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Wooo Hooo!!!

2WAY! 2WAY1 2WAY!

the diff is in and feels fantastic.

I have just finished fitting my nismo sss 2 way. i bought a center and fitted it in my original housing. it was a bastard of a job but was well worth it.

Getting the diff out from under the car only took 45min and was easy apart from the bit where i dropped it on my little finger... then getting the center out of the housing was impossible till i decided to use a bench vice. smartest thing i did all day :D then out with the viscous, remove the crown wheel (also very hard) and swap it on to the new center.

next came the spacers either side of the new center and putting the new center in the housing was a bit fiddly then getting the 1/2 shafts in was an absolute bastard... i got the short one in 1/2 an inch and it got very very stuck...

about 65 bashes later it was back out and i noticed the c clip in the new diff was too wide to fit with the 1/2 shaft :P thank you very much mr nismo...

after figuring that out they popped in with small taps. i put the end caps on and filled the diff with 1.5 litre of penrite 80/140 synthetic and limslip additive.

gooped up the rear cover and fitted it and had some lunch.

fitting the diff back in was as easy as taking it out and it was done!

took the car for a drive and noticed immediately the difference... it does not skip in car parks or tight turns but you can feel the difference cornering even at low speed turns.

the car now under steers accelerating around roundabouts but i can deal with that that's what you get with a 2 way.

This is not really a job i would recommend for your ave ridge backyard mechanic but is doable.

the preload on the diff is perfect as is the backlash. seeming as i was quoted $700 to fit the center i am happy i was able to do it myself

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    • It still combines inches with mm, especially when you have .5 inches involved, and mm and inches that can go in either direction. This would give a clear idea on both sides of the rim, right away, with no arithmetic. Even better if somebody gives you the dimensions of the arch of multiple cars. i.e GTR may be 125mm, a A80 Supra may be 117mm, or something along those lines. Yes, you can 'know' that going from a 10in rim to a 10.5in rim with the same offset moves both sides about 6mm, but you still have to 'know' that and do the math. Often it's combined. People are going from 9.5 +27 to 10.5 +15. You may do the math to know it, but if it was going from (I had to go look it up to be sure) 241mm/2 - 27 - 93.5mm from the center line to (more math) 266/2 - 15 (118mm) from the center line. Versus 93mm vs 118mm. It's right there. If you know you have a GTT with 100mm guards you can see right away that one is close to flush and the other absolutely won't work. And when someone says "Oh the GTR is 120mm" suddenly you see that the 10.5 +15 is about perfect. (or you go and buy rims with approximately 118mm outward guard space) I think it's safe to say that given one of the most common questions in all modified cars is "How do offsets work" and "How do I know if wheels will fit on my car" that this would be much simpler... Of course, nothing will really change and nobody is going to remanufacture wheels and ditch inches and offset based on this conversation :p We'll all go "18x9+30 will line up pretty close to the guards for a R34 GTT (84mm)" but 'pretty close' is still not really defined (it is now!) and if you really care you still have go measure. Yes it depends on camber and height and dynamic movement, but so do all wheels no matter what you measure it for.
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