Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

what sensor out the bottom? IF you have some mechanical experience pulling a gearbox out is a piece of piss. IF YOU DONT know what you are doing take it to someone you does

What sensore at the bottom are you talking about?

In regards to where it bolts up to the block, you just gotta make sure the box is dropped down off its cross member to get to the top bolts. Unless your trying to get them from the top which ive never down before.

What sensore at the bottom are you talking about?

In regards to where it bolts up to the block, you just gotta make sure the box is dropped down off its cross member to get to the top bolts. Unless your trying to get them from the top which ive never down before.

il take a photo of it when i get home its on the the bottom right hand sid eof the gear box and its got wires coming out from it. im pretty sure its the speedo sensor? im under the impression that the r33s have this? doing the box tonight

pretty easy on a hoist

not fun if youre doing it on the ground

take out shifter from gear box, theres a circlip holding it in

undo gearbox mount

undo starter motor

undo all gearbox bolts from bellhousing

take slave cylinder off the side of gbox

undo any plugs

take off tailshaft

and out comes the gbox

make sure you put a rag in the end of the box so all the fluid doesnt spill out

They are a easy box from memory when i did mine.

You will need 4 jack stands a decent jack, decent set of spanners and socket set with extentions and oil drain bucket. And a strong mate

this is how i do it

1. Disconnect the battery

2. Remove gear shift boot

3. Remove the gear selector by undoing the circlip

2. Jack up the car as high as you can and put the stands under. make sure it is stable before getting under it.

4. Drain the oil out of the box if you are replacing the box or its oil

3. Undo the bolts on the tail shaft and remove it

4. Unbolt the clutch slave and tie it to one side

4. Than i undo the starter motor and leave the wiring connected to one side where it wont fall

5. Undo the bottom bell housing bolts leave 2 easy accessible bolts in just loosen them.

6. Undo the gearbox cross member and drop the back of the box down

7. Disconnect the wiring and the seedo sender

8. Get your extensions and go from the back of the box to undo the top bell housing bolts.

9. Now get your mate under there with you and undo the final bell housing bolts and using a pry bar or a big screw driver and leaver the box from the back of the motor with your mate holding the back of the box up level. Be careful as they can come quickly or sometimes be a real bastard if it is not coming you have more than likely missed a bolt once it is separating from the motor pull it back and it should drop out they are pretty heavy.

and thats all there is to it someone that knows what they are doing should have it out easily in a hour and a half

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 be warned that that turbo will not be a direct re-fit to the car. The exhaust housing is, of course, in the same place. It has to be - it's bolted to the exhaust manifold. So the dump will fit up. But the centre housing is not as long, so the comp housing will move backwards. This will affect both the turbo inlet and the outlet. There is fab work that needs to be done. Yes. it has one, it should have one. Paper gasket.
    • I only recently purchased the vehicle, it came with the flex setup but the current tune is e85 only, which is why im wanting to get the tune redone to enable a mixture.  First i need to get the exhaust redone tho. I was thinking of getting a varex muffler but it sems they dont fit well in the 33 (hang low because of the valve mechanism which sticks out on top) and generally dont sound good. So that leaves me with redoing the entire exhaust (more resonators and mufflers) so its not a menace when i come and go from home, and then have the aes dump valve somewhere along the line to really open it up. I was thinking of having it before the cat but after seeing how insanely loud it will be (on a vl turbo) im thinking of putting it more towards the rear of the car, after one of the resonators. 
    • At this point I'm just 'hoping' it's the turbo seals. I did speak to someone who said it's normal for these turbos to have a bit of axial play? Not gonna lie I've never checked a turbo for axial play before but you could hear it tapping a bit as I moved it back and forth. Surely that's too much? My theory is (could be completely wrong), bad axial play, worn bearings, bad seals, oil into dump/compressor side, burns in exhaust = blue smoke. On a timing belt related note, my crank pulley was missing that front plate that sits in front of the timing belt. It's that metal round plate. It did have the rear one, and the woodruff keys are in the crank which was nice. Can anyone confirm if the NEO det engine has a front plate, im sure it would to protect the front of the timing belt or something. Water pumps...the pump I got was an NPW (yes grill me if I should've got a genuine one lol). It has a smooth mating surface, kit came with a pretty pathetic looking paper gasket. Do I need to use any RTV or just trust the gasket will work because its a smooth mating surface? Cheers legends have a good Easter break!
    • Cheers man, I thought the same.   Bit of an update on it all. It was definitely blue smoke, not grey after all. It didn't really smell oily but it was blue after all. Also puffing just the smallest amount on idle with no throttle.   I ended up pulling the intake and exhaust off and there was around 3mm of axial play on the turbo shaft. So I figured we'll that's buggered and sent it off to get hi-flowed at hypergear. Haven't got it back yet.   I haven't compression tested it yet. Had a look in the cylinder and cylinder 1 spark plug, looked a bit sooty but not oily. Then I've just started doing my timing belt because it's age is unknown.
    • In that case it is probably stock. It lives in the navigator side footwell behind the plastic trim just in front of the a pillar.
×
×
  • Create New...