Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 369
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

Here's my weapon of choice...

Will soon be up for sale, she just turned 18 so i think its time to let her go.... :cheers:

Note: I love the third pic here because i think it shows off the waistline of 32 so well

post-25414-1180517488_thumb.jpg

post-25414-1180517527_thumb.jpg

post-25414-1180517553_thumb.jpg

post-25414-1180517940_thumb.jpg

Edited by spin_psycle
  JVP said:
yeh i did.

he was awesome to deal with, always calling me with updates and shit

couldnt have been happier.

when i first went to look at it, it started to rain, and he goes do u mind if i put it in the garage?

i was like, yeh this is the car to buy.

and the fact that he imported it himself was a bonus. knows pretty much its history.

know that car well. I've been bugging him to sell the wheels to me... he didn't even tell me he was selling?!

do you know what he's changed to?

very good buy, that one - you'll be stoked!

  spin_psycle said:
Here's my weapon of choice...

Will soon be up for sale, she just turned 18 so i think its time to let her go.... :)

Note: I love the third pic here because i think it shows off the waistline of 32 so well

Love the car man. Looks great. 18 isn't that old!!!

What colour is the blue?

  Russman said:
Love the car man. Looks great. 18 isn't that old!!!

What colour is the blue?

Thanks for the kind words mate, its a top car.

To be honest im not sure what colour it, i think its somewhere in between bayside blue and the new blue coloured mazda 3's

  GTR30 said:
Not one R30 in the Victorian SAU.. I might have to join and be the only one then...

DSC00391.jpg

DSC00057.jpg

DSC00392.jpg

DSC00051.jpg

Very nice car you have there. Greg, not sure what his username on the forums are has an OZ spec 5 door.

BTW, you have some very rare IMPUL rims there too. Hold onto them.

  garage-13 said:
nice rides..

heres my junker

136d.jpg

thats looking 10x hotter then it used to, for starters... its all one colour... all be it primer putty grey :whistling:

and dam straight he can throw it around... been for a ride with him before... makes it look easy. Mind you that was a long time ago so i guess you've emproved a hell of a lot since then Alex?

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! well, there's your problem!  Guess the last person in there didn't have great attention to detail....
    • It seems like you guys want to behave like rabid dogs, rather than gentlemen... Knowing one has jumped in on a fellow comrades near done deal, and sniped it at the last second, how can one sleep at night?
    • My wifes says we have a spare set.
    • Good news!!! Changed the O ring today and I’ve got the “pssshhhh” back when I open the fuel cap 😂🙌🏼🙌🏼 It was 100% the O ring because that bloody thing was inside the fuel tank 😂😂😂😂😂 Fitting new fuel pump was a pain as always since the DW is a bit longer than stock. But she’s running!!! ❤️
    • PWM quite literally just chops the ful 12V voltage on and off at whatever duty cycle you're running it at. If you're running it 100%, then it is on full voltage all the time, same as if there was no PWM. If you run it at 50% duty cycle, it is only seeing the full 12V half of the time. This is broadly equivalent to running it at 6V. But the crucial difference is that motors (and a lot of other loads) don't like being powered at low volts. They will either fail to start rotating, or draw a shit ton of current, or other undesirable things. But if you give them the full volt, and then a short period of no volts, and then some more full volts, then the times when they are seeing power they are seeing all the voltage, and they are happy. But you get the performance out of them as if they were only seeing that fraction of the full voltage. It is not really easy to answer your question about what flow you will get out of it at 50% duty cycle. I can tell you that it is not as simple as you think. For a start, that 460 L/h pump is not going to flow 460 when you're on boost. When you're on boost you will be somewhere down the sloping part of that red line. If you have 15 psi of boost, then the pump can only deliver about 95 gal/h, which is <380L/h. So your simple 50% on 460 = 230 wasn't going to work anyway. But also, it won't deliver 50% of 380 either, because when you devolt or PWM trim th epower being fed to the pump, it is not able to deliver flow or pressure in the same way. 50% duty cycle will probably produce <50% of the full voltage flow. The way to find out what duty cycle you need to run it at at low load (ie, at idle) is to idle it and turn the DC down until you start to lose fuel pressure, then turn it back up above that with some extra for safety. And then you do the same thing at full load, in case it doesn't need anywhere near 100% DC. And if you're careful/caution/prudent, you will also do it at a couple of loads in between so you can shape the DC map against load. It might not be linear between the two end points.
×
×
  • Create New...