Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

slide1cd.png

Bolt-on Stainless Steel High flow Catalytic Converter from Boost Bitz JDM

  • 100 cell steel Catalyst
  • Super High flow design
  • 100% stainless steel construction
  • Hand made in Australia
  • Bolt-on performance upgrade
  • Available with or without sensor port
  • All TIG welded
  • 12 months warranty

The special price being offered here to SAU forum members is $275 inc. Shipping in OZ. The normal RRP is $290 + shipping. Payment is excepted by bank deposit, PAYPAL or cash when you visit our shop.

Boost Bitz JDM has been servicing the import community for over 6 years both from our mechanical workshop and parts sales and we now own one of Sydney's NEWEST Mainline digital AWD Dynos. We are all qualified motor mechanics at Boost Bitz which gives you the piece of mind you need when sourcing parts and asking for advice on upgrading the performance of your car, and did i mention we all own NISSAN imports!

Boost Bitz JDM is located at 5/43 Leighton Place, Hornsby NSW. About 35 mins north of the CBD.

For any equiries or orders please contact Chad directly on 0433 405 788 or email to [email protected]

  • 3 weeks later...
arre you also able to get exhaust systems and intercoolers at all?

We have stainless R33 GTSt Turbo XS split front pipes in stock to match theses Hi-flow cats and the Blitz and Hybrid intercooler kits are popular for R34 and R33.

Don't forget we supply, fit and Dyno tune in house also!

  • 2 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...

Thanks mate, we just finished the S15 cat and our test car does sound alot better too.

But most importantly it picked up response!

  • 3 weeks later...


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • I’d love to find some where that can recover the dashes to look brand new and original. Mine has a very slight bubble, nothing compared to some I’ve seen though 
    • $170K. I asked one of the guys there as a joke if that price was just for the passenger seat as it was where the price sheet was... he tried really hard to crack a smile 😄 He also mentioned that every single part of the car was inspected and either restored or replaced with a new or as new part, or made from scratch. The interior was incredible, every inch like a new car.
    • Time for a modernisation, throw out the AFM, stock O2s, ECU into the e-waste bin. Rip out the cable throttle, IACV, pedal, etc. into the scrap metal bin. DBW, e-throttle, modern ECU, CANbus wideband, and the thing will drive better than when it left the factory.
    • I agree, don't go trusting those trims. As I said, first step is to put the logger away, and do the basics in diagnosis.   I spend plenty of time with data loggers. I also spend plenty of time teaching "technicians" why they need to stop using their data loggers, and learn real diagnostics.   The amount of data logs I play with would probably blow most people away. I don't just use it to diagnose. I log raw CAN data too, as a nice chunk of my job is reverse engineering what automotive manufacturers are doing.
    • I'm aware, but unless you're actually seeing the voltage the ECU is seeing and you're able to verify the sensors are actually working I find it hard to just trust STFT/LTFT. I will say, logging the ECU comes naturally to me because it's one of the lowest effort methods of diagnosis and I do similar things in my day job all the time. Staring at 20+ charts looking for something that isn't quite right isn't for everyone. NDS1 allows you to log almost everything so that's normally what I do and then sort out the data later. 
×
×
  • Create New...