Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Do you remember a month ago i posted that my friend got bashed when trying to sell his car:

Orginal post here: http://www.skylinesaustralia.com/forums/t1...22#entry3364722

Anyways read the following:

'Teeth knocked out in carjacking'

Email Printer friendly version Normal font Large font Dylan Welch

October 29, 2007 - 8:15AM

Advertisement

A man has been charged over a violent robbery in Sydney's south-west, where a man was attacked with a baseball bat, had his car stolen and had several teeth knocked out last month.

Police yesterday arrested an 18-year-old Fairfield West man over the crime, which occurred on September 6.

A 29-year-old owner of a Black Honda Integra took the 18-year-old for what he thought was a test drive, only to be set upon by the young man and an accomplice, police said.

While on Barry Road in Chipping Norton, police said the 18-year-old pulled the car over near a parked truck, and another man approached the vehicle and opened the front passenger door.

He hit the 29-year-old repeatedly with a baseball bat, then dragged him from the car before driving away with the 18-year-old.

The 29-year-old sustained wounds to his head and had several teeth knocked out as a result of the attack.

Police charged the 18-year-old with aggravated robbery and he spent last night in Liverpool police station cells. He is due to face Liverpool Local Court today.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

So damn happy hes being caught as well as others who were involved.

The police were in top of things from day 1.

These guys have already got a criminal record, so most likley they dont get bail.

So i hope the rot in jail for ever!!

Edited by siddr20
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/191207-chipping-norton-car-jacking/
Share on other sites

  • Replies 45
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

No idea about the honda sorry.. I hope they still have it

Would be awesome getting the car back plus insurance money :D

evil weevil - ahh hes doin fine now.. But having fake teeth aint cool.. and bein in hospital for weeks!!

But hes moved on and bought a new car..

Top news mate. Glad to see the justice system working smoothly :( Phone bills come in handy at times like this!

Hope your friend moves on to better things and puts this very tough experience behind him, and his gf too (poor thing :glare: ).

Yeh those idiots will be rotting in a cell while the honest ppl (us!) will be free and enjoying our cars.

I wish you and your friend all the best.

i heard of a story like that a while ago bout people posing as car buyers stealing a car to "rebirth" them

now you gotta find out which jail they go to.

ask to visit the biggest bubba there.

give him a pic of the guy, and $100 and a tube of lube.

lol

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

    • But we haven't even gotten to the point of talking about stateless controllers or any of the good stuff yet!
    • You guys need to take this discussion to another thread if you want to continue it, most of the last 2 pages has nothing to do with OP's questions and situation
    • And this, is just ONE major issue for closed loop control, particularly using PID. One such issue that is created right here, is integrator wind up. But you know GTSBoy, "it's just a simple PID controller"...  
    • Nah. For something like boost control I wouldn't start my design with PID. I'd go with something that originates in the fuzzy logic world and use an emergency function or similar concept. PID can and does work, but at its fundamental level it is not suited to quick action. I'd be reasonably sure that the Profecs et al all transitioned to a fuzzy algorithm back in the 90s. Keep in mind also that where and when I have previously talked about using a Profec, I'm usually talking about only doing an open loop system anyway. All this talk of PID and other algorithms only comes into play when you're talking closed loop boost control, and in the context of what the OP needs and wants, we're probably actually in the realm of open loop anyway. Closed loop boost control has always bothered me, because if you sense the process value (ie the boost measurement that you want to control) in the plenum (after the throttle), then boost control to achieve a target is only desirable at WOT. When you are not WOT, you do not want the the boost to be as high as it can be (ie 100% of target). That's why you do not have the throttle at WO. You're attempting to not go as fast as you can. If the process variable is measured upstream of the throttle (ie in an RB26 plenum, or the cold side pipework in others) then yeah, sure, run the boost controller closed loop to hit a target boost there, and then the throttle does what it is supposed to do. Just for utter clarity.... an old Profec B Spec II (or whatever it is called, and I've got one, and I never look at it, so I can't remember!) and similar might have a MAP sensor, and it might show you the actual boost in the plenum (when the MAP sensor is connected to the plenum) but it does not use that value to decide what it is doing to control the boost, except to control the gating effect (where it stops holding the gate closed on the boost ramp). It's not closed loop at all. Once the gate is released, it's just the solenoid flailing away at whatever duty cycle was configured when it was set up. I'm sure that there are many people who do not understand the above points and wonder wtf is going on.  
    • This has clearly gone off on quite a tangent but the suggestion was "go standalone because you probably aren't going to stop at just exhaust + a mild tune and manual boost controller", not "buy a standalone purely for a boost controller". If the scope does in fact stop creeping at an EBC then sure, buy an EVC7 or Profec or whatever else people like to run and stop there. And I have yet to see any kind of aftermarket boost control that is more complicated than a PID controller with some accounting for edge cases. Control system theory is an incredibly vast field yet somehow we always end up back at some variant of a PID controller, maybe with some work done to linearize things. I have done quite a lot, but I don't care to indulge in those pissing matches, hence posting primary sources. I deal with people quite frequently that scream and shout about how their opinion matters more because they've shipped more x or y, it doesn't change the reality of the data they're trying to disagree with. Arguing that the source material is wrong is an entirely separate point and while my experience obviously doesn't matter here I've rarely seen factory service manuals be incorrect about something. It's not some random poorly documented internal software tool that is constantly being patched to barely work. It's also not that hard to just read the Japanese and double check translations either. Especially in automotive parts most of it is loanwords anyways.
×
×
  • Create New...