Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hi all,

I have a r34 gtt with a gtx3076, link ecu, Walbro 450lph fuel pump ect.

Anyways its time to upgrade the injectors, I want to put something decent in which will allow me to run E85 down the track without needing to change injectors again. I will need to upgrade the pump & lines when the time comes.

I am looking at these deatschwerks 1000cc E85 compatible injectors:

http://www.deatschwerks.com/products/fuel-injectors/sport-compact/nissan/skyline/neo-rb25det/1998-02-neo-rb25det/17u-06-1000-6-detail

Now the question is, are these going to be ok to run 98 pump fuel through without having a shocking idle & part throttle drive ability?

If its going to make the car real rough then I think I will need to go smaller now & then upgrade when I do want to go E85.

Sorry if this is a newb question, I have done some searching but cant find much.

Thanks in advance.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/459340-98-octane-through-1000cc-injectors/
Share on other sites

They are a high flowed Bosch 550cc injector, so there are better options for 1000cc injectors available now.

http://www.nzefi.com/product/nissan-rb-1000ccmin-top-feed-direct-fit-fuel-injector-kit/

Thanks for all the help.

Sub boy32 are you saying those deatschwerks are actually high flowed 550cc bosch injectors?

Wheezy what brand injectors did you fit?

What sort of power are you guys running on 98?

Sub boy32 are you saying those deatschwerks are actually high flowed 550cc bosch injectors?

I wouldn't stress too much, most of the 1000's sold these days are 750cc injectors with the pintle cap removed. They spray perfectly well, and work better for e85 imo than the long nose 900cc injectors he linked, and cheaper.

Marketing hype...

Id1000

With the dollar the way it is, locally modified and warranted injectors are a much smarter option, considering they are exactly the same Bosch injector. Unless you like paying the ID tax...

With the dollar the way it is, locally modified and warranted injectors are a much smarter option, considering they are exactly the same Bosch injector. Unless you like paying the ID tax...

The new 1300 and 1700s from ID are a whole new ball game though, internals are made inhouse with BOSCH motorpsort department... they are streets above the rest ATM.

The new 1300 and 1700s from ID are a whole new ball game though, internals are made inhouse with BOSCH motorpsort department... they are streets above the rest ATM.

The 1300's are only available through ID, but the 1700's are sold locally also. Not cheap though.

I was hoping to try them out in the evo but the 1400's I have currently will be fine with the Haltech elite i'm sure, and nearly half the price.

The new 1300 and 1700s from ID are a whole new ball game though, internals are made inhouse with BOSCH motorpsort department... they are streets above the rest ATM.

I wonder how much different they are from the stainless Deatscheworks...

http://www.deatschwerks.com/products/fuel-injectors/sport-compact/nissan/skyline/rb26dett-skyline/1989-2002-rb26dett/1200cc-fuel-injectors-6-detail

http://www.deatschwerks.com/products/fuel-injectors/sport-compact/nissan/skyline/rb26dett-skyline/1989-2002-rb26dett/1500cc-fuel-injectors-8-detail

I wouldn't stress too much, most of the 1000's sold these days are 750cc injectors with the pintle cap removed. They spray perfectly well, and work better for e85 imo than the long nose 900cc injectors he linked, and cheaper.

Marketing hype...

We have done quite a bit of injector testing.

The spray pattern between a high flowed 550/750cc injector compared to the ones I have linked to are night and day different

The Bosch 1000's are designed for Ethanol, where as the 550s weren't......

High flowed injectors were fine when there wasn't the correct sized injector available.....but now Bosch makes 1000's, 1300's and 1650's straight out of the box now.

Edited by Sub Boy32

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

    • Back in January, I noticed my car felt noticeably weak. I had the injectors cleaned, which seemed to solve the problem -- until now. Recently, the car suddenly lost power again while driving. Suspecting the injectors, I brought it to the mechanic. He recommended replacing them entirely, saying the current ones were getting unreliable and fiddly to work with. I could not find a direct replacement for my current injectors. The closest match I found were 440cc injectors. This led me to look into the possibility of upgrading -- and of course, that would mean remapping the ECU. From my research I found: The OEM Part numbers are 16600-72L20 and 16600-72L21 Both the RB20DE and RB20DET use the same 270cc injectors. There are much better options out there over the old OEM injectors. Nistune could be a viable tuning option. While the RB20DE isn’t explicitly listed on their site, the ECU is essentially the same as the GTS-T version - just with a different map. The ECU code on mine is listed as supported. One concern is finding a tuner who works with Nistune. Aftermarket ECU like Haltech and Link, but this would be the most expensive choice (and possibly overkill for a mostly stock RB20DE) I admit that I am very new to the tuning scene and would appreciate any insight or recommendations regarding this.   These are some SAU links where I got some of my information from for reference: https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/380324-rb20de-injectors/ https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/477396-factory-270cc-injectors/  
    • The inspectors are not forensic by any means but if you forge your documents and/or badgings on vehicle parts and are found out, the consequences are just far bigger than if you just run illegal parts. And their job quite literally is to cross reference what parts you got installed and what your papers say you got. Something as silly as your suspension being 1mm too low will fail you. Nonetheless I asked if someone knew the damn pipe and I certainly did not ask for smartassery or underhanded comments, no idea why you need to be told this. Great way to waste both our time.
    • As useful as you explaining what forgery is... But then again, I wasn't aware your inspectors were also forensic experts and inspect nameplates on each component to confirm everything is original. They must inspect roughly 3 cars a year at that rate. You're right though, my comment doesn't help you in anyway, so I'll go talk to my wall now. Cheers. 
    • Say that to the guy that is going to fail your inspection or tow your car for illegal exhaust modifications. If you have anything else useful to say, please go tell your wall.
    • You must be fun at parties. 
×
×
  • Create New...