Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

i think its because the surface is more grippy..?

i think it was more because it was so rough, where as the skid pan is flat and smooth, that basketball court was just ashpalt, the kind of shit that tears ur knees and hands apart when you fall over playing basketball at school during lunch :)

  • Replies 112
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

I also used my everyday tires but their wear is entirely my fault as i was fairly smoking it up. Its mainly the outside of my passenger side tires that copped it so ill just switch them round and keep the wear on the inside

Dezz - i didnt take it as having a go :) dont worry.

Its graded surface as opposed to the polish concrete on the skid pan.

So grippy indeed, but wet you'd think would've reduced it. It did, but not enough as we had first thought.

Dezz - i didnt take it as having a go :P dont worry.

Its graded surface as opposed to the polish concrete on the skid pan.

So grippy indeed, but wet you'd think would've reduced it. It did, but not enough as we had first thought.

also, another pointer, by the time my group (group A) got over there, it was getting pretty dry as the first 2 groups had already had their shot on it...and it was a bit sunnier as well :)

foz out

lmfao...

as everyone has said, thanks to all the organisers for the day.. I had an awesome time also.

And ash, my tyres were fine all day until the wet course where I destroyed my left rear tyre (because I kept drifting in the same direction) and chopped up the front left tyre a little from understeering....

which leads me to my question: Can doing what we were doing yesterday alter the cars alignment?

Because my car is now pulling really hard to the left, sam and taco might have noticed on the ride home.

I don't know for sure if it's an uneven tyre wear thing yet (as one side is more worn than the other) as I haven't put my old tyres back on yet, but when I let the car counter steer it'self.. by letting go of the wheel it was hitting opposite lock quite hard (don't know if this could affect it or not)...

yeah, well before mine went ever so slightly to the right cos my castor's little f**ked, but now I have to actually hold it straight..and the minute my hand starts getting tired..... <-----

maybe it's nothing, I'll start complaining if it still happens after my proper tyres come back on...

next time do you think i should take the munro onto the d4d thingo ???

considering my handbrake barely slows the car down etc ...

ummm

hang on, i dont think ill do that, nope ...

ill be signing up as an sau - ee after i get a bit more of my car sorted out ... so ill be pissing off ppl most likely ... and hear whispers on "what the hell is that peice of crap doing here'

hehe

bring on deca btw ... i have a helmet, booyah

this was my first ever sau event, had a great time thanks to organisers. definatley getting a locked diff before the next one though. think a lot of people were struggling with open diffs. even the instructors were struggling with getting 33's with stock diffs going. great day though, be good if it wasnt so far away.

thanks again.

yeah that was me. left the spacers on how embarrasing :P i put them in friday night in the dark. lucky someone told me though, it would have come off otherwise. what were you driving dezz met so many people cant remember any names.

yeah that was me. left the spacers on how embarrasing :P i put them in friday night in the dark. lucky someone told me though, it would have come off otherwise. what were you driving dezz met so many people cant remember any names.

dezz had a black series 2 with gtr wing and stock rims

Does anyone have any photos of my car (white S14a) by any chance? I was the one who ran over about 2000 cones on the "free for all" run at the end of the day due to lack of coordination haha

If anyone has any pics/video's i'd be keen to see!!

Great pics BTW :P

Theo

Edited by madgrk

What a tops weekend...

Although it was a fairly cold day i think everyone enjoyed themselves and was great to see some new faces getting out there and giving it a really good go..

Thanx to those that gave me a ride through out the day was tops.. Geoff your GTR sideways was super cool :wub:

Poiter bad luck mate hope it’s nothing more serious than the obvious fix.. Time for a super aluminium radiator :action-smiley-069:

And again top work ash on the bbq as always…

Also Big thanx to James for the lift up and Sam for the ride home thanx guys…

I had an awesome day, even though my diff only let me do single spinners all day and that's about it. Most of the instructors were awesome, expecially Matt Sampson from Fulllock Motorsport who i learnt way too much stuff which is gona get me into big trouble =)

Thanx to the organisers, cant wait for the next 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

    • Don't use "gasless MIG" (FCAW) you want to use proper MIG. FCAW burns a few hundred degrees hotter than MIG will for mild steel. It is a true ball ache for sheet metal. New MIG / TIG machines even have features like "Spot Weld" as well as "Automatic" settings. Plenty of people say for DIY home hobby, the auto machines are pretty good for 95% of welding. I personally, I'm a sucker for punishment and wanting to dial it in, and be able to adjust the machine. Mainly because I used to MIG weld for a living, and being able to tweak and tune things ever so slightly was my preference. Hence when I bought my ACDC TIG, it has all the adjustments for everything and no "easy" mode. Ha ha I have stick, MIG, "gaslessMIG" and ACDC TIG at home. Out of them, if you're doing mild steel sheet metal repair, and want to do mild steel exhausts, go MIG. If you're thinking you'll want to get into doing some aluminium stuff, or stainless steel, get an ACDC TIG with HF start. If you can, get one with a foot pedal too. My MIG machine is a UniMIG, and my Stick/TIG is CigWeld. If I were buying another machine, I'd buy another CIGWeld. Lots of people having issues with UniMIG, and them not wanting to cover warranty. Everything has to go back to UNIMig themselves. CIGWeld, I've had to use their warranty on my machine for a gas leak, they have repair centres everywhere, (contracted authorised repair centres). First repair place I used were hopeless, but the second place were amazing. Warranty process itself super easy, and second repair place was telling me CigWeld actually cover in their warranty, upto an hour of techs time to help you with your machine, and going through the settings and helping teach you the machine. UniMIG keep trying to get out of replacing motherboards on 12 month old machines.   TLDR, mild steel sheet welding, buy a MIG. my vote is CigWeld for brand.
    • I guess that's what happens when someone can't convert metric to freedom units to machine something. 😛
    • I've watched some vids and the technique seems to be to butt the sheets up to one another and use MIG to spot weld and slowly fill in the spots until its eventually all sealed. No runs as you would normally do, as there's too much heat generated that way. Yeah my stick welds are terrible these days because its been so long since i've done any of it. I expect to be spending many hours practicing
    • I have personally seen a Tomei USA RB26 cam that didn't even fit the head. Kind of nuts to me that it was even possible for that to happen but such is life.  There's two UP Garages in the US. One is a US branch of the Japanese company which sells things they brought over at tremendous markup. The other is University Place Garage/Fairlady Motors which is a shop best known for putting VCAM in RBs and trying to convince people to stop putting in 800hp of turbo on a 2.5L motor.
    • Gasless MIG is not exactly suited to what I would call "delicate" or "attractive" welding. So I would rule it out for sheet metal rust repair type stuff, unless you're only doing it in hidden places. I'm thinking about getting myself a gasless MIG for "hack together" type work. Noting that my welding experience is very very low, and quite a long time ago. So I'm also looking for "simple", but I'm not expecting "excellent". I'm not even sure that proper MIG is the best for sheet metal work. I get the feeling that the degree of control and the minimisation of heat input that you get from TIG is probably what you really want. And then you have to get good at doing it before the welds won't look like a monkey flinging a handful of shit anyway. You're probably SOL for an easy and cheap way to get from where you are to where you want to be. Much like myself.
×
×
  • Create New...