Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

hey guys. Driving up to syd for business and pleasure. Didnt want to catch a plane (boring) so decided to take my r33 for a road trip. Due to arrive in 4 hours. I need your help. I need suggestions ideas anything on where to go, what to see. Night spots and what night to give it a go etc. Also any events on? Any suggestions welcome. Staying there for a week from today. Thanks in advance boys! (and girlies)

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/284227-driving-up-to-syd-from-melb/
Share on other sites

If you want to see our driving roads check out the Thursday Night cruise. If you're coming up via the Hume you could make a slight detour via and take in some other roads.

Turn off at the Illawarra Highway to go down Macquarie Pass. Otherwise take Picton Rd to Wollongong and go through the Royal National Park.

As for sights, if you want to see what Sydney's version of Chapel St 10 years ago is like then go down George St in the CBD on a Friday or Saturday night. Here's a fellow Victorian's impression (the second half of the post).

Take a ferry ride, since Melbourne's harbour isn't as scenic as Sydney's.

thank you. Very good suggestions. Just a bit of feed back of my experience while staying here. Your roads are shocking, traffic is shocking, apart from those two i love it here, weather is great, lots of done up cars and cops dont pick on you here unless you misbehave, unlike melbourne. I like syd lifestyle better.

I prefer the Melbourne lifestyle, actually. :D

Yes, our roads and our other drivers are shithouse. I love driving in Melbourne in comparison, aside from the speed cameras.

I can't suggest too much to visit that isn't in a tourist brochure. It depends on what you want to do, and what your interests are.

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

    • Man that dinner was such a long time ago....2010! I would only replace the rubber coolant lines with silicone these days; cheap, readily available and will last for ever. You will need new hose clamps though eg https://justjap.com/products/cooling-pro-silicone-engine-heater-hose-set-black-nissan-r32-gtr-rb26dett
    • I wouldn't look too hard at what they did with the R32 GTR in endurance racing in Australia... Lots of things weren't actually available from the factory in the way those cars ran them... Japan also followed what Fred Gibson was doing here with some of there endurance cars in Japan... Australia is also the reason for things like the Brembo brakes, and the change in the gearbox... And quite a few other tricks they used to pull. There's a few other SAU peeps still on these forums that will have heard the stories direct from Alan Heaphy, Fred Gibson, and Jim Richards when we were lucky enough to have a great dinner with them
    • For all the talk of "these parts are junk" I generally recommend OEM because it's really not as bad as claimed. I have never seen or heard of a case like the N63 where the oil returns completely clog with coked oil for example in ~10 years or less. Would it be nice if it were a straighter path? I guess, but most modern cars use a scavenge pump instead of a pure gravity return. Also the factory lines that would be relatively simple to convert to braided are generally speaking hardlines from the factory. I would consider braided line to be a regression, not an improvement. It's also been engineered such that all the hardlines have appropriate strain relief where needed. There's absolutely room for improvement, for example the HKS advantage heritage intake piping shows just how much can be done to make the turbos fight each other less in OEM twin turbo configuration and reduce compressor surge but it's rarely a simple/straightforward process. I recommend looking at what the group A/N1 cars did, generally speaking the changes they made were necessary and proven in endurance racing.
    • Yes, multi relays needed, and possibly a diode. I'm not actually going to think about it though.
×
×
  • Create New...