Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Matsuri%20Small.jpg

Hey Guys,

As most are aware we will be hosting a 24 hour Drift Matsuri in October this year.

Entries are now open and the entry form is available.

First 100 entries will get an extra 2 hours on the track! So get in early!

Entry Form - HERE

Neil

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/372700-24hr-drift-matsuri-qld-raceway/
Share on other sites

53 entries.... over half way through the early bird 100.

Over 1/5 the way through our entry cap. Once I hit 250 I cant take anymore, so get in early to make sure you get a spot!

  • 4 weeks later...

Important Announcement- 24 Hour Drift Matsuri

Attention: Drift Drivers

The original 24 hour format event will now be run over 26 hours. Unfortunately we have to make the Drift Matsuri a 2 day event as we have been unable to have of planning approvals updated to allow for the 24 hour format in time for this October.

The track will be open for the first 100 entries from 7am on Sat 8th with all other entries commencing at 9am. The Circuit, Skid Pan and Short Course will run non-stop until 10pm on Saturday and reopen at 7am Sunday until 6pm.

Canteen will be available 24 hours a day during the 2011 Drift Matsuri along with showers for competitors.

We are looking forward to an exciting non-stop 24 hour event for October 2012.

Regards,

Queensland Raceways

www.qldraceways.com.au

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

    • Probably too late to reply to this, but worth a try. It's not calliper flex, the calliper as a whole is moving so it has to be calliper mounting bracket flex.  Calliper mounting brackets are designed to stop the calliper rotating, they don't need to be designed heavy duty to stop the calliper moving in and out.  Whatever it is is not the major cause of poor pedal feel, the outer pistons are moving towards the disc rotor the same amount as the inner pistons are moving away from the disc rotor.  Hence no change in fluid usage, what extra fluid is needed to move the outer pistons is recovered from the inner pistons. For a calliper to move as a whole by far the most common reason is the rotor is not perfectly centred in the calliper.  The first thing I check is that hub face is perfectly clean, bare metal, where the rotor hats contacts it.  Then I check the that rotor is firmly held in place by at least 3 wheel nuts (or equivalent). If all of the above are confirmed to be in perfect alignment then I would check the piston sizes and ensure that the 3 inner pistons and 3 outer pistons have matching diameters (eg; 28/32/36mm).  I have seen a no name 4 spot calliper that had 1 of the 4 pistons a different diameter. Maybe I missed it, are both the callipers exhibiting the same problem? I would remove the transfer pipe and inspect it to make sure that there are no restrictions. Maybe you already have but if not I would return them with the video and have them confirm all of the above.   Hope that helps Cheers Gary    
    • If you have the original log book and it didn't have a chassis number quoted, then no money required.  I have "rechassied" a number of race cars, no problem as long as you have the original log book.   Cheers Gary
    • Well the good news is that it won't run any worse with an atmo bov than it does with no bov, I've owned a few Nissans over the years (r32, s15 and now r33), the stalling issue caused by a bov or no bov while still having an afm is easy enough to live with, most people get used to driving them and just feathering the throttle when you come to a stop to avoid it stalling. Changing to a proper ecu with a map sensor is ideal but in the short term I'd just slap in the bov if you really want the whoosh sound. I looked into the pass through type maf like the R35 one above but decided against it as the amount of oil and crap flowing through the hot side would mean you'd have to clean it often to keep it working.
    • Build an 800hp motor. Make it as bullet proof as you want, you WILL still break things. Like, the rest of the car. Heck, even as a dead stock car, things will still break, but the more power, the more everything else will let go easier. From gearbox gear sets, to extra stress on the chassis/mounts, more stress on diff, axles, tailshaft, even the suspension mounts. Check out the motorsport build that last year went to a Bosch motor sport ABS setup, and now can brake so damn hard it's twisting mounts for suspension/subframe etc. Now if the brakes can do it, imagine what happens with super grippy tyres and 800hp in a low gear...   Shit, I'm presently out fixing the girlfriends daily driver that rarely sees past 3,000rpm and is used to cart the dogs around in. Everything WILL break. If you don't want it to break, don't drive it. And then laugh, as it will still break without even being driven!
×
×
  • Create New...