Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 49
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

RRRRRREPOST!!!

;)

Hey, if you guys are pissed because the GT-R is a) looking ghey, B) taking too long, c) not Nissan style, just send a hugely bagging e-mail to:

[email protected]

Some car here that's $325,000. It's a car but when you drive it into water it turns into a boat. But I don't know of anyone who would drive into the water because that's just really stupid. I don't think anyone's bought one, I know I wouldn't. That's a waste of money, in my opinion.

Originally posted by nc311hiver

Some car here that's $325,000. It's a car but when you drive it into water it turns into a boat. But I don't know of anyone who would drive into the water because that's just really stupid. I don't think anyone's bought one, I know I wouldn't. That's a waste of money, in my opinion.

Oi! Amanda! This thread was going to turn into a HUGE Carlos Ghosn bitchfest, and you just bllllllllew it off going on about amphibious vehicles... did you read the thread title? I thought not...

Back to th` Wasteland with ye! Gwarn! Back! BACK I tell thee!!!

;)

coz you're american :rolleyes: it happens.. anyhow, NEXT :)

2007 is a very long way off. Going on all the rumours and speculation you would have thought everything was pretty much finalised. By the time 2007 nobody will care about the GT-R, and they'll have lose most of the market.

So that just makes the V35 some inbetween freak vehicle all on its own? If its 2007 by the time the GT-R comes out it will have absolutely no shared components with a car nearly 6 years old.

seems like it.. good bye nissan performance vehicles. All you see on the road from Nissan is damn 4wD and tank people movers these days

huh? were'nt we heading out of worldwide depression? :rolleyes: or was that yesterdays news?

I don't know whether japan even came out of the last one to be honest.

Yes, Japan is an economic basket case, but at least they still have considerable export volume. If the US folds there will be mass unemployment in Japan, and it is not going to be pretty.

In the US, before the great depression radio, aviation, and automobiles were all in a boom, just like personal computers and the internet are now. Before 1929 there were over 2,000 public companies listed as being in the automobile or automobile parts manufacturing business in the US. Only three survived, GM, Ford, and Chrysler. Things are far worse now then they were back then just before the economic crash.

This is going to be real bad. If Nissan are smart they are not going to be spending zillions of dollars developing an expensive new car which no longer has a market big enough to recover the development cost. So I believe they are delaying the release date, they know what is coming.............

Originally posted by predator666

Going on all the rumours and speculation you would have thought everything was pretty much finalised. By the time 2007 nobody will care about the GT-R, and they'll have lose most of the market.  

So that just makes the V35 some inbetween freak vehicle all on its own? If its 2007 by the time the GT-R comes out it will have absolutely no shared components with a car nearly 6 years old.

You know Predator, I think you hit the nail on the head. This is not about a "Porsche toppling GT-R", but about Carlos Ghosn moving and making it *his* GT-R... like I said before, it`s gonna take until 2007 for Ghosn to bully the Japs at Nissan to do what he says, and I don`t think Ghosn cares when the car comes out, just so long as it`s *his* GT-R. Proper w-a-n-k-e-r.

>Warpspeed: Man, thats conspiracy shenanigans going on right there, if Nissan know whats going to happen in the future financially and when, why did they almost go bankrupt?

Just about all the big car manufacturers are technically bankrupt, and have been for many years. It all depends on being able to roll over the massive debt and stay in business.

The Japanese banks are also bankrupt. During the 80's property boom they loaned out unimaginable wealth to speculators. When the property market crashed they now hold property deeds at the face value of the loan. These paper assets are all the banks hold against depositors money. If there is a run on the banks the system collapses.

The whole system worldwide is drowning in debt, and phony worthless paper assets. The accountants can "prove" net paper worth exists, but actually there is nothing there.

Even in Australia the average yuppie has a mortgage on his overpriced house, shares in the stock-market, and otherwise is in debt up to his eyeballs, with zero net savings.

If the property market and stock market both crash, and he loses his job, he is finished. Your millionaire yuppie is broke. It could happen at any time. The whole thing is based on an illusion and is on a knife edge.

These days, all the wealth is actually a promise to pay by someone else. It is NOT conspiracy theory, it is FACT.

This is miles off topic though, but it is a subject I have a deep interest in.

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 have just offended every teenage boy in America
    • Structured text and other high level PLC programing languages are not allowable in Functional Safety. They are very difficult to audit. My PLC stuff is almost exclusively oriented towards Burner Management Systems which are a particularly pernicious form of Safety Instrumented System, when implemented in an SPLC. Even the part of the code written to work in the non-safety logic part of the PLC, like with a Siemens S7-1500 series, still needs to be treated as if it was safety code, with access restrictions, code fingreprints and the like. And Allen Bradley can go EABODs. They ae full of shit. They have this whole lie going on where they say if you use a ControlLogix controller and its IO, and then just duplicate the IOs (ie, run in series or parallel depending on type, to try to make it "fail safe") and "use these programming styles and place these restrictions on what you do" that you can achieve SIL2. What a load of crap. They just get away with it because no-one in the US seems to understand the first thing about Functional Safety and carries on as if all they have to do is buy only SIL2 rated equipment and hey presto, it's a SIL2 system. Idiots. /rant
    • If you're really considering leaving it, a great question to ask is, is the magnet going to stick to the sump? The answer to the above is the same answer towards if I'd have any level of comfort leaving it... Personally, based on the cost of a motor if the magnet were to cause damage, I'd be fishing it out either way. Use the methods in here. It fit in through the plug hole, it'll come out.   PS, get a small actuatable claw for a bore scope. OR if you know a vet, they have really cool controllable scopes with hooks on the end. Supposedly they're like playing a video game. Ask if they can acquire you one of their scopes... Engine oil after all is just a different type of lube right? Will only make it easier on the next dog or cat...
    • All other (Boolean) logic functions though, are just built on those blocks above. Which does give you a lot of functionality in logic. It is basing that on using thresholds with analogue signals like GTS alluded to.   Not having things like timers will make it less useful for some of the ramp up logic you'd want, and again, on Haltecs capacity specifically, I'm not across anymore what you can / can't do with different tables.   I'm assuming, with your logic you want to implement, not only do you want your timing safeties, you're wanting to be able to derive the duty cycle for your solenoid, to maintain I'm assuming 175PSi? Or are you using a standalone WMI controller to maintain the DC correct, and you just want the Haltech working out which fuelling maps you should be on?
    • It doesn't seem to follow revs. Oddly it seems to follow TPS a little bit from what I can see, but with some delay a bit. IE end of the graph, when he lets off throttle fully, pressure drops a lot, then slowly builds back up, but rpm is on a nice cruisey drop off. I do agree though, it seems very electrically.
×
×
  • Create New...