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buck naked

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Posts posted by buck naked

  1. I have a Whiteline rear sway, and it's definitely not solid...

    Just be aware that I, like a few others, have experienced a few creaks and groans from it when cornering if the nuts are not tightened EXTREMELY tight, to the point where I got concerned that I would break the bolts!

    Are you talking about the strut bar or the sway bar?

  2. i'm all for school speed zones, if you ever had to take/pick-up kids from school you know why. But if they have a friggin camera, they should use electronic sign to tell when they switch over. I had to borrow an old car and didn't realise the clock was faulty. After doing things all day and not looked at other clocks i thought it was well before 2:30pm. Only after a while i realised i went through the zone at around 50kmh at approx 2:40pm.

    I haven't received the fine yet, but when i do and if the time is under 10 minutes. Should i contest it?

    How hard is it to use electronic signs? the highways have them. i bet many motorists are caught just becaue their time is off by few minutes.

    Well the fine will go to the owner of the old car, and then be forwarded to you. The fact that you didn't own the car along with details (ie: if the registration details show that it is an old car and that you driving this car was a rarity), and present that with the fact that you were doing 50kph, meaning you were doing your best to observe the law - which you believe in, maybe you have grounds for consideration. Good luck!

  3. A handful of bolt on mods doesn't make you an NA purist. A built NA engine (you know, one with actual engine work) is going to make a supercharger kit look cheap. Basic intake and exhaust mods, along with quality suspension/drivetrain work are common fundementals in both NA and FI, which is why so many people start out with those modifications.

    But thats beside the point. My point is that front wheel drive and performance don't have to be antonyms.

  4. And it's front wheel drive, and its only good for straight line with that much power and therefore is a waste. It's hard enough driving this thing around corners in lift, why would you want to turn it into a shopping trolley with massive understeer, just go shopping at a supermarket and get your kicks out of it that way :)

    The Trial tuner Celica, when it was Blitz supercharged and Trial stroked (1.998cc) and making 283hp at the wheels, laped the Tsukuba circuit in 62 seconds, thats quicker than some Ferrari's. Check out how that compares to other stock and tuner cars: http://www.tuningpt.com/store/tsukuba.htm

    I think Trial runs their own supercharger setup now, and is making even more HP. Just goes to show a nicely setup FWD application with a good LSD and suspension can be very competitive.

  5. Quite a few people in the USA have got up around 180-190hp at the wheels with just a few bolt-on mods, plus a PowerFC. (150kw = 200hp, btw).

    To go further, you'd have to start opening up the engine. Getting a stroker kit (1.93 litres to 1.98 litres, depending on the package) will get you there, and you have a few options. Either raise the compression and go for a hard-tuned NA (build it to rev), or lower the compression and go for a turbo.

    I think Trial's (a Japanese tuning company) stroked, supercharged 2ZZ-GE Celica makes 283hp at the wheels and puts up blistering times around the track.

    For me, drive train mods, suspension work, lightweight rims and tyres, lightening the car and oil-supply mods would be my priority. Make the most of the 140kw you've got =)

  6. A comparison between the Corolla T-Sport, Civic Type R and the Renault Sport Clio.

    vid link

    That was a cool video. Seeing the Type-R get sideways in the last bend and beat out the S2000 was killer =)

    I think taking the Corolla around the track first had some disadvantages, it would have been nice if they ran them 3 times each and then averaged the times. They got the quickest 0-40mph time out of the Corolla, which was cool, and they loved the brakes.

    Concidering the Corolla is the heaviest, has the lowest displacement (1.8 vs 2.0) and was the only one with no LSD (the Clio has its "ESP" LSD equivilent, and the Type-R has one), I think it did pretty well =)

  7. As the heading says, Toyota Celicas have won the Australian Production Car Championship Outright.

    They have also finished 6th outright and 1st and 3rd in Class B.

    Team - Osborne Motorsport

    Car - Toyota Celica 7th Gen with 2ZZ-GE engine

    Driver - Colin Osborne

    Engineer - Neil Trama

    Suspension - Warwick Brooker

    Tech - Andre Lineker

    Logistics - Dave Jupp

    Footage of the final round and season wrap-up can be seen on SBS Speedweek on Sunday coming.

    Neil

    Congratulations Neil =)

    When choosing an LSD, you went with the TRD clutch-type, correct? How does a helical-type LSD compare for your application?

  8. It's a shame there isn't more dyno results for the Celica online here in Australia. 112kw at the wheels is what we'd expect for stock performance out of a 2ZZ-GE, but the results of the Melbourne dyno day were all below that (for both the Sportivo and Celica...).

    Being a less-practical car, a lot of second hard Celica's are in very good condition - very low kilometres, garaged, etc. And you see fantastic examples from 1999-2001 going for very close to $20,000 these days.

    Being lighter, having a better interior, independent rear suspension and a lower centre of gravity, from a performance perspective, I prefer the Celica. And the SX model seems to fit that demographic, with optional airconditioning and ABS. The SX model also doesn't have a sunroof, which is good for body stiffness and headroom (esp. with a helment).

  9. yeah thats a good idea

    BUT if you plan on lowering it later with sports suspension or whatever then i wouldnt waste my money on that either

    but if your gonna keep it factory standard then you would go for the lower sortivo springs

    Now if your definition of "sports suspension" is a set of King Springs, I'd say without hesitation picking up these Sportivo springs will be worthwhile. First, from a price perspective, they can be had very cheap on a new vehicle (ie: thrown in free, or fitted without labour). Secondly, they'll be covered by your factory warranty, which is really valuable.

    The stock shocks are good and with improved springs you'll find them fine for hard driving. If you're really serious about suspension, you'd be working towards buying coil-overs (and probably not $1.5k, for cheap ones), which would replace your current suspension struts. But until you're ready to drop ~$5k on suspension work (I'm talking about going further than just coil-overs here), you'll have driving a much improved suspension setup right out of the dealer door.

    Now, if you ever want to sell the car, you'd want to remove your coil-over struts and refit the stock ones - seeing as they're going to do nothing for the value of the car - and sell them off (on here, for example). Worse, some "lowering" or "sports" springs fitted to your car will probably reduce its resale value.

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