Jump to content
SAU Community

Pga-sa Interclub Dyno Day #3 - 14th March 2009!


car_fanatica
 Share

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 305
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

well i am really going in this event to see what it makes after tuning and 5psi increase

last time i was there 7psi made 179rwkw

so really i am using graham west dynos as my baseline dyno

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So is there anyway we can know before the day what times our runs are?

i know this starts at 8 and i will try to get there before then but just wondering if

there is someway of knowing when my run is thats all

Definately! The times will be released the Thursday prior to the day, or sooner if the field becomes fully subscribed (as it looks it may be!)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

just about to call up and enter. way to knackered to drive out there and pay...

... and im entered. yay.

krish/ben/nene/damo/other northies attending, feel like cruising in as a group?

Edited by scandyflick
Link to comment
Share on other sites

well this event does start at 8 so if you want we could all group up at parafield gardens bunnings at lets say 7am

i will be more then happy to cruise from there to graham west workshops

its not that bad of a drive dave

should be good one let me know if you want to organise something on those lines there dave

Link to comment
Share on other sites

ALL SPONSORS FINALISED!!!!

Dyno King: Sponsored by Adelaide Tyre Power

Evo v Rex Challenge: Sponsored by S&J Performance

Rotary shootout: Sponsored by REVS

RB v JZ Challenge: Sponsored by Phillcom Rally

Most Powerful Pulsar: Sponsored by Graham West Workshops

Little Battler: Sponsored by Pro Wash Golden Grove

There are other categories, but these are the main ones that will have prizes.

The event will be covered by: www.custom-cars-online.com

Cheers!

Daniel.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

thats a really good list of sponsors you got there daniel

well done on the awesome job you guys do in organising these dyno days

very well organised and well run

Link to comment
Share on other sites

thats a really good list of sponsors you got there daniel

well done on the awesome job you guys do in organising these dyno days

very well organised and well run

Cheers mate! I'm just waiting on Jason from REVS to send me his logo, and then I'll show everyone the poster!

www.dynoday.info has been updated too!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

you should put the Dyno Day website in your signature

DynoDaylogo.jpg

>>>Register NOW!! only 10 spots left<<<

[center][url="http://www.dynoday.info/"][img=http://www.dynoday.info/images/DynoDaylogo.jpg][/url][/center][url="http://www.dynoday.info/"][center][color="#FF0000"][b][size="2"]>>>Register NOW!! only 10 spots left<<<[/size][/b][/color][/center][/url]

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




  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Wow its been a while since Ive signed in for sure.  Time gets away... Good question. So much was different between the two designs.  The RB315 was a test to see if I could do it.  Limitations were for the most part due to local machining capability.  Tolerances were an issue.  The 3.15 used a single OD dry sleeve, and was almost the same as a kakimoto spacer plate engine, except I used a plate design similar to the OS Giken plate.  I did not make the top flanges thick enough either.  I can't be sure if it was machining tolerances, or thermal distortion of the sleeves, but the engine did produce quite a bit of blow by.  The modified 87mm RB30 crank was also an issue, and was no where near as nicely balanced as the forged 90mm crank in the 3.4. The 34 was a next level build.  The sleeves were stepped for max thickness, and were a semi-wet design breaking though into coolant completely in the block.  Minimum thickness was 3.75mm and max was 5mm with the 90mm bore, and the new spacer plate also fully supported the tops of the sleeves closed deck style.  This combined with far superior CNC machining, and a cylinder hone finish that the machinist does on 3000hp pro stock cars resulted in no noticeable blow by at all.   In the end the 3.15 was removed to swap in the 3.4.  I discovered the modified RB30 crank had partially sheared the woodruff key on the balancer.  That was all that was wrong with it, but it did make the engine a paperweight at that stage. $1100 to make another crank for an engine with blow by issues was not worth it, considering I'd started playing with all Nitto forged internals instead. I hope you found this interesting.   Cheers, Ian
    • All their parts, when order directly off them are made to order. So you're able to customise fitment of things or delete things. E.g. I asked for no throttle cable bracket, no IACV port, etc. on my plenum. In hindsight, I should have asked for an IAT port/fitting welded on, hindsight no. Should have bought a M2 or 3 lol.
    • 25de in c33 a31 is different to r32/r33 s1 which is different to r33 s2 & r34 so you can vaguely do whatever man.
    • That's the pink sticker type, you haven't said what car so no idea if it's correct, 25de or det is the same in the same model.
×
×
  • Create New...