Jump to content
SAU Community

Adhesive


Recommended Posts

how do you plan on usign the adhesive? to seal the skirts to the body? front and rear bars wont need anything.

sikaflex isnt bad, with skirts its a matter or fitting with screws and then a seal along the top edge so gaps close.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

ummm plan on using in conjuction with screws..... jus for the added strength...

yer front bar wont need any....

sideskirts will, and then have the screws in the front of the skirt and rear...like in the wheel arcs...

and not sure with the rear bar?? i dont understand,, coz its come in like two seperate parts and leaves the middle area empty....so i assume the two sepearte parts are like add ons to the original rear bar???

oh ok....any ideas where i could get that from??

Link to comment
Share on other sites

haha yerr i thought similar until mine turned up.....best i can come up with is that they replace the rear pods....and add onto the rear bar....because the original rear bar doesnt curve round the corner of the car...havnt tried fitting it yet....might drive across to work tomorrow and try it....i hope its that simple

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Best to try it on and see I guess. I was trying to find a picture of an r33 with the Jun style rear bar/pod, but can't find any. They're all pictures of the 400r and do-luck kits.

I don't think there will be a problem. The link above shows you that the bar will come in two so....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

use double sided tape with self tapping screws, that's all you need. anything more than that is overkill.

we just spent 1 full day grinding a car back to bare metal with a grinder cos some retard thought it'd be a brilliant idea to superglue his "widebody" kit to his car. some adhesives don't sit well with metal and fibreglass and hot australian summer :laugh:

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
 Share



  • Latest Posts

    • With my pre/power I use a remote trigger cable(3.5mm jack each end). I turn tv on, it turns both on via ARC. Or, just the pre with the remote or its streaming software, turns on both. Not that difficult at all. Obviously,  you would also want to actually update/upgrade over other factors in your life(bills, family, other hobbies, etc)
    • Yeah, nightfall was very "meh". And I'm crap at pvp, so feels like everyone has cheats(it's just my lack of skill). Final shape has been pretty good. New raid and dungeon are pretty good. If you want to give it a go, probably wait until it's on sale. But, as usual, most of it feels very familiar. 
    • This morning was Kingswood's Microscopic Wars. It is the album's 10 year anniversary this year and we went to see them play the whole album as a special show a couple of months back. Was pretty spectacular.
    • Yeah I would like to try and get a ADM car to reduce issues with insurance. I've decided if I end up getting this car I will set it up to be a sleeper build, leave it looking stock/dad spec on the outside I wonder if you can just drop in the 400r/Red/Z ECU or better still use a flashing tool to copy the map off one. Backup the factory map and then flash the 400hp cars onto the 300hp cars ECU?
    • Nah, yeah, nah. Speakers have a nominal impedance of 8 ohm that looks more like 6.4 ohm when measured. The receiver's amplifiers (all channels) are all rated to 6 ohm (I think, it's been a long time since I cared). The real problem is that many modern class D amps have aggressive protection circuitry that cuts off the fun if they think too much current is being drawn. And with my speakers having series crossovers, as opposed to more typical parallel crossovers, and big TL enclosures, they can certainly dip down to lower impedances at some frequencies and that easily triggers the protection. Pioneer receivers are somewhat famous for it, but even Denon, Onkyo, et al, all have many complaints against them across various models. It only does it when listening to music at high levels. You have to be putting your ears at risk to do it. But sometimes I want to do that. If I was serious about using it as a listening room I'd simply upgrade the amp for the front pair to a nice Rotel or something, and just use the receiver for signal handling and processing - although that would be a bit of a pain in the arse too. Have to switch on more shit, pre-amp volume vs main amp volume, etc etc.
×
×
  • Create New...