Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hi all, the time has come to sell my R34 GT-T sedan, it is silver grey metallic, has tiptronic either on the console or steering wheel, original 17" alloys with good tyres, good trim, Climate control, front and side airbags, traction control, a couple of minor blemishes, and is ACT registered.

This is a great car to drive and is mostly ummolested apart from a pod filter.

Perfect for the family Skyline driver with young kids, since two doors are a pain with booster seats etc.

It is a 1998 model, first imported with 93000 kms, I am the second owner in Oz. It has some of the japanese service stickers on the drivers door opening, but since I dont read Japanese I cant tell you what they say.

For SAU members only I am offering it for sale for $8500 firm,(apologies to others asking $12K and upwards) I know this is the cheapest one available in this condition but I have too many toys (7 motorcycles, R32 GTR etc) and some have to go.

I also need a cheaper car for my daughter, auto, four cylinder, power steering and air conditioning, not turbocharged, not Korean and I may take it as part payment.

This will be done on a first in first served basis, the first person with the money owns it.

I will post photos as soon as possible.

I can be contacted by PM or call me (Tony) on 0421985762 at reasonable times of the day.

Edited by Tony Brown

Ohh!

My wife has a 2002 Holden Cruze, blue.

Auto, 1.5lt

120,oookm (have to check)

Very well looked after.

Extremly good on fuel (around 5 to 6 lt per 100km)

Aircon needs re-gas.

Is that the kind of thing you are looking for?

(after driving my Toyota V8 she keeps wanting more power.)

I've got a little green Mazda 323 Astina? Runs quite well on fuel, aircon needs to be regassed and has paint protector peeling from bonnet. Other then that it's not too bad, wouldn't say it's immaculate, but would come up nice with a little bit of attention and care. Also, it's manual. Beautiful looking car by the way. PM me if you're interested.

Ok, due to some truly stupendous "OFFERS" LOL! to swap or take as part payment for overpriced cars that are of no interest , I am no longer interested in part swaps, swaps (was never interested is swaps) or any other offers than just being able to buy the cheapest R34 GT-T in Australia for $8500, no offers, firm price, if you can find another one cheaper...........go buy it!

The only swap I am prepared to take is $8500 in Australian Dollars.

Sorry if I seem a little harsh on this but if you were privvy to some of these "OFFERS" you would understand where I am coming from.

Swap my Skateboard, ol skool fibreglass chicago long deck with new trucks and 3 new poly urethane wheels + a $30 vodafone text card (Unused!) PS. Will throw in my almost new Nokia 8210 too. :rofl:

Wake up clowns - this one is worth over $12k.

Cash up the $8500 or please keep quiet huh.

Edited by Sinista32

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

    • $53.35 and a double din Pioneer head unit that I have...
    • Put a camera facing your dashboard so you can film the gauges. Head out to a straight but of road, and filming it as you go from a stand still at wide open throttle to as fast as you can/feel comfortable doing. Then film the dash board as you for example accelerate like normal onto a freeway. This will give us an indicator from Speedo of your expectation of slow, and will give us the rpm reading too to see if it's shifting. (Auto still has tacho from memory)
    • Buy yourself the cooling system pressure tester. Being able to pump it up, and have a gauge on it, AND have a cold engine makes it much easier / practical to diagnose. Additionally as the engine isn't running, you can listen for pin hole leaks as well as watching if pressure drops away. In addition, you can pressurise and while doing so, watch all the little rubber hoses. Some fail very brittle, and will just leak, while others can end up very soft and bulge. While a bulging hose isn't necessarily leaking, one of those small ones starting to stretch / expand in a bad way is an indicator that you'll be looking to replace that one soon   Depending on if this is a project car, or you'll be dailying it in the summer months would alter how I'd be most comfortable with driving the car and how I'd replace. If you're planning to use it as a daily, with no backup, I'd pull the engine, and replace all the external oil/water lines in one big swoop. At the same time do the timing belt, water pump, tensioners etc. Do not open the engine at all. We just want to replace all the things that are inexpensive as a single item, but a PITA when they go. By doing the above, you've made the car from a bunch of age related issues more reliable. If it's a project, and you like swearing while trying to reach into dirty hard to reach places to replace a single hose that may or may not be the leaky one. Just replace the leaking/bad ones as they need it. If it's a project and you'd rather swear at the car once and enjoy it as much as possible, then refer to the process I mentioned in how I'd want to do it if it were a daily. However, the approaches above do come down to how much spare pocket change you have. Pulling the engine and dropping over a thousand dollars on parts, may not be practical for you. Oh, if engine outing, I'd replace as many silicon/rubber inlet joiners as possible too.
    • Yeah, they're pretty dumb though...ie; they'll throw a solenoid error if the solenoid is dead, shorted, wiring is open circuit, or even if the driver transistor has failed (they can't self-diagnose much, they can only test inputs/outputs)... but if you wanted to try, I believe it's this protocol....(uses a long pulse indicator with short pulse counter)...    
    • Yeah I'll do what I can without taking off any major parts for now. If it becomes clear I won't get far with the engine in the car I'll have to think about the next steps. I am not too stuck on keeping everything 100% OEM, if there is better solutions, like converting most lines to braided with AN adapters, I'd rather do that than buy overpriced new "shit" parts.
×
×
  • Create New...