Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hi guys,

I took my gtr to Heasmans and wanted to share my experience...when I turned up, I couldn't get a park so Doug (owner) walks out and ushers me to the workshop. He then shakes my hand and we go for a drive around the block as he wants to feel the car. He starts on the car but couldn't get my wheels off so he gives me his personal car to drive home so that I can get the wheel locknut, just awesome.

The outcome is a car that has never felt better after a front and rear wheel alignment, front and rear camber adjustment and front castor adjustment.

10 out of 10 from me on all levels :)

I can vouch for Heasman. I went there to get a bush moved from a bent control arm to a straight one. Dropped it off in the morning and picked it up in the afternoon the same day. When I went to pay he didn't accept my money.

As long as I live around the area I'll take my cars there for alignments :)

Aaaaah paulie not many threads on sau get past u haha.

The car really feels planted now, -1.5 degrees camber front and rear.

When Doug drove my car he commented "your car is pretty quite and the suspension is a nice ride, not rough like most GTR's I've driven"

A bit surprising considering I'm running a 3.5" veilside exhaust, however, I am very happy with the tein superstreets!

The whole family are a decent bunch.

I went to school with a heasman (yes, related). I have used them too for an alignment. Found them professional, and knowledgable. Explained the issues I was having, and why the car felt the way it did. Only thing that stops me going back is it's not a convienant location at all for me.

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

    • They are what I will be installing. 640s for me.
    • Hmm... From my experience you get about 0.25° camber change per mm of RUCA length change. So, to correct from -2.5 up to less than -1° (or, more than -1° if you look at the world as a mathematician does) then you'd be making 6-8mm of length change on the RUCA. From a stock length of 308mm, that's 2-2.5% difference in RUCA length. My RUCAs are currently very close to stock length - certainly only 2-3mm different from stock. I had to adjust my tension arms by 6mm to minimise the bump steer. That's 6mm out of 210, which is 2.8%. That's a 2.8% change on those, compared to a <1% change on the RUCAs. So the stock geometry already has worse bump steer than is possible - you can improve it even if you don't change the RUCA length. If you lengthen the RUCAs at all, then you will definitely be adding bump steer. Again, with my car, I recently had an unpleasant amount of bump steer, stemming from a number of things that happened one after another without me having an opportunity to correct for them. I only had to change the tension arm lengths by 1mm to minimise the resulting bump steer. (Granted, I also had to dial out a lot of extra toe-in in the rear, and excessive rear toe-in will make bump steer behaviour worse). Relatively tiny little adjustments having been made - the car is now completely different. Was horrifying how much it wanted to steer from the rear on any significant single wheel bump/dip. And it was even bad on expansion joints on long sweepers on freeway entry/exits, which are notionally hitting both rear wheels at the same time. My point is, the crappy Nissan multilink is quite sensitive to these things (unlike the very nice Toyota suspension!). And I think 99.75% of Skyline owners are blissfully ignorant of what they are driving around on. Sadly, it is a non-trivial exercise to set up to measure and correct bump steer. I am happy to show my rig, which involves nasty chunks of wood bolted to the hub, mirrors, lasers, graph paper targets and other horrors. Just in case anyone wants to see how it is done. I'll just have to set it up to take the photos.
    • What do you have in that bad boy ? Ill go with the 725cc since I'll be going with Nistune ( would definitely like more engine protection but Haltech is too far out of reach at the moment... plus, Ill probably have a pretty safe tune as its a daily, not gonna be chasing peak power 24/7 ahahah ). Are Xspurt a safe choice?  Pete's great. He didnt mention anything about traction arm length so I reckon it may be good. When I get some new wheels/tire later down the road I'll ask him about it and get his opinion on em. I heard from Gary that you've got the bilsteins too, are you running the sway bars too? and what other suspension goodies do you have installed or would recommend?
    • In true Gregging style...  
×
×
  • Create New...