Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Took a mate for a spin in the GTR yesterday and after a run down the local 1/4 (two white lines 400m apart) I did a u'y to go back home and wound it out to the speed cut, as soon as I hit it i backed off and continued home. as i dropped my mate off i noticed it was running like a pot was down. I thought "Hmmm not good" anyway no smoke coming out the back so not so bad, I gave it a bit (still being cautious) from an intersection and it seems to rev out clean. got home noticed the motor was shaking like a pot was down and thought "plugs" straight away, I checked the exhaust for an unburnt fuel smell and it didn't smell good and made my eye's water. Checked the the plugs and all good, Pulled the 12v feeds to the coils off 1 at a time and I noticed that pot 3 doesn't make a difference to the idle on or off. swapped plugs around and still pot three. So I got another plug in the coil and earthed it onto the motor and there is spark, about an inch long if you slwly pull it away. I pulled the injector electrical connection off and the idle does change so it must be all OK, so it has me a bit stumped. I re-set the computer, pull the positive off the battery and leave the internal light on 5 mins later the car still ran the same. a bit stumped, any ideas folks? could it be the speed cut out has messed something up? it stopped shaking after I had messed with it, but it still sounds different on idle.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/43587-gtr-sounds-like-its-missing/
Share on other sites

Ok, I bought a compression tester today and checked the compression. Going from the front cylinder to the back one here are the results.

1. 10.75 bar (150psi)

2. 11 bar (160psi)

3. 10.75 bar

4. 11 bar

5. 11 bar

6. 10.75 bar

Any other thought folks? I assume a leak down test checks how the cylinder holds the pressure and how quickly the pressure drops, didn't do that test. should i do that? I assume if a valve is burnt it's going to have a vastly different result to the other cylinders

yeah drove the car around and got it to operating temp then did the test immediately afterwards and got those results.

I bought brand new NGK plugs today, just v grooved standard plugs. With the apexi plugs when you started it it would cough, splutter, shake alot and struggle to hold idle, (like the timing was all out). put the new plugs in and it started fine doesn't shake but still sounded funny (sounds like it is lumpy).

A mechanic here with a 32 GTR reckons that I might have an adjustable exhaust cam gear. my timing is set to 15 degrees advanced and the pickup is nearly fully advanced compared to his 32 where it is sitting close to the middle. pick up is on cylinder 1 and light set to 0 and I have it on the 4th white line (line=timing 1=0 2=5 3=10 4=15). There is no obvious detenation under load as you would expect if the timing was that far out. I wonder if something could have come out of wack n the cam gear, if there is one on it?

on the Back of my GTR there is a "tuning sports RICAP" sticker. Anybody heard of this company? and what they do? When I was putting my alarm system in I noticed that the sticker had been removed off the ECU and that there was some altered wiring in the ECU wiring loom. Fact that the speed cut is still present makes me think it is nothing. I will have a look a exhaust cam gear later tonight.

I just started it and noticed the fuel pump takes a while to pressurise the fuel line. then when you start it then car struggles to start and idles badly for a sec or two. Could this be a fuel pressure problem?? Mind you my car never did this before I posted this thread.

Ok folks, beleive the problem has been found. took it to the mechanics today and he seems to have figured it out. he checked a few of the things I had and he noticed that the inlet manifold gaskets seem new. he pulled out a bit of carby cleaner spray and the inlet around no. 3 cylinder seems to have a small leak in it. spray a bit of the stuff around that area and the idle picks up, it's one of three things, the seals around the throttle shafts, the gasket onto the head or the gasket onto the plenum. using some co-contact cleaner i beleive it is the gasket onto the head, we will see! the boost spiking and dropping on the speed cut must have been enough to blow something out. who would have guessed!

Ok beleive it might be the seals around the throttle shafts, anyone ever had to replace these? it seems anything to do with the exhaust or intake manifolds it would be easier to pull the motor out and do the work, DOH! any idea's as to taking the inlet manifold off? I mean with enough messing around I will get it off but anyone got little tricks I should know that will make the job easier?

  • 4 weeks later...

Ok, it was the gasket between the head and that inlet manifold that sits between the throttle bodies and the head. a big leak right on No.3. Anyways I cleaned everything up throttle bodies where full of carbon. putting it all back on the car idled at around 1500rpm. I screwed the idle screw in and it dropped it to 1300rpm. I adjusted the screws on the throttle body but now it sits just over 1100rpm. I was looking at the throttle bodies when I had cleaned them and there are very, very small gaps around them when they are closed. using spray it can't find any leaks. I have reset the computer as well. any ideas????

the bypass air controll valve,its under the inlet manifold.It has an idle adjustment on it...you should be adjusting from there!What you might have to do is take it off and have a look on the side of the valve there is a hole that has been glued up from factory.This is the parts where they fit the spring in to hold the valve closed then they fit a screw in there and glued the door closed.....i have found that this spring looses its tension over the years so the go is to get all the glue out,give the screw a few more rotations(its not screwed all the way in from the factory,so there is a bit of life left in it)then re araldite the screw hole closed....simple ;)

Ok, I pulled the Bypass air control valve off and noticed how the spring looses it's tension, So a bit of fitting and turning and I had fixed that all up, but! The solenoid still doesn't operate. I noticed before I did all this work that if you disconected the supply to it the engine would struggle to idle. now it doesn't make a difference. but the solenoid operates with a 12v supply and the wiring gives a supply of 10.9v. I'm thinking that it could be throttle bodies. before I cleaned them they had stacks of carbon in them. when I had cleaned them they close properly but there are very, very small gaps around them when they are closed. i'm thinking that there is just enough air getting past to let it idle up. maybe time and a bit of carbon build up will fix it. I pumped heaps of spray into the engine bay trying to find a leak and i can't find jack.

Well it seems I'm doing allot of posting on my own thread but i'm still having drama's. I pulled the throttle bodies off again last night to check the gaps around the butterfly's. I took it to a mechanic today and asked him what he thought about the gaps (I had it touching top and bottom and gaps where more around the side). After a bit of fiddling he got the gap even around the whole butterfly, he then set them so you could just see around the whole thing. Does anyone know if you should be able to see any gaps or whether it should fully closed, when I cleaned them firstly I sprayed cleaner on the butterfly and if you didn't open it the cleaner wouldn't leak away.

Fully closed makes sense to me considering you have separate idle control. I rang up Nissan and apparently each throttle body is a complete assembly and your looking at over $2000!!!!!!

well the GTR has been at the mechanics due to me having no time to play with it, and after a couple of days of changing my clutch and rear cranks shaft seal (seal not faulty just changed it), finding out my front universals are stuffed and that my tappet cover leaks they have seemed to have found the problem. The air regulator when closed still allows air to pass through when it shouldn't, it should be half shut at 20 Degrees Celius and fully shut at 60 degrees and should time out and shut after 7 mins. It seems with the caked up throttle bodies letting no air past this bit of air flowing by didn't bother the idle. Now with the throttle bodies letting some air by again plus this bit of air coming through the air regulator makes the revs pick up. The AAC valve is fine after we had fixed it up earlier.

Anyone had problems with the air regulator on a GTR before, are they the same as the unit on a RB25? And whats the cost from Nissan? I'm prepared to buy genuine for the sake of it!

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

    • Hows your intake piping? Are you still running stock? Having in the stock AFM position would mean, if the BOV was shut/venting out, it'd create the almost stalling kind of effect right // "the rich pulse behaviour" due to MAF thinking air is flowing ? But this would be better than having the bov in the stock position + MAF on/just before cross over piping right?
    • Essentially, yes. Although I wouldn't put the AFM on the crossover pipe. I'd want to put it into what amounts to the correct size tube, which is more easily done in the intercooler pipework. I bought a mount tube for card stile AFM that replaces the stock AFM - although being a cheap AliExpress knockoff, it had not flange and I had to make and weld my own. But it is the same length and diameter as the stock RB AFM, goes on my airbox, etc etc. I don't have a sick enough rig to warrant anything different, and the swap will take 5 minutes (when I finally get around to it and the injectors & the dyno tune).
    • So to summarise, the best thing to do is to move recirc to between turbo and IC, and maf on the crossover pipe. Meaning I'd need a recirc flange, drill a hole in the piping on turbo outlet area. And drill hole on crossover to fit/weld maf sensor? Either that or put the MAF on the turbo inlet right?  Is an aftermarket recirc/blowoff valve recommended? Do currently have family in Japan so could probably bring something back with maybe a cheeky lil SuperAutobacs run?
    • Yep, so far most have said that it looks like corrosion on the wall from piston not moving. Which then has probably damaged the oil rings and caused those vertical marks. The longest the engine was still after the rebuild, was the winter of 2018 - 2019, plus the boat trip to Japan. When I shipped the car, it had normal gas in the tank but before that winter pause, it had E85 in tank.  In any case, even if either one of those was the cause, it happened close to 6 years ago and the car has been driven something like 30 000kms after the fact. Again, apart from the plugs and the dip stick, there is nothing in the way the car runs that would indicate what has been going on in the engine. I am going to consult a shop and ask their opinion, what would be the best approach. I do have some access to a garage I could use to diagnose further myself, but time is very restrictive. Might end up buying another engine that could be used while this one is being remedied. Without pulling the head, it will be impossible to find out if it needs another bore, but here's to hoping a hone would suffice.  Goddamnit, I would really have preferred this not happening.  
    • Boot is going to be replaced eventually. I just wire brushed what I could and rust converted. Then painted in rust kill primer. the spoiler also got repainted and plugs replaced on the ends. The under side of the bonnet is going to be black also, currently white. But red on the top side, same colour code as the silo to begin.
×
×
  • Create New...