Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Holy crap... check this out... I wish I had the money to buy this... and actual Nurburgring endurance R34 N1... :drooling: :headspin:

Nismo R34 Vspec N1 racecar  

I'm selling my Nismo-built ex-NME (Nissan Motosport Europe) R34 VSpec N1 racecar, Bayside Blue metallic colour as well as all spares available. The car is modified for endurance races.

General spec:

- built by Nismo

- well known car

- featured in many magazines

- featured in Best Motoring March 1999 video on the Nurburgring

- raced in several Nurburgring 24H races

- Nismo bumper + spoiler package

- diff, gearbox, xfer cooler

- 120 liter tank

- air jacks

- big Brembo brakes, 28 mm endurance pads

- 2-way adjustable shock absorbers

Since weight is an issue, the car is equipped with

- carbon doors

- Z-tune bonnet

- carbon bootlid

- carbon tank container

- carbon battery container

- lightweight custom Nismo exhaust

- lightweight Enkei NT03 18 inch wheels

The original metal chassis parts will be included in the delivery. New carbon parts can be fabricated and supplied on request.

The car can be supplied with or without the MoTeC M880 ECU + MoTeC ADL dash/logger. These items are equipped with almost all options, like pit lane speed limiter, full throttle gear shift, anti-lag. Both engine data and chassis data are logged.

Alternatively, the car can be supplied with a PowerFC ECU.

Currently, the car is equipped with the standard 6-speed Getrag gearbox. A brandnew 6-speed OS Giken sequential gearbox is available too, as well as another overhauled 6-speed Getrag gearbox. Current engine is a Nismo built N1 engine.

The car is available with an optional spares package, including brandnew engines in various tuning- and build stages, turbo's, gearboxes, wheels, drive shafts, rear diffs.

Some dated pictures:

Skyline-in-motion.jpg

Skyline-R34-Rear.jpg

Skyline-8200RPM-trailer.jpg

The thread is here...

http://www.skylineowners.com/forums/showth...=&threadid=4233

So who's gonna bring it to Aussie soils?

Imagine driving aroudn in that... "so what's that you got there a V-Spec?"... "Nah just one of the few R34's that actually went into the endurance races at Nurburgring... n stop leaning on my carbon fibre door panels"

  • Replies 42
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

i don't think its meant to be a fast car, its supposed to be an endurance car, but it'd be quick compared to usual skylines... what I mean is its not a purpose built speed demon for drags.

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

    • I dunno. I just go off what I know works. On RB20, the idle switch meant something to the ECU and the potentiometer was ignored. In Nistune, with the switch unplugged, you could bridge the terminals in the loom connector and see IDLE come on and off. Not so by moving the pot. The R32 RB20 ECU and the 26 ECU both look like this. Sure there is the "throttle sensor" (pot) on pin 38, and also sure, the idle switch is also directly wired to the TCU, whereas the pot is only directly conected to the ECU. But I am sure that the throttle position from the pot is passed to the TCU across the data bus on pins 21, 22 & 31. Maybe the ECU likes to know throttle position, but it sure as hell doesn't use it to determine the idle condition. Meanwhile, on the later engines, like the 33 25DET and my Neo, you remove the TPS and move the pot to-from the 0.45V position, and IDLE comes and goes in Nistune. No throttle switch on the ECU diagram. Just the pot.
    • So, good news and bad news Bad news first: The intake plenum is lost in the mail apparently, I haven't paid for it yet, and MX5 Mania are still chasing it up, farking 'Merica postal service  Good news: Any retune will be free if and when it turns up,  I'm still keen for them to throw it on The car goes noticeably better, with only the typical initial take off thingie from a choppy cam and manual transmission, but giving it just a little more RPM than before gives it a smooth take off (and hour or so of peak hour traffic sorted that little skill out) Car made around 145kwatw & 225Nm (Intake may get me to 150kw, maybe....🤣) Weirdly, 145kwatw is the same max power that my standard 2015 WRX STI made a few years ago The cam really comes alive from around 3.5k and keeps making power and holds it flatish all the way to 7k, whereas before torque would drop hard around at 4.5k Drive home was sadly in peak hour, although I did get a little clean air here and there to wind out 1st and 2nd a little bit, and whilst the gains aren't anything for the "boosted boys" to be impressed at, the thing is a blast to drive The sound in the vid is poor, as it is in a undercover yard at work, but, outside, in the wild, it sounds awesomeballs to my ears with all the choppyness I consider it money very well spent for the outcome  Cam specs for reference (Basically the biggest you can fit with stock pistons) 20250417_171807.mp4   LOL, I don't think I will ever grow up  
    • Swap the injectors around and see what happens. If the misfire follows the injectors then that's a signal, if it doesn't it's probably not the injectors.
    • R33 with RB26 seems to go off of learned voltage for idle. Seemed like whatever the baseline voltage was once ECU first gains power will be the idle voltage. With ignition on unplug/replugging the TPS would relearn the idle TPS voltage.
    • Have you confirmed the 2 pin coolant temp sensor on the motor is working properly? I've had a very similar issue when I forgot to plug mine back in many years ago.
×
×
  • Create New...