Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

thanks for the part numbers guys but i went down to nissan yesterday and they could not help me.

first off i gave them the part numbers for the mirrors that are posted here, eg 96366-4P000 but they could not find any of the parts.

secondly i gave them my VIN number the WGNC34001.....etc and also the 6U90WGNC34001.... but yet they could not bring up any info on that VIN either.

the guy said when the cars are imported, the Australian authorities stamp on their own VIN, however this WGNC34 number is stamped on multiple places on the chassis

the only other plate is the blue one with japanese symbols so i will try again with those numbers

your vin needs to be 6 digits wgnc34-123456. But they should have been able to find with part #, give them the alternate part # (which is most likely an updated part as the old one wouldnt be used anymore) 96366-4P060. Even try a different Nissan dealer, i never have any problems with my part #s in Brisbane (metro nissan) or Gold Coast Nissan, they are very accomodating for imports.

rofl.

well, if any stagea's have the balls to enter SAUWA's timed track day, I will even be able to tell you how much they get chopped by a "gutless" 4 cyl ;)

Anyway, if you are past 21, you cannot drive a hatch. Not even if you equip the damn thing with a rocket engine. :(

not too much luck at the local nissan, the guy managed to pull up some info.....he quoted me about 120 for the glass, 250 for the folding mirror motor, although he couldnt be certain on these prices....but he was certain it was 600 bucks for the whole assembly. no guarantee that they could get the parts either

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

    • Just as long as it's not those putridly disappointing RE003s.
    • I had this same experience going from a set of no name tyres that were on a set of good wheels (Enkei RPFs) to some Potenza RE-11s (this was a few years ago). The wet grip in particular was so much higher that it was almost scary considering how dangerous the old tyres were in comparison. The expense of the tyres also made me want them to last longer so drove accordingly. Wife happy. So now she only 'lets' me buy some flavour of Brigestones...
    • This. All of this. I am turning >$300 into small particles inside 20k km, because I like to be able to roll around any 90° street corner at the speed limit. Would my car be more fun with cheaper tyres? Possibly. When I swapped out the bald AD09s for new ones, the change in the car was massive. The obvious one was being able to put the power down instead of lighting up into silly wheelspin. But the corollary of that was that the lateral traction went from being fun to fast. It was more fun when it was loose. But the corollary to the corollary is that if I need to dodge a child in the road or emergency brake to avoid the arsehat who has just tipped a GWM on its side in front of me, then I've got a much better chance of that manoeuvre coming off without unintended "fun" meaning that I hit something else, or the original target.
    • Every time I have to buy new tyres I question what actual difference it makes between running $40 tyres and $300 tyres and whether it's worth it. Because that's a massive difference to the wallet. But then I did go to a driving training at some point which also included emergency braking and swerving in the wet. In part I think it was meant to show people how bad it gets. Funnily enough what I took away from it is that I can go much harder than I thought in my car. I presume mostly because of decent tyres. Some of the other cars there were shocking to behold. And a bit scary that cheap tyres are probably a lot more common on the road than decent ones  
    • I'm pretty sure that is just straight AI generated word soup, where did you receive that ad (facebook)? They misspell Pirelli twice, no human eyes looked at that before it was posted. Incidentally, I am running the chinese pirellis on my V37 and they are.....OK....I didn't go looking for them, they were just what the shop had in stock in the tall size that car needs. LIke any brand, you really can't trust the brand's reputation to apply to every product they produce. Pirelli make good and crap tyres, all with the same logo stamped on them, and all with an attempt at price premium due to the brand
×
×
  • Create New...