Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Oh, well I am only after an R34 GTR for my company car anyway. When eliteopps mentioned it I assumed he meant R34 GTR Vspec 2.

Importers are really close to having the import plates for the R34 so it shouldn't be long now.

I have a friend with an online japanese account at showatrade where he buys cars. It is pretty expensive for an account it costs $120 for 1 month or $1200 for a year. I can ask him for you. I was going to lease a R34 GTR but because of the price my work won't allow it, best I can go for is a WRX STi

cheers

Hi Contempt HPI have done a few good write ups of the R34 GTR, I have the special issue with it in if you can't get hold of a copy. I find HPI get some of the best info.

Vspec2, not judging you or your car, but I thought the V spec cars deleted the rear wiper? what year is your car 94?

I've currently got an R32 GTR in Japan... waiting to see what happens with the 15 year old rule change...

If I could afford it I would not car what colour an R34 came in.. oh well, can always dream!!

  • 2 weeks later...

Hi Contempt - I'm not able to get access to scan in the info on the R34 GTR at this stage - I can send it to you by fax if you want? otherwise, I'll continue to see if I can find someone who can scan the article in for me.

Are you still planning on getting one?

I get my R32 GTR about march next year!

Thanks anyway mate, there's heaps of reviews/stories on the net.

Yes I am most definitely still getting one. I am more keen then ever. I just can't import the thing ;)

Anyone know how far compliance is away?

Whoever manages to get compliance plates first is going to be getting a heap of business.

Contempt, below are the companies who are seeking R34 compliance. you will need to contact them to see what stage they are at as this list is now 2 weeks old.

Adrenalin Enterprises

PO Box 8461 Gold Coast Mail Centre Bundall QLD 4217 Contact: Tony Brown

Phone: 07 5591 2444

Down Under Auto Services

71 Scarborough Beach Rd Mt Hawthorn WA 6016

Contact: Bryan Hubbard

Phone: 08 9242 4575

C.A.M Pty Ltd

1520 Albany Highway Cannington WA 6107

Contact: Frank Bempasciuto

Phone: 08 9350 9696

Vehicle Direct QLD

2/3337 Pacific Hwy Slacks Creek QLD 4127

Contact: Adam White

Phone: 07 3290 0444

Iamshe Pty Ltd

PO Box 3046 Southport QLD 4215

Contact: Philip White

Phone: 07 557 17133

JB WA

Unit 1/1520 Albany Highway Cannington WA 6107

Contact: Jimmy Balducci

Phone: 0411 693 256

Cheers and good luck.

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

    • hey OP can you remind me what the actual question was, I got sidetracked at V12. Do you have an turbo oil return leak and an unidentified coolant leak? The factory oil returns are terrible design; short, rubber and expensive to replace. They are very common to fail and a pain to replace because they are so short. Still, they are available new if you want to replace both last time I checked. For the coolant leak, any competent mechanic should be able to do a pressure test; that should show up where the leak is. It is almost certainly one of the billion 30 year old rubber lines which are now brittle as hell, you engine will be fine.
    • From the OP's description, sounds to me like the TCU is in 'limp home' mode --- that is, no actuation power to shift solenoids, and the EPC valve is shut (full line pressure). This effectively sticks the box in 3rd gear, with as much line pressure as possible, to try hold the high clutch clamped shut....and so you get woeful acceleration and don't feel any shifts (because they're not happening). If you don't have Consult or some other scanner to interrogate the TCU itself, you can test with a multimeter to see if it's in limp home mode....ie; stick it in D with engine at idle (hold vehicle with hand/foot brake), and measure the voltage at the TCU feeding shift solenoids A & B -- both should be ON (battery voltage). If they are energized at the TCU, you can unplug the harness from the TCU, and check resistance down through the wiring to the solenoids themselves -- you should see about 20ohms on each coil --- if you do, you can presume the wiring to shift solenoids is OK -- if both measure open circuit, you have to check intermediate connectors in the loom down to the gearbox (and the gearbox connector itself), and check the shift solenoid resistance at the gearbox connector itself --- if the shift solenoids test open circuit here, problem is in the box (ether the solenoids or wiring to them is bad). If you get no voltage at TCU connector for the shift solenoids (and the solenoids/wiring test OK), check powers/grounds to the TCU itself --- if they're ok, it suggests the TCU is the culprit (and you'd need to interrogate it if possible, to find out why it's behaving badly)... 
    • Hey mate give Autotechnica a go, I recently got some Comfort PUs and rails from them, they're comfy and look great highly recommended! https://www.autotecnica.com.au/part-finder/nissan/skyline/r32/
    • Honestly, for a daily I would gladly rock a Camry. The more disposable the better. People drive horribly out here and road conditions are awful.
    • Verify it's going into each of the 4 gears in normal acceleration, make sure the torque converter locks up over ~65-70 kph or so at low throttle opening. If you ease into the throttle at those speeds eventually you should get a "gear" between 3rd unlocked and 4th locked. It should downshift eventually if you floor it at 65 kph too. Get some Matic D ATF and drain the pan, check for signs of sadness in fluid and drain plug magnet. Top off to the correct level afterwards. If the transmission is worth saving you can drop the pan on a second drain and change the filter while you're at it. These are not complicated transmissions, at least compared to modern stuff.
×
×
  • Create New...