the meth addled antics of drifters) in mind. So I would hope (in fact, I would expect) that their design work included the offset of that steering force. Doesn't mean that it is not totally valid to ask the question of them, before committing $$.
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