Jump to content
SAU Community

R34 Gtt White Coupe 64500km 230rwkw


Recommended Posts

The time to sell my 1998 R34 GTT has come.

Reason for sale is that I want to get back into forest rallying and I cannot afford to keep the Skyline. I would if I could!

The car has always been garaged and religiously serviced (I am a mechanic) every 3000km, using Castrol products. Always warmed up/cooled down. The car has never missed a beat and has been a pleasure to own, modify and enjoy! It has never been in an accident - any inspection welcome!

It has travelled 64500km.

Engine mods:

GCG steel wheel ball bearing highflow turbo

Power FC

Greedy boost controller set at 14psi

Walbro in tank pump

Sard fuel reg

Nismo 480cc injectors

Splitfire coilpacks

Drift pod filter, cold air pipe and underbonnet heat shield

Monsta front mount

Full turbo back exhaust, high flow cat and HKS rear section from cat to tip

Poly (hard) turbo intake pipe instead of standard soft rubber pipe

Tuned by Micks Motorsport to 230rwkw

Just Jap alloy radiator and twin thermo fans

Genuine Nismo low temp thermostat

Oil catch can

Brakes/suspension mods:

Nismo S tune suspension with 4 way adjustable shocks

Just Jap radius rods

Just Jap upper rear camber arms

Just Jap HICAS lock bar

QFM A1RM pads all round

Master cylinder stopper bracket

Lucas racing brake fluid

Street legal braided brake lines

Interior is standard and in excellent condition. I have never smoked or allowed anyone to smoke in the car. Has a full set of factory mats.

Only interior mods are a Saber boost gauge and Nismo gearknob.

YLD34T number plates included and registered until September 2009

PRICE: $23900 o.n.o

Please call Toby on 0409 903 669 for more information.

post-35199-1239435941_thumb.jpg

post-35199-1239436425_thumb.jpg

post-35199-1239436470_thumb.jpg

post-35199-1239436513_thumb.jpg

post-35199-1239436556_thumb.jpg

post-35199-1239436604_thumb.jpg

Edited by yld34t
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 45
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

sorry mate, cant even reply to pm bcos of the min post thing.......

is that for full comprehensive or just fire n theft?

also, howre the maintenance costs? i ask bcos its not exactly stock...

and do u know how many owners since landing in oz?

sorry abt the q's, but i gotta sell it to the missus

No probs mate, you have PM!

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

    • Well, yeah, the RB26 is definitely that far off the mark. From a pure technology point of view it is closer to the engines of the 60s than it is to the engines of the last 10 years. There is absolutely nothing special about an RB26 that wasn't present in engines going all the way back to the 60s, except probably the four valve head. The bottom end is just bog standard Japanese stuff. The head is nothing special. Celicas in the 70s were the same thing, in 4cyl 2 valve form. The ITBs are nothing special when you consider that the same Celicas had twin Solexes on them, and so had throttle plates in the exact same place. There's no variable valve timing, no variable inlet manifold, which even other RBs had either before the 26 came out or shortly afterward. The ECU is pretty rude and crude. The only things it has going for it are that the physical structure was pretty bloody tough for a mass produced engine, the twin-turbos and ITBs made for a bit of uniqueness against the competition (and even Toyota were ahead on the twin turbs thing, weren't they?) and the electronic controls and measuring devices (ie, AFMs, CAS, etc) were good enough to make it run well. Oh, and it sounds better than almost anything else, ever. The VR38 is absolutely halfway between the RB generation and the current generation, so it definitely has a massive increase in the sophistication of the electronics, allowing for a lot more dynamic optimisation of mapping. Then there's things like metal treatments and other coatings on things, adoption of variable cam stuff, and a bunch of other little improvements that mean it has to be a better thing than the RB26. But I otherwise agree with you that it is approximately the same thing as a 26. But, skip forward another 10 years from that engine and then the things that I mentioned in previous post come out to play. High compression, massively sophisticated computers, direct injection, clever measuring sensors, etc etc. They are the real difference between trying to make big power with a 26 and trying to make big power with a S/B50/54 (or whatever the preferred BMW engine of the week is).
    • Is the RB26 actually that far off the mark? Honestly from where I'm sitting a VR38DETT is not actually that much more advanced than the RB26. Yes, there is a scavenge pump on the VR38, it's smarter in a number of ways but it's not actually jumping out to me as alien technology. Something like a B58 or V35A-FTS on the other hand has so many surprising little design features that add up to be something that just isn't comparable. 
    • https://www.carsales.com.au/cars/details/2021-nissan-skyline-400r-auto-rv37/SSE-AD-17857548/ Well there you go 
    • Chris won't reply. He doesn't visit the forum much anymore. You can try these guys https://www.facebook.com/autotainment/ They did mine many years ago
×
×
  • Create New...