Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

the optional factory Xanavi pop-up satnav LCD unit + headunit (cd player/TV etc) + casette player and dash lid/flap.The unit recently came up with the usual chip error but from what I've been told it can be repaired easily and the whole unit can be modified to work with gps etc.

Price $200

mud flaps/pods that sit on the guards at the rear of each wheel. Factory option (plastic) GV1 black. $80

standard GTT rear bar (black), plastic obviously .. car was rear ended recently, very minor damage to it that can be easily repaired, very little paint damage $250

items are pickup only in Sydney or you must organize courier if elsewhere .. due to weight/size. I'll post photos if there's any real interest.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/251543-r34-gt-t-part-in-sydney/
Share on other sites

really interested for factory xanavi pop-up. but its too pricey since there's no one can fix it in canberra. and gonna cost me more money.

anyway, just PM me if you have any good offer since i'm going to wollongong this weekend.

cheers mate + free bump.

RE THE XANAVI SAT NAV CD TV UNIT - CAVEAT EMPTOR

As you are asking a fairly high price its important that people know the pros and cons of the Xanavi set-up. I had the same unit factory installed in my R34 - potential buyers should be fully aware that there are several major issues with trying to get Xanavi cd/tv sat nav in R34s to work properly or at all - Xanavi has its own proprietary sat nav system/software and there is no software or cd map disk available for Australia so despite all optimisim the sat nav will never be capable of working in Australia, re the TV this is NTSC so you will need a PAL to NTSC converter to get it anywhere near working.

Another very real problem is that apart from the 2 fascia inputs the Xanavi unit does not have any standard wiring connectors (such as RCA/ AV /S VIDEO etc) - it has its own special connectors - and lots of them - so to fit it in a car you need to already have a R34 with all of the right wiring loom -so it must be a R34 that already has the Xanavi set-up (and there are several varaiant models of the Xanavi) , or you should have access to or be an auto electric expert and be able to make a substitute wiring loom - so the bottom line for buyers is be informed do proper research and make sure you get the whole wiring loom if buying - even though some of it would be near impossible to take out of the right car as some of its is integral with the standard wiring loom. To summarise I have found that these units are like the standard R34 coils, when they start to malfunction they will sooon be completely dead so better to just get rid of them.

Cheers

the xanavi that's on sale is NOT FOR THE FAINT OF HEART.

This is NOT an item you can just pop in your r34 and it will give your satnav/gps, cd player etc. If it were, it'd probably cost $2000. What it DOES give you is a perfectly functioning LCD screen with a motor function ie. can be opened/closed, and FIXABLE cd system which can be repaired if you are a enthusiast sparky.

It CAN be and has been fixed and modified by a few people ie. as a gps system or a general popup screen connected to a DVD player or playstation etc. It fits perfectly on the R34 dash and comes with the required lid so this is not just some generic screen that you have to modify your dash to make it work - it pops right in and bolts onto the dash in under 2 mins - you just have to know what you want it for (ie. dvd output, playstation gps or just a cd player.

So all this doom and gloom above sounds a bit over the top imo. Do NOT get this if you have no idea about car audio or electronics in general. It's for an enthusiast who wants to customize their R34 and is prepared to spend a bit of money to have a unique popup screen on their dash.

And the price is $200 - you can't even get a crappy little gps unit for that price. This unit is custom made for R34s and fits where the standard triple guages on other R34s are.

Edited by Delta Force

its not in my car anymore but I'll take a couple of piccies later (perfect opportunity to test my new digicam lol ) I'll try and find a photo of someone's while its still mounted in the car.

basically it sits on top of the dash instead of the triple guages and has a custom headunit just below the airvents... the whole centre console is a bit different because in normal GTTs the aircon unit sits under the vents but thats not to worry because I have the entire centre console incl. the brackets that hold it all in there and incl. the aircon unit and associated fascias so it will pop right in to any R34 GTT (although the dash lid and aircon fascia have been painted black but can be resprayed to anything u want obviously)

Edited by Delta Force

Ok check this thread it has a couple of shots of the screen and headunit a few posts down ... for $200 you get the entire centre console incl. tv screen and associated motor (all one piece), the dash flap/cover that replaces the triple guage pod, the centre console incl. AC unit, the headunit and factory radio with all fascias and brackets. ie. you can pop the whole unit right in, the only thing that you need to worry about is the electrical parts/wiring .. that needs custom work/rewiring and the cdplayer is throwin up a chip error but I've been told it's an easy fix if you know what you're doing.

http://www.skylinesaustralia.com/forums/Co...l&hl=R34+TV

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

    • You’re all still going on about track cars, he has said multiple times doesn’t intend to take it to the track,  just stick to what was said at the beginning and do the pump and ecu, it’ll get you enough for 230kw at the wheels and has enough poke to be fun for what you want it for 
    • All of that is absolutely true. At any time in the history of these turbos the lottery has always been that it could die at stock boost treated exactly as the factory intended, or it could die when pushed to 10, or 12, or 14, or 16 psi, after a short time, or a longer time, or it could last seemingly forever. You have the combination of all the possible statistical (probably) normal distributions of manufacturing tolerances and quality outcomes, on top of the statistical distributions of failure modes (which might be normal, but are probably biased, like Poisson distributions). You get the lucky turbo and you can beat on it for years. You get the really unlucky turbo and it will crap itself as it rolls out of the factory gate. And every possibility in between. But you can definitely still kill the lucky turbo. It's just that most people didn't try, once they knew they really shouldn't try.
    • Maybe I have Stockholm syndrome but working on an M2 isn't that hard. Getting parts cheaply and quickly is hard, but getting parts same day isn't necessarily hard if you're willing to pay way too much for it at local dealers. There's a lot going on, you need to have a build of ISTA on a laptop and the right cable, if you don't have the mindset of "do it exactly right or not at all" you will probably start seeing cascading failures. Skylines are a little more tolerant in that regard. The car doesn't potentially trash itself if you bought the wrong oil filter like a BMW would. Or trash the entire cylinder head and potentially spin a bearing because someone took the anti-drainback valve out of the plastic oil filter cap. An M2 will also do just fine on track, zero oil starvation concerns, factory brakes are great if you change the pads for a high temp compound + flush with track-ready fluid.
    • The "ideal/formula" that used to be touted was death of the turbo is going to be caused by a combination of 3 things. Heat Speed of turbo (boost level you're pushing) Time   Basically, you can get away with high heat and high boost for short periods. But start doing long hard pulls, or circuit driving etc, and now you've increased time as well which will shred things. From memory when Adrian was drag racing he was running 17psi, on a stock turbo, and running insane speeds. But he also had other additives helping in the setup too. Some people have success at 14psi for a while, while others due to pushing the cars hard for long periods opt down to lower temps. But also, generate a lot of heat (let's say bad tune), for a long time, and you'll be okay, until you try to spin that little guy up slightly. It's the one advantage of dumping a lot of fuel in, you'll be reducing EGT a bit and helping with the heat portion of the above 3 areas.   And these days, stock turbos are that old that there's the possibility of just outright failures due to material age. I'm not shocked that even when used in factory spec that a stock turbo fails when 30 years old. It's a worn out "precision" "balanced" performance item, that's likely no longer precise, or well balanced
    • this... hence I said what I said previously, SMSP nights you see mainly Hondas, Evos, A90s, F80x and the odd VW. The 5 or 6 times I went, I only saw 1x R32 GT-R, and other than that I was the only one in a shit box Skyline.
×
×
  • Create New...