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Tony D

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Posts posted by Tony D

  1. Show me a single CarreraRS 3.0 that went to a track for competition in Europe that wasn't fully prepped to Group 4 Spec...

     

    And EVERYTHING to do that prep was available to anybody who put the parts on the order form and laid down the money on your Datsun. In some instances Nissan installed these parts before the owner ever took delivery of the car...or before the car ever made it to a dealership.

     

    That sounds like the same as a Carrera RS 3.0 to me: taking delivery of a race ready car directly from the factory special Homogolation workshop...

     

    The only difference between a Carrera RS and the Datsun parts was the car was assembled in Europe for Homogolation and sold that way, whereas because of agent agreements Nissan made them as a "to order" basis.

  2. OH, but before someone parses the fact someone said "L-Engine"... I'll note the L-Engines came with ELECTRONIC FUEL INJECTION and not the mechanical version used on the Z432R. And either the crossflow LY or Non-Crossflow FIA 6-Cylinders were a considerable improvement over the E31 and E88 heads used in public cars...though suitably prepped by competent builders should be handily spanking comparably period-correct prepared P-Cars!

    I mean, they got a 3.0 EFI engine making 230 PS weighing something like 2400#...check out Group4 Specs--that was where the car was built to work. The Datsun 2.4 was a 330HP setup in carbureted form... Using a 74 or 75 would allow the 2.8 and similar power with more forgiving torque.

     

    And that's the conventional engine...WITHOUT the LY or FIA speciality heads!!!

  3. And it did not have the L engine nor other Carrera like bits, brakes, wide wheels.... So, useless.

    Better go back and read the FIA Homogolation Rules for the 240 before making such ignorant statements!

     

    That statement is so colossally deprived of cogent thought I don't even know where to start enumerating the shortfalls in facts it transgresses!

     

    BTW: quantify "bit"... As by my definition, a mechanically injected Z432R making 345+BHP sounds like it has "Bits" galore... And I might say that Slide Valve Injection sure as hell looks like the Kugelfischer setup on old P-Cars...

     

    Those Four-Pot Calipers, LSD CV Jointed Rear Running Gear, specially thickened structural stressed members, glass fibre doors, bonnet, boot and Perspex all 'round straight off the production line apparently don't qualify as "Bits comparable with Carrera Bits"... Differential cooler, close ratio transmission, radio delete, special sound deadening delete, lightweight door hinges...

     

    Let's just say some people THINK they know about racing Z's but in reality they don't know jack!

  4. My 46 DCOEs ran fine on a bone stock L28, tuned properly they are most definitely "not" too big!

    You say "chokes" below 3k when you go WOT.

     

    Check your acceleration pump stroke, delivery volume, and shot duration. In Japan now they are selling accel pump nozzles with multiple spray holes to better mix the accel shot than the old single spray setup.

     

    Also remember, if you don't have a lightened flywheel, this will make a big "bog" off the line. The airspeed needs to catch up with the engine... At low Roma if you are over-choked (too big) you will have this low speed bog as well. What chokes are in the bores? 30, 32, 34, 36, 40???

     

    It isn't a Smsll Blovk Chevy, BTW. Going WOT before 3000 in anything but 1st gear is really poor driving technique.

  5. Its really difficult to be gentle with the throttle 1st and 2nd gear. The car will stutter at WOT sometimes in the lower rpms, off idle it feels like its gunna die around 2k, but it idles fine at 1k. Around 4k rpms in 4th and 5th it moves pretty smooth though. So this would equate to the carbs being out of sync?

     

    This sounds like an issue transitioning to the mains circuit. You may need a different accelerator pump jet, a bigger idle jet, bigger main jet...

     

    When you put the car in first gear and just crack the throttle and feather the clutch to get the car moving, does it stumble at 2k? That test takes accel pump out of the picture.

     

    If you are idling fine, and can smoothly accelerate at 4000 in 4 th or 5 th, then likely your main is the right size.

     

    My bet is something clogged in the accel system, or an idle jet not large enough to feed the transition ports from 2000 to when the main jet starts tipping in at 3000.

  6. Gogriz91, the car chasing something on the Okinawa Expressway was an RX7.

    There weren't any Z Koban Cars on Oki, but the Savannah RX7 ran the expressway.

    The Z's were in Kanagawa, on the mainland.

     

    I got warned by him in 84 after passing him at 200KPH... I stayed stopped at the Ishikawa off ramp at the light till he caught up and warned me over a tail lamp that wasn't working.

     

    Earlier in the year, when first on the island doing Togue Racing with a long-lost school acquaintance in his Toyota Carina GT the same RX7 ran us down, followed by the biggest Japanese I've ever seen pulling my friend Douglas out the drivers window, punching him once in the face, then doing a head slam twice on the hood... Followed by the entangled giant stomping to my side of the car and scolding me for letting him drive that fast (145 in a 30...)

     

    Then he said "You, safety drive! Friend no drive anymore today!"

     

    Wether that referred to Douglas laying in the gutter half concious and bleeding, or that he just thought the display would scare me into following the speed limits (uh...) I don't know.

     

    I never had that issue with the JP's. I think to this day Douglas got it because he wasn't wearing a seat belt, and I was... I got stopped for far mor egregious violations ("your car... I see UNDERNEATH!") and was always treated with polite disbelief ("Why you stop?")

     

    Z Stories from Okinawa? I got a ton!

     

    But what you CAN do is tell the pompous git who poo-poohed the existence of toll booths on the Okinawa Expresseay when I talked about them that they INDEED existed 25 years ago!

  7. Oils WAY too heavy.

    Guy running heavy oil are usually compensating for errors elsewhere.

     

    A most excellent marketing tool was Texaco Halvoline, when sponsoring CART cars (Buick Stock Block Turbos at the time...)

    Those guys had cases of 5W30 just like you find at any auto parts store. And that's what they ran in the race! Filled it one quart at a time from the same plastic bottles you could buy.

     

    Heavy oil wastes horsepower. The Datsun L has a very well designed oiling system. There is no need for the heavy oil.

  8. Oh no...you just aren't looking in the right places Zmanco!

    Go to some Harley Shops and 20W70 and in some cases THICKER straight-weight is available!

     

    Air Cooled is a bit different than our mills, but generally higher viscosity is generally a cover for a compromise elsewhere...

  9. Don't discount the stock early Datsun tanks!

    I corked mine up when I did the EVAP hoses and it held 7psig for 48 hours!

     

    The tank is sound, adapting the sensors...and more usually the filler neck and MODERN CAP is the most you should have to do. It just takes talking with the referee and explaining HOW you transferred the sensors and filler neck from the donor vehicle's tank to the S30 tank. The neck is a machined adapter away usually.

     

    I have seen referees say the tank has to be swapped because "The early tank doesn't have provisions for..." but discussing it with him and explaining how you transferred everything before he gets to that point usually stops the mixing of compliance. If you show you know what you are doing, and took pains to comply with a stock tank, they get impressed.

     

    And nothing says you can't shop referees, either! Or talk with them BEFORE you do the swap to see if they are willing to accept it. You only have to get through the referee ONCE. Once you have that sticker...everyone else has to accept it.

     

    Just because one referee says you have to change the tank, it doesn't mean the guy 5 miles down the road won't accept sensor swaps.

     

    Most sensors are low-pressure cap-integrity checks for the OBD computer. Many times putting a "T" into an EVAP line lets you use the sensor without penetrating the tank.

     

    The HARDEST thing I've found is getting the stock EVAP hoses to keep from leaking. I change them to 3/8 or 7/16" FUEL LINE and holding pressure ceases to be an issue. After the cap/filler neck adaptation, the ref can stick the tester in there, pump it up...and scratch his head in admiring, impressed, disbelief! The stock Datsun filler neck and cap don't have adapters available for them, so changing it make the refs job just like any other late-model. And that makes for a no worries pass!

  10. Ditch the heavy oil, you are costing yourself horsepower.

     

    Verify with mechanical gauge.

     

    For all intents and purposes a straight 30 wt will handle your needs. The multi-vis is good for quick oil pump prime and pump-up to the top end.

     

    More important than high viscosity is the anti-scuffing properties of the oil. You can have 100wt in there and still wreck your cam without enough zinc in the oil!

  11. I tried to give John C my second full size Bridgeport, but he turned it down.

    I would agree that a Smithy is a damn good thing to have, and will do everything mine will do for 99.95% of what you would normally do in the course of a project---all while having the advantage of being bench-top mountable.

     

    Actually it will do more than mine, because it's a metal turning lathe as well.

     

    Then again, as part of that $800 deal, I got a 17 X 48" Cinncinnati Milacron Lathe as well. Rotary Phase converters are a PITA!

     

    I would make note that the REAL SMITHY has a resale value VERY close to new purchase. They don't go down in value. I would personally buck up the money for the brand-name over the HF one, unless you wanted to intimately get acquainted with the machinery when you buy it by taking it completely apart, going over everything and accurizing it, and then using it. The HF stuff is O.K., but you have to take steps to 'make it better' if you want what you will get out-of-the-box from a new or even used Smithy!

     

    In addition, the Smithy is bigger than my 6" Atlas/Craftsman Lathe. But I hold out for that deal on a particular Atlas 10" lathe with EVERY attachment ever made for it---same guy sold me the Bridgeport, and just couldn't part with the 10". He offered it to me for $350 and last I talked he stuck to that price. For that price, I'll live with it taking up the floor space---same as I do with the Bridgeport! :D

  12. Did I mention the 73 he wanted to trade was basically a TUB? No suspension goodies, just stock stuff. No engine, no trans... A rolling chassis freshly repainted black with big flares.

     

    Stealth Z and Corzette probably both know the car I'm talking about --- it was Rojer Puffer's 240Z minus the hood with retracting lights he'd had installed in 1981...

     

    When in your life will you ever get the opportunity to trade a SHELL for a complete car (1 of 417)... KNOWING what it was by then, and being HAMSTRUNG by the government paperwork...you think YOU GUYS hurt reading it. Try LIVING it, and then REMEMBERING IT! :(

  13. Wow Tony D thats crazy that you passed up a Z 432!! I would kill for one of those! Its crazy to think back on stuff that we passed up because we didnt know any better :P

     

    Not just once. The same car after being sold was offered to me by the new owner as a DIRECT SWAP for my 1973 240Z with flares. Specifically I was to leave the red tail lights in it as well... :blink:

     

    The original owner was privy to the deal, and offered up the complete set of mechanical injection, racing cams, an rocket boxes full of spares up to and including a spare S20 Engine.

     

    I'd already filled out governmental shipping documents in triplicate, so there was no way to get the 432 shipped along with my household goods. :(

     

    I still know where the car is, and who owns it!

     

    The decision and circumstances haunt me to this day, especially after being introduced to one of the premier 432/GTR restorers on the mainland of Japan...

  14. First one I saw was a gold 78 280Z owned by my little brother's friend the local lawyer's kid. I remember what I said when I saw it, walking back from my 62 VW Microbus: "I don't like it, the nose is too long!"

     

    9 months later I was driving down Rte 58 in Okinawa in a newly-purchased 79 Toyota Carina GT and saw a 1975 Fairlady Z(S) on the lot.

     

    Went to take a look, in "ZG Maroon" it was a one owner car with 98,000KM on it. Plastic Mats, and an elemental tinniness not there in the Lawyer Kid's 280Z. The car seemed far more elemental, less luxury, and more sporty. I fired it up and the 2 liter was ready to roll. I bought it by trading in my Carina and writing three post-dated checks for the next three pay days ($240 each...how appropriate!)

     

    Now, it has to be said, in all honesty that I bought that car for $2400. There was another one just 1KM up the road at another lot. It was light silver, and was a 1971. It was for sale at the equivalent price of $3200. But it was a 71, meaning I needed to inspect it EVERY year. And why the hell did I want that car when the 75 had a two-year inspection left and was newer. And just as sharp looking.

     

    Of course, I never looked under the hood. Nor did I pay attention to the badges on the grille or fenders. Hell, I didn't even realize the tachometer went to 10,000 rpms. Yeah, why would I want that old 71?

     

    Hey, "Whats a Fairlady Z 432 anyway?"

     

    :shock:

  15. Nice Josh! I'm sure those injectors are at the 5 degree oblique angle as well, huh? :lol:

     

    My hobby minimill is a full sized 1.5HP Bridgeport with a J-Head and shaper on the back. $800 plus $245 for the single phase motor conversion kit. Bought from the original purchaser who used it from 1975 to 1998 in his shop to cut slots in aluminum or thin plate steel.

     

    When I turned the head to 45 degrees for my injector conversion on SU's he put his hand on my shoulder and said "I've never used that feature!" Talk about knee being tight! This thing was like brand new, with the years of patina on the paint. Hell, he even threw in boxes of little end nibs of billet for the cost of the scrap value he would have gotten. I don't think I will find another deal like that. Latest purchase yet to be installed is an XYZ DRO kit (chinese) for $280 that was on e-bay but that I had delivered to our factory in Shanghai for a little bit of nothing! Getting that 40" Glass Gauge onto the plane was NOT easy! :angry:

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