Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Oh whoops... LOL, ignore me... Brainfart moment... :P

I still expect a 3RD gear limiter bashing skid at Texi...

will give it the beans repeatedly, disconnecting the entire exhaust from the headers doesn't count as a screamer pipe right?

by the way beaker I bought a "92" vh45 ecu so i can nisstune. but it won't arrive in time :mad: . and what do you want in your package I'm sending?

got a new three core, triple pass, crossflow, copper radiator and new fan mounts that should keep it cooler. the radiator hoses are no longer 5mm away from the alternator. yay.

will have to test it at texi. pics to come.

  • 2 months later...

long time no post...well here's whats new, nothing other than finally got a nistune from unique autosports. the result?

post-38774-0-35726400-1347865704_thumb.jpg

30 kw gain at wheels. something tells me nissan undertuned these alittle.

  • 3 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...

is it bad that the 79 two two door corolla i bought off a work mate had 30 degrees timing when GTRsean and I did a quick tune up today? althrough it does explain the noises it was making.......and why it looks like it head gasket is on the way out.

somehow i managed to be talked into a twin side draft weber manifold and carbies, and the plan is to put the biggest cam the stock rockers will allow. who knew spool made forged rods for them. it will sound wicked, weather it goes anywhere in hurry is up to debate. it was supposed to be a daily, so much for that idea.

It's a 'cool' daily!

So another engine I will be doing.

It will have the following:

.5mm over pistons

spool h beam rods

4K block decked, bored and honed

crank balanced

flywheel lightened

sump modified

oil pump shimmed

3K recoed head with 4K style stem seals

some sort of solid regrind cam with 260-270deg and .400" lift

port match and cleanup.

rollmaster double row timing chain

4-2-1 headers

redline dual side draft carby setup

electronic dizzy

I think that is it....

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

    • Well, back in the day..... "race" fluids, which were essentially only really "high temp" fluids, used to absorb water more readily. So they really needed to be changed more often anyway. The coincidence of that being directly necessary along with it being what racers would do as a matter of course was just fine.
    • Does the high temp fluid degrade any different over time compared to normal one? That's one thing I've always been wondering. Because a track car is going to get the fluid flushed probably way more often than every two years and will see less kilometers driven. I would think the requirements are different. I'm running Motul RBF 600 in mine. Was recommended by my mechanic before a trackday and I've stuck with it since. Hasn't seen the track since but I've kept buying and using it for servicing anyway.
    • The brakes are all stock bar some DBA slotted discs and the EBC pads and braided lines. The car has brake ducts as standard but they're kinda pointed in the general direction of the brakes rather than really getting at the heat source. I guess I should hit it with an infra red thermometer after a session and see what they're at.  100%! Its just a curiosity more than anything. As I said, high temp brake fluid was such a track day rage back in the day. From people I speak to at the track and threads on here everybody has their own take on it but I'm not gonna scoff at spending a few more bucks.    OH, a quick side question - would you use brake fluid from an opened container even if the lid has been on? Eg, if you have a bottle that you opened last time you flushed, it's been tightly closed, is it still good? 
    • Nice, is there a post with the new 4" dyno curve?
    • The brakes are all stock bar some DBA slotted discs and the EBC pads and braided lines. The car has brake ducts as standard but they're kinda pointed in the general direction of the brakes rather than really getting at the heat source. I guess I should hit it with an infra red thermometer after a session and see what they're at.  100%! Its just a curiosity more than anything. As I said, high temp brake fluid was such a track day rage back in the day. From people I speak to at the track and threads on here everybody has their own take on it but I'm not gonna scoff at spending a few more bucks. 
×
×
  • Create New...