Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hi all,

Just a small thing. But the boot latch next to the drivers seat on my 93 R32 GT-R is designed to open the fuel cap as well as the boot lid.

Fuel cap pops not a problem but the boot doesn't open.

I just thought I'd ask around here if anyone has had a similar problem (stretched cable I assume) before giving it a go myself.

You may have locked the boot from the boot latch (inside the boot).

They have this feature so when you give you car to someone else, they can't open the boot without the key.

Pop the boot and have a look at the boot latch/locking thingy. You should see a little leaver, just click it the other way it it should work fine.

J

That's because someone has pushed the little lever on the boot lock, it prevents someone inside the car opening the boot from the inside, while the spare key is too fat to go in the lock.

It's so when you give the car to someone, you know they can't go through your stuff...it's a neat little feature.

Not so neat when the boot lock buggers up, and you think to yourself "what's this lever" and press it. I had to remove the speakers in my parcel shelf, try and fish around past my subby and click the lock from inside NOT fun!

I sooo didn't read the start of this thread...what a tool!

Dan

You should be able to see where the cable ends up at the latch. Get someone to move the release lever up and down from the driver's seat, and see if there is any tension on the cable. It could be snapped or accidentally unhooked from the latch. If it has stretched, you might be able to modify it to pull on the latch sooner rather than ripping the whole thing out and replacing it.

Hi all. I did a lot of fiddling around with the boot today and here's what I have found:

If I open the boot and push the lock boot mechanism up (ie: not locked) and then close the boot very very gently. Then pull the lever inside the car gently the boot opens!!!

If I slam the boot shut I cannot open the boot from inside the car as the mechanism which locks the boot up permanently has moved to the lock position.

Alternatively if I pull the lever all the way up this also pushes the boot lock mechanism to the lock position!

Now how strange is that huh?!

That reminds me of my old Commodore which had a faulty lock mechanism. Whenever I hit a decent bump the boot lid would fly open. The lock seemed fine, although it only took a slight touch to release it, so I figured big bumps were enough make it open.

I took the lock to a wrecker just to make sure I got the right one. He looked at it and said there was nothing wrong with it and I was wasting my money. I had to convince him to sell me one! $10 later and I bought it and fitted it and the problem never came back.

That sounds like a damn hard thing to find! Looks like I will take it to a smash repair place and see if they can fix it before I begin my hunt. It's the little things ain't it?! Especially when you are in search for perfection!

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

    • Just checked in first post and you should be able to bring it home November this year, right? I'm amazed you made it through four years of this. As hard as it feels now the rest will go by in a breeze in hindsight, I'm sure.
    • Realized I haven't been back here in a while. Still here, still alive, still waiting for the car.  I went back again the only time last year from Oct-Nov for R's Meeting and drove it around some more, including a few laps on Fuji Speedway(in the wet, sadly). The car still feels good, but have a couple small things to address. I've been getting more parts but have slowed down still, and most of the bigger purchases are now out of the way. I find myself getting impatient more and more when it comes to getting started on this project; it's quite hard for me not being able to really dive in and start making this car my own because it's halfway across the world. At times it doesn't even really feel like I own one of these. Haven't really been motivated or had the desire to document the last trip on here or social media for, well, reasons... but here's some pics...it's also still alive and well as you can see: I've narrowed down to the last large part purchases(anything over $2k) before the engine build to be: 1) Ohlins Road & Tracks 2) ATS Twin Carbon clutch 3) Endless BBK with some custom options and 4) Kansai Service carbon driveshaft I don't think the budget exists for all of these this year, but I'll try for one or two items I think. Though, every time I look at my spreadsheet I sigh, shake my head, and get depressed just that little bit more.  'til later.
    • It's a stunning location!  I've been to NZ twice but haven't made it to the North Island yet.  Definitely on the cards but the South Island is hard to tear yourself away from too... Looking forward to see what you can wring out of it once you can get it to hold together!  Be awesome to get a low 11 or even sneaking into the high 10's pass out of it.  That's a bloody quick car that most people will never experience in their life.  Enjoy!
    • Nominally yes but I’m not really at that stage yet. Outsourcing to Japan is also a relatively good deal at the moment because their currency has devalued much more against the USD.  You would assume this but a lot has changed from the pandemic. Mechanics are in short supply and demand for fixing old cars has gone up from the cost of new cars. 250-300 USD/hr is not an unusual shop labor rate in California and you’re paying that regardless of whether the guy is competent or not. Coworkers have been quoted 3000 USD for a water pump and thermostat at a dealer on an N54. Oil changes went from ~75 USD to 150 on fairly normal cars like Civics. The cost of the oil and filter hasn’t even kept up with inflation.
    • The downside to that is that the cost of everything, particularly labour, is significantly higher here than it is over there in the Disunited States of Slavery. You can hire 3 tradesmen over there for just the Ranger Raptor allowance of a single 3rd year apprentice over here.
×
×
  • Create New...