Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Whats an average life span of an RB20DET usually expected to be?

I realise there are a lot of variables which will increase/decrease the life span of the engine,

but if everything was pretty well stock, what's the most Km's someones got out of one of these engines?

I'm looking at a care today that has 155,000 on the clock, it a 93 R32 type M, that seems a tad high....

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/111101-average-life-span-of-an-rb20det/
Share on other sites

If they have std turbo and ECU then i dont see why 250,000kms shoudl be a problemn provided servicing has been looked after.

My original RB20 was ripped out at 175,000kms after a woopsie with spanners (not the engines fault) and it was foufn to still be in good niv, with a very clean head and bottom end looking healthy. That on an engine that would have done at a guess 7-10 track days a year for almost 5 years...which was somewhere around 3,000-3,5000kms of track wotk...not bad for a std engine built by Nissan in 1992 :(

it's a difficult question to answer, for a few reasons

- it's hard to tell the kms on an engine in a car that came from japan, because alot of them have their speedo's wound back and you have no idea if it's the original engine in the car of if they've had to rebuild / change motors

- running aftermarket turbos with high level's of boost will dramatically reduce engine life!

Speaking from personal experience, my rb20det, whilst fairly stock, get's a lot of thrashing, in the form of drifting it once a week for the last year, and it's still going strong. I've got friends who are blowing sr20det's left right and centre, but the rb's been put under similar level's of abuse and still going strong.

The car has 114,000kms on the clock and when i first got the car at 98,000kms it was showing 150psi compression across all cylinders. No idea what sort of history it had in japan, but i've been serviceing it every 4,000kms with good oil.

Anyway, 150,000kms is nothing to worry about, i'd expect these engines to last well over 200-250 thou kms if it's fairly stock and well looked after. rb20det's have had a reputation for being relatively bullet-proof.

I've seen plenty come over with under 100k on the clock, just wanna know what the maximum Km's someones got out of an RB20DET.

No, you've seen pleanty of odomoters with less then 100k, you havent seen many R32's under 100k on the engine.

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

    • Good tips, I like it! 😂😂 My wife is a LOT more frugal than me so it's only me we need to worry about! A splurge to her is buying 2 pairs of socks in one visit at Kmart!
    • Haha, the appropriate response to the question "Is this new?" is "I've had this for a while.". With the unspoken small print that a while may be the time since this morning or five years ago   And to be fair I learned that from the best, i.e. my wife. Because it goes both ways.
    • Yeah kids certainly add a whole another dimension to your life.  Life ceases to be about you and more about them for a while!  And I wouldn't have it any other way.  I love watching them play sport and make new friends along the way. Wow, sounds like your mate is a good guy to know!!!  He's got some serious toys in the toy box!  Yes it would be lovely to be able to do stuff to your car without getting all tied up in boring shit like how to pay for it!!  I would describe my spending style as "aggressively spontaneous and logical but regrettable purchasing"....  That will hopefully make no sense at all which would be appropriate given that is how I buy stuff.  I'll decide at the drop of a hat that I'm buying something expensive, research the living shit out of it for 2 days straight then go out and buy it.  Then I'll have instant buyers remorse for 2 days which generally passes by the time it turns up on the front step!  If I'm feeling ballsy sometimes I'll tell my wife.  Other times it just makes its way silently passed the house and out the back to the shed, never to be spoken of again...
    • My extinguisher mounted like this unscrewed a little (Maybe from the chair sliding forward) and dumped a bit of white on my mats. I'll need to get a more narrow one for future.
    • I totally couldn't do the whole kids taking up my life thing! 😮 I find it bad enough doing 45 hours in 4 days, and then fitting normal adulting life into the other 3 with no kids! As for my mates race cars, they're AMG C63 setup for production racing. The original is what has just been stripped and a brand new shell built. The original is then going away to have some panels straightened, then it will be put back together again. Then there's a third that will shortly head off to have a roll cage put in, then build it up too. And potentially a fourth to be built too... Oh, and he has two Renault Clio D class production cars, ha ha. And when he's not racing them in the Australians and QLD production championships, he's been racing one of Chaz Mostert's Lamborghini's in GT4. They just won GT4 at the 12 hour in the Lambo. We're pushing to finish the new AMG as it has its first round (and potentially its first shakedown/outing) in under w weeks for Round one of QPC, and that round is really the shakedown to make sure it's all good for the Bathurst 6 hour, which I'll be at too. Ha ha ha Working on my project is different to his, I slowly tinker and work ways to make things happen on a shoe string budget. Hes in a good position that he has a massive workshop full of parts and tools, ha ha. He also looks after me. When his air compressor died, he just needed it working, so bought himself a new one and gave the old to me. Sand blaster unit too, and a 20t pressing. And pretty much all the shelving in my shed too as he upgraded all of his (the stuff he gave me is the expensive black Bunnings heavy duty stuff)!   I enjoy working on his stuff. No decision paralysis, and anything that's needed parts wise is just there. Plus, then I get to be hands on at the track in real racing, not just club day stuff.
×
×
  • Create New...