Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

The regular t-shirts will be available in black, white, light grey, navy, red and blue. I will have to confirm the available colours in the long-sleeve t-shirt range. Black, white, light grey and navy shouldn't be a problem...

Blank ink will be used on the white and light grey and white ink be used on the other fabric colours.

  • Replies 184
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

We will definitely be going ahead with this latest design.

The cost will be $32.00 per t-shirt, or $36.00 for long-sleeves. This price includes postage (within Australia) as well as a $5.00 contribution to this forum. For those of you living outside of Australia, e-mail me and I will forward you a separate postage quote.

The t-shirts will be available in black, white, navy, light grey (marle), red and blue. The long sleeve t-shirts will be available in black, white, navy and light grey (marle). The white and light grey t-shirts will be printed using black ink, the other fabric colours will be printed using white. Keep in mind that the GT logo will not necessarily be black and white - it will be the ink colour against the t-shirt fabric colour.

We will be taking orders for probably around two weeks. Expect to see your t-shirt/s around 7-10 working days after this.

Edit: The t-shirts are rather large, so be sure to refer to the sizing chart when ordering.

How to order:

1.) Click to: http://tshirttext.com

2.) Browse to the SAU order page (linked from the home-screen).

3.) Complete and submit the order form.

4.) Wait for our e-mail, which will confirm your order and provide you with appropriate payment details.

5.) Submit your payment, together with a receipt number which we will provide in this confirmation e-mail.

It's as easy as that. You can monitor the status of your payment and order at any time by e-mailing us and quoting your order receipt number.

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

    • How's everyone going? Just a shout-out introducing myself. I'm James, I live on the north side of Brisbane. I bought an R33 that had been left to rot in someone's front yard for 14 years. Apparently, it has immobiliser/fuel issues. Long story short, it's suffering from a seized engine, plus whatever else turns up once it runs. The car is pretty good considering it sat for so long. It pretty much died after being imported. It has a bunch of Jap parts and a full Top Secret body kit. It's painted Fiat Turchese Festival, or aqua blue if you're not French. Another project to throw money at!
    • So the clockspring is responsible for the indicators cancelling on their own? I thought that was the function of that white thing in the center (any idea what it's called?)
    • Can you log IAT? Whilst WTA coolers have their place, doing any sort of sustained run is not one of them There are fixes that slow down the heat soak, like ice boxes, which don't last that long, and interchillers, which are fairly expensive, up grades to the WTA cooling radiator, which may require a bigger pump, and upgrades to the reservoir size,  and upgrades to the cooling fans, but, it all still heat soaks, and takes ages to come down in hot weather  For a turbo, that isn't locked into WTA like my PD blower is, can you not possibly swap to a nice air to air intercooler????, it would be better for sustained runs then, and have alot less things that could go wrong in my opinion 
    • So, the other thing I've sorted is a baseline dyno run up at Unigroup's new location. The auto trans was a little unco-operative by both shifting down when the throttle was floored on the dyno (so Mark had to ramp it up more slowly than in a manual) and also by shifting up at 6,000 even in sports mode instead of the indicated redline of 7,000 Still, on a hot day it made 240rwkw at 16psi which seems about right for 300kw (400hp) through an auto at the wheels.  The shape of the curve is not quite right because it was not full throttle to about 4,500 to stop it kicking down, but until I can get a tune on the auto trans control this was the best we could do.....full boost will be well below 5,000 once that is sorted, I'll get some data logs when I can to confirm For comparison, the R32 made 255 at 12psi (at 4,500) on the same dyno with tune, n1 turbos, cam gears, big exhaust but otherwise all standard so the v37 is likely a little better out of the box. One thing that is very clear is that the standard water to air intercoolers are not up to sustained use at full throttle in warm ambient temps. After about 5 runs (so only a few minutes full throttle), it was pulling boost and timing and dropping 10-15% power. Unfortunately I didn't get that printout and the Unigroup guys are away at the moment, will try and get hold of it on their return. So, looks like a healthy engine to start modifying and the only real area of concern is the w2a heat exchangers which the aftermarket has plenty of solutions for    
    • I maintain it actually looked really nice in person. So much so that I thought "No, this is illegal" but there it was, clear as day. I think we can easily call the wing and wheels/height to be transformative. Not saying it's better than the GR Whatever, or the 86, or the WRX STI or anything of that sort (the internet says it all bolts up so you can buy best of all worlds?) but it's still at least a thing and not nearly AS bad as people say.
×
×
  • Create New...