Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

1990 GTR R32

stock bottom end

260cams

Gt35 turbo

650cc injectors

big intercooler

twin 44 pumps

haltech pro

20psi

3.5 exhaust

340awkws tuned by JEM

cars now getting fitted with head studs,1000cc injectors,E85 conversion,so with a bit more boost hoping to get around 380kws,see how we go!

Forgot to post my results in here last year.

I have now upgraded a few things this year and I will post the differences in mods and power/response gains.

Last Years Results using:

1997 R33GTR V-SPEC Series 2

New RacePace Stage 1 R34 RB26 Engine

New R34 GTR Head

New Garrett 2860r-5 Turbos with 14psi actuators

OEM Camshafts

Tomei Cam Gears

OEM EX Manifold

X-Force Dumps

HKS Front Pipes

HKS Hi-Power/Silent Exhaust System

Trust/Greddy Sump Kit

Trust/Greddy FMIC 100mm Thick/The Big One

Trust/Greddy Alloy Radiator

Trust/Greddy Oil Cooler

Trust/Greddy Type R BOV's

RPM Oil/Water Seperator/Catchcan

Power Fc HKS EVC 5 (Black Edition)

New Nismo AFM's

Sard 800cc Injectors

Sard FPR After Market Fuel Rail/HKS copy?

Bosch 044 intank pump Series 3 GTR Gearbox with short shifter

OS Giken Twin Plate Clutch & Flywheel

Tuned by RacePace 365rwkw @ 19psi

http://www.skylinesaustralia.com/forums/index.php?app=core&module=attach&section=attach&attach_id=318964

Upadates From Earlier This Year:

New RacePace 3.5" Custom Exhaust System with Twin Pipes

New RacePace Tuned Length Front Pipes

New Tomei 72mm Dumps (older style)

New Nismo Super Coppermix Twin Plate Clutch & Flywheel Kit(COMP MODEL)

Tuned By RacePace 380rwkw @ 20psi

Cant Get these pics working will try again tmrw.

1996 R33 GTR

Mods

Nismo front pipes and Apexi Exhaust with 100cell metal cat

Nismo intake and HKS IC

APEXI Suction and pod filters

Aftermarket cams ?? 9.1mm lift

HKS Cam gears

N1 R33 Turbos

21PSI

??? bottom end

Nismo FPR

stock injectors

stock AFM

301AWKW

post-52024-0-07585200-1343994464_thumb.jpg

*will post dyno sheet tonight*

R33 gtr

ID 1000's

Walbro 400lph

Powerfc

Greddy profec b spec 2

Tomei Cam Gears

NPC 10" sprung button (650hp)

Big front pipe

3" cat back

100cell cat (letting me down)

-9's with 1bar actuators

Standard afms (letting me down)

Standard airbox

Standard dumps

Heres the dyno sheet. Can a mod please join it to my post?

IMG_0877.jpg

Updated with some Cam Gears dialled in for a little extra down low and a bit more up top.

20120806_152641-1.jpg

  • 2 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...

-7's

Forged bottom end

Z32 AFM's - Apexi Super suction

3 - 3 1/2" Exhaust

ID1000cc injectors

Nismo fuel pump

Stock cams

Tomei adjustable cam gears

Power FC

Hi flow cat (apparently!)

Topped out at 322kw, backed off a bit to 315kw.

Love to get anyones feedback on the power and curve! Seems a bit soft to me??

EwanDyno.jpg

  • 2 weeks later...

1993 R32 GTR

Rebuilt RB26

2860-7's

Haltech - mafless

Tomie Type B cams, Adjustable cam gears

700cc injectors

Nitto/JE pistons

98ron

326kws at 18psi

350kws at 21psi

1993 R32 GTR

Rebuilt RB26

2860-7's

Haltech - mafless

Tomie Type B cams, Adjustable cam gears

700cc injectors

Nitto/JE pistons

98ron

326kws at 18psi

350kws at 21psi

Correction - ^ 2nd run at a different Ramp Rate skewing output figures ^

1996 R33 GTR

Mods

Nismo front pipes and Apexi Exhaust with 100cell metal cat

Nismo intake and HKS IC

APEXI Suction and pod filters

Aftermarket cams ?? 9.1mm lift

HKS Cam gears

N1 R33 Turbos

21PSI

??? bottom end

Nismo FPR

stock injectors

stock AFM

301AWKW

post-52024-0-07585200-1343994464_thumb.jpg

New 1000cc injectors and E85 now 341awkw

post-52024-0-83844800-1347959108_thumb.jpg

dyno.pdf

  • 2 weeks later...

5 months ago.

R33 GTR Vspec

Standard Motor

2860-5s

blitz dual intake

1000cc ID's

Haltech Pro Ecu

PWR intercooler

Greddy Cam gears

Walbro Fuel Pump.

330Awkw

new build with single kit and other stuff now.

new results with dyno shortly

  • 2 weeks later...

- Desno 800cc injectors

- 2860 -5 Turbos

- Tomei Cam gears

- Power FC and Controller

- Z32 Afms

- Apexi AVC-R Boost controller

- Trust 100mm Intercooler

- Tomei Expreme TI cat back

- Venom 100 cell 5 inch body cat

- Apexi Super Suction Kit Pods

- Air Box and Cold Air Intake

-

Engine

- Forged Pistons with standard Rods

- Metal head gasket

- GTR crank

- ACL bearings

- Extended Sump

- New Rings

- Honed Bore

Pretty happy with it. Much more responsive and when it hits 4000rpm wow.....

Thinking some drop in cams, push a bit more boost and ill be done

post-33454-0-15655400-1349996029_thumb.jpg

R34 GTR V-Spec II

RB26 Standard bottom end

Apexi Power FC D-Jetro

Tomei Poncams

Sard 700cc Injectors

HKS Fuel Rail

Sard FPR

Tomei Exmprere Exhaust Manifolds

HKS 2530 Turbos

HKS Wastegate actuators

Trust Intercooler

Trust Hard Pipe Kit

K&N Pod Filters

Nismo Z-Tune (cast) dump pipes

Power House Amuse Titanium Front Pipes

Hi flow 3" Metal Cat

Tomei Expreme Ti Cat Back

349.6kw @ 19psi

391.9kw @ 22psi

I am going to stick 19psi due to stock bottom end.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

22 PSI BOOST

Dyno02.jpg

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

19 PSI BOOST

Dyno01.jpg

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Here's mine:

R34 GTR VS2 Nur

N1's

HKS Actuators

Racepace 3.5Inch full exhaust

Nismo Twin Coppermix (Comp)

HKS EVC-S

HKS Cam Gears

Nismo Fuel Pump

Nismo FPR

Nismo Airflow Meters

ID1000's

E85

Power FC

379kw @ 21psi.

scan0005ld.jpg

  • 4 weeks later...
  • 3 weeks later...

Capacity 2.6L

R33 GTR crank

Tomei rods

CP pistons

Jun Oil pump

Standard water pump

Standard sump filled to 6L (Race pace sump to be installed soon!!)

Tomei type B cams

Breathers from sump to head (passenger side)

Tomei oil restrictor

Tomei cam gears

Exhuast and Turbo

Full-Race twin scroll manifold

BW S300 83/75 .91 housing

4inch dump pipe

High flow cat

3.5inch exhaust after Cat

Twin Tial 38mm waste gates

Koyo 100mm intercooler

Electronics and ignition

Link G4 ECU

Apexi AVC-R Boost controller

Ross balancer and Crank trigger

Ethenol Sensor and digital readout screen

Split fire coil packs

After market Ignitor

New OEM coil pack loom

Copper plugs

Fuel system

Nismo intake Fuel pump

ALPHA OMEGA Billet steel CNC'd Surge tank

Twin Walbro 400LPH pumps in surge tank

Sard FPR

ID2000cc injectors

Twin entry fuel rail

Braided lines all round

Duel filters

E85 Tune, top line is just more boost through the mid range

post-47556-0-73677300-1354445995_thumb.jpg

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

    • Can perhaps see how the R33 appreciators would think so.  
    • Thanks, I removed the fuse and the relay from the car and made my own circuit with them to test them with a test bulb.  I will look for the wiring diagram and go from there.
    • Jdm DC2R is also nice for a FF car compared to the regular hatches of the time.
    • Now that the break-in period for both clutch and transmission is nearly over I'd like to give some tips before I forget about everything that happened, also for anyone searching up how to do this job in the future: You will need at least 6 ton jack stands at full extension. I would go as far as to say maybe consider 12 ton jack stands because the height of the transmission + the Harbor Freight hydraulic platform-style transmission jack was enough that it was an absolute PITA getting the transmission out from under the car and back in. The top edge of the bellhousing wants to contact the subframe and oil pan and if you're doing this on the floor forget about trying to lift this transmission off the ground and onto a transmission jack from under the car. Also do not try to use a scissor jack transmission lift. You have to rotate the damn thing in-place on the transmission jack which is hard enough with an adjustable platform and a transmission cradle that will mostly keep the transmission from rolling off the jack but on a scissor lift with a tiny non-adjustable platform? Forget it. Use penetrating oil on the driveshaft bolts. I highly recommend getting a thin 6 point combination (box end + open end) wrench for both the rear driveshaft and front driveshaft and a wrench extension. These bolts are on tight with very little space to work with and those two things together made a massive difference. Even a high torque impact wrench is just the wrong tool for the job here and didn't do what I needed it to do. If your starter bolts aren't seized in place for whatever reason you can in fact snake in a 3/8 inch ratchet + 6 point standard chrome socket up in there and "just" remove the bolts for the starter. Or at least I could. It is entirely by feel, you can barely fit it in, you can barely turn the stupid ratchet, but it is possible. Pull the front pipe/downpipe before you attempt to remove the transmission. In theory you don't have to, in practice just do it.  When pulling the transmission on the way out you don't have to undo all the bolts holding the rear driveshaft to the chassis like the center support bearing and the rear tunnel reinforcement bar but putting the transmission back in I highly recommend doing this because it will let you raise the transmission without constantly dealing with the driveshaft interfering in one way or another. I undid the bottom of the engine mount but I honestly don't know that it helped anything. If you do this make sure you put a towel on the back of the valve cover to keep the engine from smashing all the pipes on the firewall. Once the transmission has been pulled back far enough to clear the dowels you need to twist it in place clockwise if you're sitting behind the transmission. This will rotate the starter down towards the ground. The starter bump seems like it might clear if you twist the transmission the other way but it definitely won't. I have scraped the shit out of my transmission tunnel trying so learn from my mistake. You will need a center punch and an appropriate size drill bit and screw to pull the rear main seal. Then use vice grips and preferably a slide hammer attachment for those vice grips to yank the seal out. Do not let the drill or screw contact any part of the crank and clean the engine carefully after removing the seal to avoid getting metal fragments into the engine. I used a Slide Hammer and Bearing Puller Set, 5 Piece from Harbor Freight to pull the old pilot bearing. The "wet paper towel" trick sucked and just got dirty clutch water everywhere. Buy the tool or borrow it from a friend and save yourself the pain. It comes right out. Mine was very worn compared to the new one and it was starting to show cracks. Soak it in engine oil for a day in case yours has lost all of the oil to the plastic bag it comes in. You may be tempted to get the Nismo aftermarket pilot bearing but local mechanics have told me that they fail prematurely and if they do fail they do far more damage than a failed OEM pilot bushing. I mentioned this before but the Super Coppermix Twin clutch friction disks are in fact directional. The subtle coning of the fingers in both cases should be facing towards the center of the hub. So the coning on the rearmost disk closest to the pressure plate should go towards the engine, and the one closest to the flywheel should be flipped the other way. Otherwise when you torque down the pressure plate it will be warped and if you attempt to drive it like this it will make a very nasty grinding noise. Also, there is in fact an orientation to the washers for the pressure plate if you don't want to damage the anodizing. Rounded side of the washer faces the pressure plate. The flat side faces the bolt head. Pulling the transmission from the transfer case you need to be extremely careful with the shift cover plate. This part is discontinued. Try your best to avoid damaging the mating surfaces or breaking the pry points. I used a dead blow rubber hammer after removing the bolts to smack it sideways to slide it off the RTV the previous mechanic applied. I recommend using gasket dressing on the OEM paper gasket to try and keep the ATF from leaking out of that surface which seems to be a perpetual problem. Undoing the shifter rod end is an absolute PITA. Get a set of roll pin punches. Those are mandatory for this. Also I strongly, strongly recommend getting a palm nailer that will fit your roll pin punch. Also, put a clean (emphasis on clean) towel wrapped around the back end of the roll pin to keep it from shooting into the transfer case so you can spend a good hour or two with a magnet on a stick getting it out. Do not damage the shifter rod end either because those are discontinued as well. Do not use aftermarket flywheel bolts. Or if you do, make sure they are exactly the same dimensions as OEM before you go to install them. I have seen people mention that they got the wrong bolts and it meant having to do the job again. High torque impact wrench makes removal easy. I used some combination of a pry bar and flathead screwdriver to keep the flywheel from turning but consider just buying a proper flywheel lock instead. Just buy the OS Giken clutch alignment tool from RHDJapan. I hated the plastic alignment tool and you will never be confident this thing will work as intended. Don't forget to install the Nismo provided clutch fork boot. Otherwise it will make unearthly noises when you press the clutch pedal as it says on the little installation sheet in Japanese. Also, on both initial disassembly and assembly you must follow torque sequence for the pressure plate bolts. For some reason the Nismo directions tell you to put in the smaller 3 bolts last. I would not do this. Fully insert and thread those bolts to the end first, then tighten the other larger pressure plate bolts according to torque sequence. Then at the end you can also torque these 3 smaller bolts. Doing it the other way can cause these bolts to bind and the whole thing won't fit as it should. Hope this helps someone out there.
×
×
  • Create New...