Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I am constantly surprised at how good the R35 is; my car has just basic bolt-ons and an E85 tune. About 390awkw and the thing is docile as a Maxima. 10.7 @ 132mph, great circuit times too, yet anyone could drive it to the shops. It's an astonishingly versatile car.

Cars with similar power can be total P!GS to live with.

However, it's becoming clear GTR's are capable of much bigger numbers.

Question is, how much is too much?

700awhp, 800, 1000?

At what point do we start destroying the drivability of the car?

With other cars i've had, i can isolate the point at which i crossed the line, the car stopped being fun, it became a chore to live with, and the gains on the track were not as linear as you would first imagine.

Anyone with honest/frank thoughts on this? (for R35)

Edited by LSX-438
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/339361-r35-power/
Share on other sites

Mark, how do you feel about 450awkw, do you think the car can take more power (and use it) on the circuit?

interesting question. I would say another 50-70 kw would still be useful. I really have to feather the throttle in corners with that power for much longer than I did when stock but it is linear and controllable. the extra power really sees the time on the straights plummet.

I also reckon with more experience I will obviously be able to progressively use more power earlier. I am carefully monitoring how early I am getting on the throttle, % throttle inputs and time to full throttle on my lap data, a handy feature with the Vbox can module. you can see the % throttle input on my videos, it isn't much coming out of some corners before I feel it getting loose. mind you I have never tracked with new tyres, always used second hand slicks which I personally get a an extra couple of days out of to save money on rubber! next year we are looking at a new custom turbo and exhaust manifold setup to get another 70kw or so, challenge will be responsiveness and linear delivery. if you want an out of the box solution the HKS 800 or the Alpha 10 package from AMS may get you this over the willall turbos, I dont know. the AMS guys seem to run pretty high boost though I think and I have no idea how linear there power delivery is. I suspect they start suffering the trade off top end power/responsiveness.

The willall turbos though do a great job and the balance of top end and mid range responsiveness is a big improvement, easily reflected in lap times coming down. they are a pretty cheap option too when compared to other turbo solutions

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/339361-r35-power/#findComment-5482816
Share on other sites

The 2nd hand slicks are great value for what they are, but there is nothing like the grip with the new ones. You have to try them. It's almost a crime to use 2nd hand slicks, given the capability of your car.

I wish there was a way to make them more affordable.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/339361-r35-power/#findComment-5483409
Share on other sites

U bought a grt but cant justify buying new slicks. Cmon man! Its like buying a gtr and using cheap fuel to run it.

New slicks are $3200/set and (depending on compound) may last as little as a single day.

It's pretty simple.

2nd hand ones are great for practice/setup and working out what works in terms of diameter/width etc etc.

Even 2nd hand slicks can be WAAY better vs r-specs (costing 10x the price of 2nd hand ones).

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/339361-r35-power/#findComment-5496292
Share on other sites

personally I reckon at 450awkw you are getting close to the limit of what LSX is talking about. With much more power the car will start to become a real handful on track and times won't necessarily improve, on top of that reliability will start to become questionable and of course costs for consumables goes up. as you've found in the past, as maintenance costs go up at some point fun goes down.

it's all speculation though, maybe the happy point on a 35 is more like 500awkw, but personally I reckon around 400awkw is the happy point. you can get there without spending a fortune on bolt ons or internals, car still behaves nicely, electronics aren't having too much of a fit all the time, and maintenance costs shouldn't be much worse than a standard one. so you are getting a lot of fun for not much money.

consider though in a 32 GTR that happy point is more like 280awkw. after that it's big money on turbos, reliability gear etc and drivability starts to suffer from 350 onwards. so things have certainly improved!

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/339361-r35-power/#findComment-5496325
Share on other sites

I recently had Paul Stokell drive the car. he was really impressed at the performance. looking at the data he sets the car up faster and gets to full throttle much quicker. an example is the hairpin turn 6 at QR where he gets it on full throttle 40-50 m earlier. this results in about 7kmph higher terminal speed in the straight. there are a few other tricks to the circuit but I wont divulge them all here :)

despite all this we reckon technique and set up are still yet to be maximised to make use of all that power in the corners

after planning the next few mods for this summer we have decided to leave the car at current power levels (435awkw - 580awhp) with the willall turbos

we have further lightening mods, a roll cage and some suspension tuning to happen for the new year.

new track wheels arrive next week! 10.5 up front and 12 inch out back.

12 inch rears should help get the power down better out of the corners

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/339361-r35-power/#findComment-5499801
Share on other sites

I think the trick is balancing lag with power as the R35 is a heavy beast to get moving out of the corners, give it a torque hole for another 500rpm and it will be slower. We choose a mild turbocharger upgrade for this very reason. Lowering the weight should improve - everything :blush:

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/339361-r35-power/#findComment-5500867
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Neil you will find that the Aussies will be gobsmacked with your 700awhp figure as they most done understand the variance between Aussie and US dyno numbers. For those that are interested 700awhp on a Dynojet or similar is almost spot on 420-430awkw on a Mainline over here in Aus :P

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/339361-r35-power/#findComment-5524339
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


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • I'm thinking that this is such a small part of the problem that you could easily forego the vac pump and just achieve 90% of what you need, which is keeping the gate open when off boost. It's not as if there are not already techniques to keep a gate fully closed under boost. After all, you have boost. Just use a wastegate actuator that will allow you to apply the boost on the appropriate side, just like every external gate out there.
    • Heres another fitment photo. redrilled the pattern to 5x112, and threw my audi´s rims on. had to touch the upper control arms with grinder, because the "sharp corner" was sticking about 2-3mm on the tire path. i have the "fender lip" mostly cut off, otherwise these (too) would contact with it. 20x9.5 ET25 rear    265/30 20x8.5 ET20 front    255/30 they are temporary, and look too big for the chassis. searching for 19s to it.
    • From experience, it will come back to bite you haha.
    • Background: my BMW 225i hatchback (rebodied MINI/X1) came with 3x RE003 and 1x Goodyear Asymmetric something. The RE003 roared and slid around, the Goodyear side was quiet and grippy. Definitely my car was thrashed before it got sent to dealers. My brother also got RE003 all round on his old VA WRX STI, I wasn't impressed with them, car was loud so can't comment on noise. Anyway, Hankook stopped making/updating V12 Evo2. So bought S1 Evo3 runflats. Great daily duties tyre and not that harsh ride. Tyre reviews site/youtube rated them as best stopping in the rain and I believe them. Next set, Goodyear Asymmetric 5 non-RFT. It beat PS4 in tests and is like $100 cheaper, so put them on. Great tyre, more grip then S1 Evo3 but a tad noisier as expected, still rocking them. Next set I am looking to go runflats, probably the new Hankook Evo. Although the new Pirelli PZ5 did well in tyrereviews test. Or go Goodyear Asymmetric 6 which was top tyre last year. The V12 Evo2 on my gen5 Liberty GT wagon did great in cold condition (drove to snowy mountains for a day so my husky can feel his ancestor's roots). Super impressive performance for $120 each lol. Never skimp on tyres, brakes, suspension. There's old pics of my R31's crappy random brake pads bending in the caliper at Oran Park track day somewhere around here. Anyway, my 2 cents.
×
×
  • Create New...