Jump to content
SAU Community

Smashed my R33 GTS-T =(


Recommended Posts

Guys,

Smashed my pride and joy =*(

Im not too sure of the extent of the damage yet, but;

Drivers door dinted in, front left tyre poped rim doesnt look good at all,

the rear right hand side wheel is poped, rim not good, and the wheel isnt too strait. there is a piece underneith bent (idler arm i think its called?)

the front wheels arnt pointing the same way.. thats about it..

its uninsured, i was getting it taken care of next week =(

do you guys know where i can get parts? wreckers..etc? alltho im not even sure what needs getting replaced yet..

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You must have been a spirited drive to smash up both sides of the car like that :P

Was this last night during the torrential downpour? I got caught in that, I was so scared that someone will spin out and smash into me.

So what happened?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes, in the rain,

a cat ran out from the side, ive tryed to miss it (regret it now) and cliped the gutter that made it spin around.. and hit the back wheel.. smashing into a bin (the bin dented the door)..

it could have been worse, i was doing under the speed limit etc.. there were witnesses that told the police what happened, so i didnt get a neg driving ticket. thats an upside i guess.

i just wanna get it sorted, hopfully its not too much damage, the way the wheels are sitting it doesnt look good tho. =(

Link to comment
Share on other sites

:cheers: sorry to hear - but as you know, it could be worse.

Heard too many dodging cat stories now. If a cat jumps infront of my car I will steer my big chassis of metal straight at its little fluffy head and explode the damn thing in a big horrific explosion of twisted bone and meat and fluff. Easier said then done though.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes i know, i wish i did just hit it now =/

my girl would have killed me tho.. lol

ive herd from the police, they are now saying i may get a neg driving ticket.. f**k knows why??

there were around 6 witnesses, 2 differant groups of people who saw what happened and told the police every thing.. oh well..

thanks for the links guys.. keep em coming.

cheers

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That really sucks. It could have been worse though, in the news last year there was a guy in an R31 Skyline that swerved to miss a dog, and he ended up mounting the gutter and somehow nose-diving the car into the ground and went roof-on into a telephone pole, which killed him instantly.

Good luck with fighting the neg driving, there is no justice in the world. The guy that rear-ended me while I was stopped at the lights and gave me whiplash got off with only paying his insurance excess, the cops didn't wanna know about it. And you've hurt nothing but your own car and you may get a fine and loss of points and don't even have insurance to claim on. The system sucks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

sometimes its much safer just to hit the thing than swerve and hit something else.

That's exacly right!

I have killed 2 cats and 1 bird for this reason....

Instead of swerving, hit them...

But DO NOT hit them with your tyre(s), or you could end up in just as much trouble. Try go over them, it's much safer that way...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I ran over a suicidal possum last year. I was driving home and I saw it sitting in the middle of the road. I was cruising by at about 40kph (10kph under the limit) and sort of went to the left side of the lane thinking it'd be cool because it was just sitting there. The *exactly* at the point which it was too late to swerve or brake, even if I was slowing down at the time, the possum wandered straight under my tyres! It didn't even run, it was sort of a couple of steps and then thud-thud of front and rear tyres. Oddly enough, no blood or guts or fur or anything under the car. The next day I drove past and it had already been cleaned up by the council. Poor possum :P

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks guys,

ive taken the wheels off and looked at the damage, there isnt too much, i just dont know the name of the parts, i may have to take pics. i can put the parts on myself, just have to find them.

at the back, its like a wish-bone (bar on the bottom connecting to wheel) that is bent, i need to replace.

at the front going to the wheel there are 2 bars (once again i dont know the name) only 1 of them is bent.

i need to replace 2 tyres and 1 rim.

get the dint in the door fixed.

its not as much as i thought. hopfully thats all.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You should have run over the cat. If the owners even cared it would have been inside. Cats bounce off the car anyway. They do no damage really and even a hit at 50kph, most times they will be able to get up and run away. sometimes..

I would have sacrificed its life over damaging my car regardless of what my misses would say. Sorry to hear about your car man. Its an expensive lesson to learn.

i had some guy driving like a dick infront of me last night in a falcon swerving all over the road as i passed him and he nearly took out my front quarter panel.

find the cat take it hostage find the owner and get a ransom from them for its safe return to pay for some of the damage... he he he...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

me and my mate ran had a cat experience in burwood a few wkz ago.

My mate was driving probally 70kmz/hr in a 50 zone..jus speedin a bit at like 10pm..no cars on the road..and out of no where..we c a fcUkin caT in the middle of the road, my friend swerved left and the cat ran left...and den..................we ended a life. Killing a cat or dog or wateva is easier said den done..you feel so guilty running over the thing. but like many of you said...risking my life or the life of my car for the cat? sorry pussie

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i was cruising in the hill one night (bout 10pm) doing 110kms in a 110km zone, and i saw this large white rock on the left lane ahead of me, so i went on the right to avoid it.

as soon as i got near this "rock" it decided to fly in front of me. it ended up being a large white owl, even before i realised what happened i slammed it good.

lucky for me it hit the bumper, and not the grill or the window.

steve

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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
 Share



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Right.  I'll try my best at a concise "bring you up to speed" on stuff that may be missing here - obviously open to questions or further input from others as relevant. Here's a datalog from a responsive turbo setup with electronic boost control being used a bit, to keep it simple I've marked 3 points of interest.  All of these charts are on the same time scale on the X-axis, so you can reference what engine rpm is doing in the top graph, boost and EMAP (exhaust backpressure) in the second graph, and turbo rpm in the bottom graph. A) The turbo gets it's power from exhaust gas, and pumping air takes work.  As a result you can't just spin a turbo with a fixed amount of exhaust energy and expect it to keep spooling - the bigger the turbo (ie, the more air it can push) the more exhaust energy you need to drive it.   The most obvious ways of getting more exhaust energy are by adding displacement, adding boost, or adding rpm - but as you add any of these the turbo also needs to do a bit more work so there is a big balance of these things needed to even get to your target boost and sometimes that's not even possible. What you can see in step "A" is that there isn't enough engine rpm or boost to reach the level we want, so this is where "lag" is.  The dyno run continues and rpm increases, which gives enough energy to increase boost, which helps spool  the turbine speed up even more - so you can see that the rate that the boost (and turbo speed) are starting to ramp up faster than the engine rpm is, so turbo is really starting to wake up as the graph gets closer to point B....   B) At this point we've been able to reach the boost that is actually desired at this point.   To stop the boost from going further than this the wastegate will open and bypass gas past the turbine, meaning it doesn't continue accelerating at the point it was before but instead carry on at a more progressive rate which matches what the engine needs.   The wastegate will have a spring in it which is rated to a specific pressure where it will start bypassing, but electronic boost control (managed by the ECU) can adjust how much pressure the spring sees in order to allow some tunability on how much boost the wastegate actually sees, and therefore how much exhaust it bypasses.   The tune in this case stops boost from ramping up HARD at around 21-22psi just before 4000rpm, then as the rpm continue it allows boost to continue up to around 25psi higher in the rpm.   You can see the turbo speed fairly steadily increases through the rpm to ensure it's keeping up with the increasing airflow demand due to the engine speed being higher and boost being pretty steady.   If the boost dropped off after a point then you may see the turbo speed level off or even drop.   C) You can see that despite the boost pressure staying pretty flat here, the exhaust pressure is steadily increasing and at this stage has overtaken boost pressure.   This isn't unusual, and is largely as a result of the increasing energy needed by the turbo to pump more and more air to suit the needs of the engine as it revs out further.   There are a bunch of variables in regards to how much back pressure there will be on a given turbo etc, but its one of the factors we manage when sizing and tuning a turbo setup.   When exhaust back pressure starts exceeding boost pressure you will eventually start seeing signs that the turbo is running out, the engine gets less keen to make more power and it gets harder to raise boost further. In this case it's a fairly acceptable compromise for the power level (around 630kw on a 3litre engine with full boost by 4000rpm), but you'd not want to push it a lot harder than this.  The maximum speed rated for the compressor wheel on this setup is around 125,000rpm so you can see its starting to get close on that side as well - I feel like this kind of illustrates some of the turbo related things we both decide on how far to push, and are also limited to how far we can push depending on the parts combination. Hope this helps more than it confuses things  
    • For that influx of Spammers we had I made no pic posting and no PM's for first ten posts. This is group based and I've manually updated @Beanie to the Members group which will open up the images and PM's. 
    • Thx for the reassuring reply. I’ve got above legal clearance  going in for roadworthy Friday… fingers crossed it’s keeping me awake  bloody nanny state 
    • I was actually going to try and dig out a datalog with turbine speed and EMAP haha
    • Wait until @Lithium posts a compressor map and tries to explain what's going on. There is a strong possibility that the OP lives in a digital world and is not comfortable with analogue machines. A turbo is just about as analogue as it gets, with plenty of non-linear behaviours added in on top. Most of us who think we know how they work are actually only getting by on 2nd and 3rd order mental models that abstract away from the actual physics and bring it back to the sort of kindergarten level concepts we can hold in our heads. This is important when you need to hold 10 such concepts in your head at the same time. You need to reduce the complexity of the individual concepts to allow them to be simultaneously held and manipulated. Too much complexity in the base models makes it very difficult to make them work with each other mentally.
×
×
  • Create New...