Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 186
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • 3 months later...

Nick: Dezz, sometimes madwob

Name: Michael, but most people actually call me dez

Age: 19, 20 in Jan

Location: Hoppers Crossing

Car: 98 R33 GTS-T on its way from japan

MSN/Email: madwob (at) hotmail.com

no pics of me :P

pic of the car...

10724970_f.jpg

Edited by dezz
  • 2 months later...

Well newbies includes me - so here it is:

Nick: The Baron

Name : Andreas

Location : Northcote

Car : currently Toyota Corolla Sportivo (140kW of front wheel fury ;-) but soon - very soon..........

Age : 36

email : [email protected]

Edited by The Baron

Not an offical member yet, just gotta download those forms, but anyway.

Nickname - Obes

Name - Michael

Location - Sunbury or Scumbury as i like to call it (just up the road from calder park raceway)

Car - Shitty old corolla and 92 R32GTR

Age - 24

No pics as i cant get them onto the computer..

Ciao

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

    • Also, a tip for young players  Check the dates on new tyres before they fit them, I always ask this question at the tyre shop, as they have tried to put "new" tyres on one of my cars a few years ago, but the build date was about 3 years old
    • Yeah - 4 or 5 years is the limit for decent tyres. Pedestrian grade tyres with 400 TW ratings start out hard and don't start to suffer until they are somewhat older again. But the stickier decent stuff? Nup. My current ADO9s are < 2 yrs old, 17000km in, only have about the minimum 2mm of tread depth left, and they are.....not what they used to be. They are clearly much harder now than when new. Whether that is heat cycles (unlikely, for a road tyre), different compound between top and bottom of tread, or actually aging out (in less than 2 years!!!) is not really able to be discerned. But I'd credit actual aging as being at least part of the cause. I've got an old pair of ~50% worn AD08Rs in the shed that I really need to get rid of. They started feeling waaaay too hard to put back on the car after a couple of years sitting there.
    • Personally I wouldn't put tyres over 4 or 5 years old on any of my own cars. Once they go hard the grip characteristics completely change. As per most things it only matters in an accident and that's when you most want them to do their job!
    • I'm replacing the front tyres on the E39 tomorrow because one of them has a few gouges out of it. There is so much tread still on them but they're also 9 years old and the rubber is super hard.  This falls within the guidelines of 10 years old that I've read which surprises me given their condition.  I'm curious about whether you guys care about tyre age or just judge the tyre based on condition? How old would you consider too old?
    • What starts as a scratch, becomes a flesh wound, then quadruple amputation. Jus' sayin'. Crush resistant gloves (The ones with the rubber strips down the back of the hand and fingers) might not be a bad idea after all!
×
×
  • Create New...