Jump to content
SAU Community

R34s...please!


NS2500

Recommended Posts

Yeah there from the US there forged and cost just under 6K for a set. Was at tyre power hawthorn the other day and thats for 19. I think they weigh around 8 or 9 kilos

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah there from the US there forged and cost just under 6K for a set. Was at tyre power hawthorn the other day and thats for 19. I think they weigh around 8 or 9 kilos

fark that, would rather buy a quality set of te37s for basically half that.

they look like shit any way

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Does anyone know the owner of this, would like to ask; is that the 275/30 on 10.5 -5 meisters from WA and do the wheels for under stock guards without modification?

555462_10150991757146329_688309122_n.jpg

Edited by kylieyeah
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just thought I'd also ask, do you guys think it would be easier to fit an 11" wheel with stretched 275/30 tyre or 10.5" with same tyre to give the more filled out look, on a GTR. Offset is +5 and -1 respectively so both sizes sit out the same.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Does anyone know the owner of this, would like to ask; is that the 275/30 on 10.5 -5 meisters from WA and do the wheels for under stock guards without modification?

555462_10150991757146329_688309122_n.jpg

Yep, that's Chris' car. Here's another pic to show how the wheels fit under the guards. Keep in mind the front Z-Tune fenders are 15mm wider than stock though.

1jb5le.jpg

Edited by PewPew
Link to comment
Share on other sites

A couple from the JDM meet..

post-25424-0-68331000-1341744583_thumb.jpg

post-25424-0-40670800-1341744592_thumb.jpg

post-25424-0-32603900-1341744608_thumb.jpg

Oh and that above white 34, you sure there 19's look more like 20's

275/30 should be fine on a 10.5" rim. I've got 285/35/19 on my 34 front and back. Rears I could go wider and still have no problem.

Edited by Noy
Link to comment
Share on other sites

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

    • I am impressed with all this level of adjustment. I didn't expect all this possibility
    • Correct.  In the case of the 500kw dyno plot I showed you the car actually runs two boost control solenoids for boost control and a 5psi wastegate spring.  It allows me to control how much boost pressure is applied to both sides of the wastegate valve at any point and fairly accurately control boost target as a result. I've tuned it so that it's able to target anywhere from 5psi to 25psi depending on what's needed.  The target tables I've set up in that car are Gear vs RPM, so every gear has potential for a different boost (and torque) curve.   First and second gear have quite low boost targets, third gear actually has different target boost all the way through the rpm range as it's a stock RB25 gearbox - the boost targets have been chosen to maintain a peak of 600nm (what the owner has set as the maximum torque he's happy with putting through the stock 3rd gear) but it carries that to the rev limiter.   The boost curve to achieve that is something of a ramp up, then hold, then ramp up again and the power curve looks more like a flat line haha.  
    • so you can decrease or increase the boost depending on the diet as you wish?     by acting on the wastegate?
    • That's torque and power, it's all from a single run.  The boost curve is "held back" from it's peak target in the 3500rpm to 5000rpm range from memory, so it ramps hard to something like 18psi then climbs more progressively to 23psi nearer 5000rpm.   It makes the torque (and power) ramp more "natural" and less hard on parts and traction, it doesn't feel artificially held back.   
    • Here's the torque curves from the car I ramped boost up later in the rpm to allow a slightly wider useful power curve - the power curve is a bit weird shaped also thanks to the TVIS (or whatever they call it with the 4EFTE in this Starlet) which changes the volume of the intake manifold throughout the rpm range, but you can see that the green power curve actually holds later on with the extra boost... but looks almost more like the kind of thing you'd expect from a cam or exhaust change
×
×
  • Create New...