Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Was probably me. I play soccer and train Monday and Wednesday nights. And work at pacific Harbour golf club. What time was it?

You work at the golf club? Where's the hook up.

shows intent so i reckon it counts. I'm really in the need of new floor mates and a new gear shifter. Back when i first got the car many years ago i thought it would be super hectic to cut the gear stick really short and ever since then no gear knob actually fits it properly....

Also my electrics wiring knowledge is pretty poor. I took put a boost gauge to install one which has a bigger range. But when i wired the new one up it just showed full Boost and wont move. Should i re-wire the entire gauge or have i missed a step.

Edited by SCR48

cheers... Any one know a decent short shifter that fits ? Alot of the ebay ones I've read are a poor fit and are shit quality.

Bodo has the skills with resolving this,

As for washing the Car, I have a dedicated wash bay at work that I have use of. You are up this way perhaps we should organise a detailing day.

Bodo has the skills with resolving this,

As for washing the Car, I have a dedicated wash bay at work that I have use of. You are up this way perhaps we should organise a detailing day.

I've had my skyline for about 5 years by now i think and never once had it detailed.. never got the love it deserved when it was my daily driver

Hopefully my Bonnet gets re wrapped tomorrow.

:yes:

Was probably me. I play soccer and train Monday and Wednesday nights. And work at pacific Harbour golf club. What time was it?

not sure what time. Early afternoon maybe?

I enjoy golf, I'm shit at it but I enjoy it

Golf is boring, but cruising around a golf course talking shit and hitting shit with sticks sounds like it could be fun :)

Detailing old cars sucks....you find all those extra chips and dying paint that you know you cant do too much about without a total respray. having said that, it still looks good afterwards :) and well worth the elbow grease.

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

    • Ah right. Maybe my rb just loves chewing through batteries lol.
    • On the R34 can't you just unplug the IACV? This is the way I've always done it on the R33. Disconnect IACV, get it idling around 650rpm, and then do a power reset on the ECU to get it to relearn idle (factory ECU).   The big reason no one has touched on as to why you'd want to get the base idle right, is that it means the computer needs to make smaller adjustments to get a good idle at 700-750rpm.   Also, cleaning the IACV won't normally make the car suddenly idle lower or higher. The main issue with the IACV gumming up is that the valve sticks. This means the inputs the ECU gives, aren't translating to changes in air flow. This can cause idle choppy ness as the ECU is now needing to give a lot of input to get movement, but then it moves too far, and then has to do the same in reverse, and it can mean the ECU can't catch stalls quickly either.
    • 12.8 for a great condition, fully charged battery. If the battery will only ever properly charge to about 12.2V, the battery is well worn, and will be dead soon. When I say properly charge, I mean disconnect it from the car, charge it to its max, and then put your multimeter on it, and see what it reads about an hour later. Dieing batteries will hold a higher "surface charge", but the minutest load, even from just a multimeter (which in the scheme of things is considered totally irrelevant, especially at this level) will be enough over an hour to make the surface charge disappear.   I spend wayyy too much time analysing battery voltages for customers when they whinge that our equipment (telematics device) is causing their battery to drain all the time. Nearly every case I can call it within about 2 months of when the battery will be completely dead. Our bigger customers don't even debate it with me any more ha ha ha. A battery at 12.4 to 12.6 I'd still be happy enough with. However, there's a lot of things that can cause a parasitic draw in a car, first of which is alarms and immobilisers. To start checking, put your multimeter into amps, (and then connect it properly) and measure your power draw with everything off. Typical car battery is about 40aH. Realistically, you'll get about half this before the car won't start. So a 100mA power drain will see you pretty much near unstartable in 8 days.
    • Car should sit at 12.2 or more, maybe 12.6 or 12.7 when fully charged and happy. If there is a decent enough parasitic load then it will certainly go lower than 12.2 with time. You can't beat physics.
    • Ok guess I can rule out the battery, probably even the starter and alternator (maybe) as well. I'm gonna clean those leads and see what happens if it's still shit I might take it to an auto electrician. Unless the immobiliser is that f**king heavy, but it shouldn't be.  If I start the car every day, starts up perfectly never an issue. Isn't 12v low, shouldn't it be around 12.5v?
×
×
  • Create New...