Jump to content
SAU Community

F/s 89' S3 R31 Rb20 Turbo


Recommended Posts

Model: GXE Nissan Skyline

Year: 1989

Kilometers:Unknown

Transmission type: low kilometer 5 speed Rb20 box

Engine: Silver-top Rb20 Turbo

Colour: White

Modifications:

-silvertop rb20det conversion

-brand new Xtreme heavy duty clutch

-machined fly wheel

-3 inch cat back exhaust

-vg 30 turbo

-hybrid fmic

-GTR fuel pump

-thermo fan

-boost controller

-pod filter

-locked diff (mini spooled)

-rear slotted rotors

-monroe gt shocks

-lowered pedders springs

-front nolathene bushes

- 4 Ti rims with all 4 center caps

-new kenwood deck

-kenwood rear 6x9's

-kenwood front 6"

Roadworthy Certificate:No

Registered: Yes till 25th of august, I wont be renewing the rego untill the car sells as i have a company car which i drive.

Accident History: None

Asking:$42000ono

Location: Adelaide, South Australia.

Contact Details: 0401261531, Nathan.

Other Comments:Firstly the car is NOT registered with the Rb20 now thats out of the way unfortunately its time for me to sell my Skyline i've had a lot of fun with it but i have just moved in to my first house and need the money for house stuff, As it states above its an Rb 20 turbo which has been dyno tuned by morpowa making 172.9rwkw @14 psi, the paint work could use some attention the roof and front quater could use a respray it hasnt bothered me enough to get it sprayed and there is a minor dent in the rear quater panel where a socket set hit it form in the boot, Overall the car looks good and is fun to drive. I've also put in a brand new century battery and new extra bright blue white headlights.

Any questions give me a call or just come have a look.

cheers, nathan

DSCF0700.jpg

DSCF0697.jpg

DSCF0696.jpg

DSCF0695.jpg

DSCF0694.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

pretty cheap considering bro.

gl with the sale. well worth the coin

what? $42,000 for this is cheap? maybe its time you put the crack pipe down eh lol jokin jokin, i know he means 4,200 but that not cheap if you cost in engineering and regency you end up with the same price as a engineered and regency approved one without all the hassle.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

HAHA if any one wants to pay $42,000 ill take it.. but i am only asking $4,200. thanks Sneaky its cheap cause i need money for my house and i have a company car now so also need the space. Mungy your right but compaired to other Rb20 31's for sale that are not enginnered it is cheap.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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
 Share



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • That's the most absurd thing I've ever heard. I would go cut bellhousing over that monstrosity of a flywheel all day, every day. It puts a lot more mass further from the last main bearing. I've had nothing but problems with Collins in the past and refuse to ever buy their products again. I would not trust anything they tell you. He's playing his salesman card.  I'm currently at 640whp on a mustang dyno (~770bhp) with the intentions of running E85 and a lot more power this upcoming spring. Cheers, 
    • Nah, it's not the reduced knock margin. It is a direct mechanical effect of having to initiate the combustion earlier, while the piston is still rising, which starts to exert combustion pressure on the rising piston earlier, making the rest of the engine work harder to finish driving the piston up to TDC where the combustion pressure stops being a negative and starts being a positive. Your modern engine that only needs ~10° to make MBT doesn't waste the other 10 or so degrees of crank rotation. That's almost all of it. The difference in knock margin might go either way. Remember that modern engines to which you are currently comparing the long tractor engine (the RB) are now running super high compression, direct injection, tricky cam control and maybe even cylinder pressure sensors. You're not comparing apples with other fruit. It's apples and sea weed, or some other evolutionarily primitive vegetation. And remember, squish only really comes into play at the very end of the stroke. It certainly does good things, but it is not the biggest contributor to what's going on. It is quite possibly much less important in 4 valve head than 2 valvers also, because there is so much less squish available to a 4 valve anyway.
    • Food for thought, a longer stroke motor would need less ignition timing vs. a shorter stroke motor requiring more ignition timing.
    • Thanks Duncan, HART is only 10 mins from me (I did my bike license there), it'd be awesome if it ran these types of things.  Sutton Road does look good and they take fewer cars than SMSP which is good.  Surely you have enough land to lay a few million tonnes of concrete and some sprinklers D? 
    • I thought an engine that needs more ignition timing to make power is going to result in less power due to reduced knock margin? More time for the combustion to propagate -> more time for it to heat up the rest of the mix to detonation.
×
×
  • Create New...