Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I used to have a hicas lock bar but it snaped off while driving :-{

So I now have the standard Hicas setup which I have never had before. To be honest it kinda freaks me out a little. Sometimes it makes the arse of the car feel like jelly... I am slowly getting used to it though.

Does anybody out there experience similar things with hicas?

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/43823-does-hicas-freak-you-out/
Share on other sites

The thread on the bar gave way so the rear right steering arm fell out. The rear right wheel started to steer my car all over the road. Lucky it was only at 80 kph. The day before this happened is was doing 200kph racing my mate :-{ That would have killed me and him

The HICAS certainly does give you that "I have no idea what's going on back there feeling" especially as speed increases. I had mine disconnected electronically, only because i didn't wan't the car to be straining against a "lock" mechanism. Centainly makes a difference with it turned off - and wouldn't even try taking it onto a track with it turned on.

I found HICAS to feel like the arse end was rolling on high profile tyres at first.Discovered that if you don't turn the steering wheel as much into corners (which is hard to get used to) then the car feels beautifuly planted on the road.I have the 1st HICAS though,which doesn't use a rear rack,so this may differ in feel to R32>

drifting isn't about skidding out of a corner, its about getting the car sideways into the corner and coming out of a corner straight... which is what HICAS will do if controlled properly, of course, its easier without HICAS (allowing you to oppy lock), but not impossible.

all HICAS does is make your steering more responsive at high speed, you just have to learn not to turn the wheel like you got no power steering.

What's dangerous is opposite locking with hicas (fun fun fun) as it has some wierd effects :P

Hicas only works at higher speeds, doesn't it? So it's not as if your girlfriend would notice the rear wheels steering, even so slightly, when I was parking the car or something? (excuse my lacking in this dept.)

Hicas kicks in properly at 80kmh and it moves the rear wheels .7 of a degree.

Hardly enough to throw you off track during "Normal Driving"

On the track yes it's tendancy to sharpen the angle of the car does make it tricky to judge the corner.... but after a few corners you get used to it. I have driven cars with and without HICAS on the track the car without HICAS and a rear brace is much more ridgid and "Feels" planted in the corner. Mine with HICAS the steering wheel tends to want to fight back but cornering is about the same in my opinion

guys my hicas doesnt work, the only time i see the hicas light is when car starts for 2 seconds then it turns off. i think its disconnect but where would it be disconnected from, and wat does the lock bar look like, i wanna find out? also when hicas kicks in does the light turn on??

also depends what model of cvar you have...

ECR33 = Hicas Equipped

ER33 = non Hicas model

HCR32 = Hicas Model

HR32 = non Hical Model

as you may have guess the C stands for HICAS

H = 2.0L Engine

E = 2.5L Engine

well it is a ecr33 cos it has it in the engine bay, and i do have a hicas system looking thing in the boot, just dont feel it kick in or the ass become easier to turn, wat should i look at, i want to experiance hicas like u guys :D

I've managed to get used to it. Theres a big corner on the way home from work which I use to get the feel of it every day. My car has front and rear strut braces and they changed the feel of the hicas a bit. It gets small precise twitches from the rear through a corner, feels kinda weird as you all know. A week after i bought my car, i tried a drift in the rain and lost it and i couldnt gain control of it, very scary stuff, i had to hit the brakes and cross my fingers id miss the guard rail. i didnt know what went wrong (later i learned about hicas). anyway, since then ive learnt that if your crossed up, point the steering wheel (dont yank on it) where you wanna go, slightly understeering and keeing power on and it will go in that direction 99% of the time. A good way to learn is to get on a skid pan or shopping centre car park and go mad for a while.

-rb25

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

    • Hi guys, planning to get 18x9 +25 in fronts and 18x10 +25 in rears been reading the whole thread and cant really find anything   Anyone know if these will fit a r34 gtt with no scrubbing or guard work needed?
    • They usually get made by hand as part of any such swap.
    • Was planning on getting an R35 MAF and the adapter, should this be okay? Also any idea where I could get my hands on an intake pipe?
    • I mean yes, if you're starting from scratch on an unknown engine yes you don't need to be doing all kinds of math in the background but if you're doing relatively minor changes like AFM + injectors + boost up with some aftermarket turbos it takes quite a bit of math if you want to do something like maintain OEM fuel + timing tables but compressed and then a bit more load scale up top. I think I've spent too much time working on big engineering nightmares though so I'm a big fan of trying to constrain the scope of whatever work I'm doing as much as possible and trying to get it right before moving on. For example, a local owner just did the usual E85 + single turbo conversion to his R32 GTR and nearly burned his car to the ground doing some spirited driving up the local mountains. Turbine is unshielded and too close to the hood insulation. It's tough to balance "just get the project done" and "seemingly small details can cause massive setbacks I'm not willing to deal with".
    • No idea about Neil's steering wheel, but I have the same behaviour in the Stagea. I doubt it has ever been messed with so might be normal. Indicating to turn right at a roundabout and correcting even a little bit to the left to go around will cancel the indicator. Never considered it an issue other than it being a bit odd.
×
×
  • Create New...