Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

i think it really comes down what your block looks like - if you bores are fine, keep the stock pistons - just replace the rings etc. But if you got scarring and sh*t on the bore, then you may want consider a bore out to 86.5mm which will mean A/m pistons.

You've mentioned you want to keep it reliable - although it may cost a bit more, doing a little extra then what your've got listed should give you a fairly bullet proof engine.

are you pulling the engine out before you sent it to the shop or are you getting the workshop to do everything?

  • Replies 90
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

This thread has gone from bad to worse.

Now it's up to not using .20thou pistons to save money? Bore and hone is $180!!!! Oversized pistons are the same cost as stock sized.

Would you like to do it once correctly and have it last, or skimp on vital things and be wondering in 6 months why it's died again?

Just save your coin and take it to an RB shop who knows what they're doing, let them do what's needed and then pay the bill.

Edit: not trying to sound like an ass, just seen this happen before.....a lot

Also heres something to consider; there's now going to be tiny bits of bearing material throughout the oil, all of the oil.

So anywhere the oil goes (engine of course but oil cooler too), needs to be cleaned out properly. So cooler core and the part you may not have thought of yet, the head. A head service isn't a big deal while the engine is apart but it's like anything and not free.

If you just pull the engine out, pull the sump off, and try to swap bearings (you'll have to pull the crank out to machine it), then put it all back together the problem is you don't know how much bearing material is in the head waiting to wreck your day soon.

I'm happy to help as I have for others in this position but not if you won't allow it to be done properly the first time.

I am getting a Nissan N1 pump for my build.

But that's just me staying with Nissan parts.

And it can handle the power you want for you build and a lot more if you decide to tune up for more power.

If you have the money go the Tomei or Nitto but as you mentioned cash is a slight issue atm so just go the N1. They are a good pump regardless of some of the things that you might read on the forum about them.

For your power goals it will be perfect and give you room to play with if you decide to down the track.

Ps dont forget your oil restrictor ! :)

I know of at least of 3 people running unmodified N1's in their big single Rb26 drift cars that see regular limiter bashing at high 300 - low 400kw and they do just fine.

Too many people are too quick to bag them out imo.

The car is getting

CP Pistons

Manly Turbo tough rods 1000hp

Tomei Head gasket

Tomei Baffle pan

Mines Cam baffle

Tomei Oil restrictor

ACL bearings

studs

Tomei valve springs

Gates racing timeing belt kit

Gasket kit

probs more that i cant think of but thats the main guts of it. i will see how i go when it gets closer to it, its around about 1k more for the nitto pump if i can strech it out then ill bag that or go the N1 if i cant.

Edited by T4NK

Only alterations might be Nismo belt and Nitto pump.

Ever seen a cutaway comparison of a N1 pump Vs Nitto?

I have an N1 oil pump. It's behaving itself.

My son's VS2 Nur has had its N1 pump changed to a Nitto just for precautionary reasons (by the previous owner).

I know of at least of 3 people running unmodified N1's in their big single Rb26 drift cars that see regular limiter bashing at high 300 - low 400kw and they do just fine.

Too many people are too quick to bag them out imo.

My $0.02 - I think alot of it comes done to who builds the engine and how anal they are about bearing/general clearences/tolerences. I beleive Its the shock loading caused by excissive clearence between the colour and gears that cause the pumps to fatique crack and fail...This can happen in all pumps, but its more prenounced in the n1's & stockers due to the relative strength of the material (sintered metal vs say en24(or there abouts) for the nitto). One day, i'll sit down and run an FEA analyse on a few of the pump designs to show the weak points in the designs.

However, IMOH all pumps will work in the hands of a compentent engine builder. The tomei/nitto just offer an additional safety factor.

If you do go down the tomie/nitto route, i strongly recommend getting a sump extension to 8L and baffels installed to prevent oil starvation due to the higher pump flow rate.

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

    • Not R7R. Meant to type R&R, obviously enough.
    • Bugger "making it look stock". I put one conventional internally fused Hella relay behind each globe. I just pulled the plugs off the back of the globes and built new loom segments with male and female plug parts to match up to the original loom and the globe, and used the original power wires to each globe coming from the switch through the original loom plug to trigger the relays. Ran a big fat (also separately fused) power wire across the front of the car to feed all the relays. It's as ugly as f**k, but it is wedged down between the headlight and battery on the RHS and the airbox and headlight on the LHS, and no-one ever looks in my engine bay, and on the odd occasion that they do I simply give no f**ks for what they think. Fully reversible - not that you'd ever want to. For f**k's sake. It's a Skyline. They made million of the bloody things. We've been crashing them into roadside furniture for 30 years now. There is a negative side effect to putting relays on the headlights. The coil current is too little to properly clean the contacts in the switches and they get blacked up and you have to open them up every couple of years and clean them manually. I have 25 years of experience on this point.
    • I was poking through the R34 wiring diagrams vs R33 and noticed that the R34 has proper headlight relays while the R33 is like the R32 and sends full headlight power through the headlight switch. I'm not afraid of wiring but I really would like to do this in a way that looks OEM (clipping into open positions on the OEM relay box) and also unlike the factory wiring which interlocks the high beam and low beam on the halogen series 1 GTR headlights I want to make it such that turning on the high beams keeps the low beams on as well. Any advice on how to locate the specific connectors + crimp terminals + relays I need? I was thinking one NO relay for low beams and another for combined high + low running off the factory high beam headlight connector. I don't really want to splice into a crusty old probably discontinued factory harness so fully reversible is my goal here.
    • Pretty sure they run the same engine as the Q50 hybrid which specifies 95 RON.  I ran 98 in mine for a while, but it made no difference in performance or economy, so I have been using 95 for the last few years.  I have never hit 6.0L/100km, but have returned mid to high 6 on the highway.  Being a hybrid, fuel economy is a lot more dependant on how you drive it.  At 110km/h, mine never goes into EV mode on the highway, so returns closer to 7.5L/100. urban driving can return low 8s if you are careful or over 10 if you are a bit more enthusiastic on the throttle.
    • About a quarter of what you want to do. It's only R7R, not R&dismantle&replaceparts&reassemble&R. ? It is stock. I already told you, you will NOT have broken those. It's f**king 4th gear for Christ's sake. You just chipped the teeth off.
×
×
  • Create New...