Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I told you they were coming! It's still a small % of us but they are coming!

I'm pretty sure they jumped in through the same window Aaron came through!

Edited by Jetwreck

I told you they were coming! It's still a small % of us but they are coming!

I'm pretty sure they jumped in through the same window Aaron came through!

Maybe you can rise up as their leader. They are all gunna want Epic wings like you and then you can change them for good,

Maybe you can rise up as their leader. They are all gunna want Epic wings like you and then you can change them for good,

Just like the soup nazi!

NO MORE CAR WORK FOR YOU!!!

Here's mine:

Owned since March 2010 - purchased from Japlink with 39K and now nearly 139K.

Mods include:

Hdi FMIC (installed by Dale), B+M transmission cooler sandwiched b/w FMIC and radiator (installed by Japlink), plenum spacer (installed by Dale), Selby sway bars front and rear (BG organised by Dale and installed by him), Dale's front chassis brace (also installed by him), Jetwreck's GB rear chassis brace (installed by Dale), BC BR coilovers (installed by Dale last Dec - with thanks), Brembo brake upgrade (installed by Japlink), transgo shift kit (installed by Jetwreck in the bro' garage), Scotty's 3" dump pipe and a custom 3" exhaust (installed by Japlink), air horns above the FMIC and pair of LED fog lights (both installed by Japlink), 19x9.5 +20 offset (bought from jasevr4) shod with Kumho KU31 245/40 (from Taleb Tyres Arncliffe),

Dude! That looks great, nice one.

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

    • Ha ha ha, this stuff they had was installing Toshiba PLCs that were made some time in the 1990s, and they were replacing GEM80 PLCs. To let those two talk (staged upgrade along a ~1.2km long building that was split into 4 sections), was a bunch of WinXP machines running Java gateways... There was no way to put something like ProfiSafe in... Most of the HMI machines were WinXP, with Java program, with a custom button board emulating a keyboard... About the only buttons in the operator stations that went direct to the PLCs was the eStop. There was some interesting design stuff in that place...
    • Stock bypass valves are good for plenty of boost.
    • Check for fuel flow out of the outlet end of the rail. Check for spark. Try to start with aerostart (or pressure can brake cleaner or similar solvent in a car) prayed in through TB. If you have fuel and you have spark and it will fire on substitute fuel, then seriously suspect that E85 sitting for ages in your fuel system has destroyed something and put it in your injectors.
    • Nissan stock oil pressure is typically about 1 bar at 1000 rpm plus about 1 bar per thousand revs on top.
    • Luckily for safety applications, with dedicated links not being used for any other traffic, you simply run ProfiSafe (or an equivalent safety comms protocol from other vendors) over the top of ProfiNet (if that's what you're using, or Ethernet IP if you're stuck in the world of American PLCs and not verking vis ze Chermans) and the redundancy is more about being able to know that you need to cause a system diagnostic lockout because you've lost one of your comms channels, rather than not knowing that you've lost your only comms channel. Granted, heartbeats and all that are possible and useable and all that, but some safety applications are are so time critical that you might not be able to afford a few milliseconds until the next check.
×
×
  • Create New...