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LooseRocks

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Posts posted by LooseRocks

  1. My '71 tank only had a single baffle between the left and right side of the tank.  The pickup is on one side.  So if the 260's tank is the same then in a low fuel and continuous high G situation you could momentarily starve your lift pump.  That shouldn't be an issue since you'll have the contents of your surge tank to prevent the engine from starving.  Just as long as your lift pump is good a sucking (re-priming, not all pumps are good at this) then having that momentarily stop in cooling shouldn't cause it to die.

  2. 12 hours ago, calZ said:

    They should work fine with your hubs. I haven't checked the spacing with a rotor between the tone ring adapter and the hub, but everything should still clear. I'll do some quick measuring to check, and then post the final measurements I gave to SendCutSend. It was $52.76 for the two adapters in 3/8" aluminum, and then I countersunk the holes myself. 

     

    That would be awesome.  Thanks.

  3. 13 hours ago, primaz said:

    BBK? I assume Big Brake Kit? As long as you are using a 16" or larger it should be fine.  I am running the Arizona 12.5" big brake Wilwood kit on two of my 240z cars.  Actually the larger the diameter the more tire options as new cars are not using 14" or 15" anymore.  For 17" there are good tire options with the Michelin Pilot Sport which is a good tire https://www.tirerack.com/tires/tires.jsp?tireMake=Michelin&tireModel=Pilot+Sport+All+Season+4&frontTire=445YR7PSAS4XL&rearTire=44YR7PSAS4XL&vehicleSearch=false&fromCompare1=yes

     

    My Red 240Z is running ground control coil overs with the same Arizona 12.5" vented rotor big Wilwood brake kit and the same tires.  16" wheels has less options than the 17" I believe for the ultra low profile but there are still options in both 16" & 17".  I would look carefully at the tire size and brand options and let that guide you between 16, 17" or even 18" if you are ok with the large diameter.  You will need to see the options in different tire heights from 40, 45, 50 to help guide your preference.  The right offset is critical to avoid rubbing and I would recommend to roll your fenders. I would recommend to spend the money for a 3 piece wheel which will be easy to replace an inside or outside barrel if you ever dent it vs the 2 piece welded versions I am running. A 240Z with 245 wide quality tires with coil overs will handle incredible, you will love the feel...

     

    Tire choice and guaranteed caliper clearance is what drove me to look at 17's.  Once there, I was pretty much SOL on wheel choice.  The only ones that I could find that had an offset that might work for tires sizes at 225 or larger and no fender flares are the TE37V (17x8 with 4x114.3 and 0 offset).  The same wheel with 5x114.3 is +25.  I don't think there's 25mm on the inside even with the coilovers.

     

    The CCW are nice looking wheels.  I love the looks of the classic.  Their 3 piece are the only ones that are smallish at 17".  Everything else is larger.  18 would be ok, but I think that it starts to look a bit too wagon-wheel on this car.  I like the idea of being able to specify an offset.  The CCWs is at $1150 (17x8) per wheel.  That's a hard price to swallow.  It's ~$400-$500 more than TE37V per wheel.  I also looking at Jongbloed.  They also have custom offsets and seem to be in the same neighborhood as the Volk.

     

    Did you have a shop roll your fenders?  On your 16x8 +13 offset setup, do you think you could have gone +25?

     

    Since we're talking expensive customs, might as well add BC forged to this list.  Still "reasonable" 🤣 at ~$3200 per set (mono-forged).  Also option to buy the fifth at 1/2 price.

  4. 10 hours ago, primaz said:

     

    I am using CCW wheels, 16" x 8", offset +13, backspace 5", lip size 2.125" on the orange 240Z with BC Racing coilovers; that enables us to run 16x245x40 series tires on all four corners no flares and no rubbing.  Every car can be slightly different as you may use different suspension such as different brand coilovers, springs, etc.  By measuring using those wheel measuring tools you can determine what is the ideal offset, etc. that you can fit and thus the widest tires.  Running 245's on all corners is very easy as there are others I have seen on the forums going much wider pushing their setup to the maximum.  Our 240Z's with 245's, with good suspension and good quality tires handle extremely well.  The orange car uses fairly soft springs to give it a very mild ride and the red z is running much stiffer springs but that is the one I drive.  I like the CCW brand and styles but any good quality wheel that is a 3 piece design will enable you to custom choose the offset, etc.

    Thanks for the answer.  I'm going to run T3 Evolved coils with their BBK and I want to run 245's with no flares.  The issue has been wheels.  There doesn't seem to be many options out there with a small enough offset to work.  I was looking at TE37V (17x8 or 17x8.5) but the only ones with 0 offset are 4x and I would prefer 5x.  I suppose I could go with 16" wheels but I worry about clearing the BBK and tire options.  I do like the looks of the CCW.  That might be a viable option.  Are you running a BBK with your setup?

  5. On 12/31/2020 at 4:45 PM, primaz said:

    I do not see rolling the fenders on a 240z affecting the value in my opinion.  If you roll the fender the car looks stock and if you use the tool jhm mentioned you can get a custom offset wheel.  I have two (2) 240Z's no flares but both have rolled fenders running 16x8.5" rims running 245 40 tires on all four corners which fills up the well very nicely and looks very clean. The extra width makes big improvement in handling...  I have seen others even put wider tires than I have with no flares either just squeezing it to the max.  I wanted to keep all four the same so I can rotate the wheels to get the maximum use of the tires.

     

    If you do not lower the car as much you can run the same tires as I have.  The Red Z is pretty low, around 4" off the ground and the orange one is higher.

     

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    What wheels and what offset?

  6. The manufacturing process is reflected in the price.  TE37-V are forged wheels and are made for racing applications (light + strong + expensive, ~$500 to $750 each).  Grids are cast (heavy + less durable + inexpensive, ~$500 to $700 for a set) and probably should not be used for high-speed racing application.  And while I say this, many people still do use them for exactly that.  I think they're fine for street wheels.  And in my eyes Rota has some of the more attractive offerings.

  7. They were a really inexpensive brand and are popular with many car enthusiast communities.  BID, when I was into Subies, I remember seeing them crack in racing applications back in the early 2000's.  To be fair they are very inexpensive and at the end of the day you do get what you pay for.  I personally wouldn't use them in a racing application but if you're just cruising around and want a cheap set of wheels to make your ride look good they're not a bad option.  For the price of a single TE37-V you can get an entire set of Grids.

  8. The tiny bit of lip that those socket head screws hold on to in that T slot always bothered me about their design.  It just seems like they needed to give you two plates with two holes in it for the bottom side.  I would be tempted to put an 1/8" plate with a couple of holes there.  Or some thick oversize washers for each of those screws.

     

    I always thought the T slot should at the very least be just two unconnected slots.  I know they're trying to do a T and all but it would have been better/stronger if T was tow unconnected lines.  Can you imagine if the placement of that front screw in the longitudinal hole landed at the intersection..

  9. For every car that I've ever played with the aftermarket has always been suspect.  Even the reputable vendors will take some shortcuts.  Parts don't fit and you need to grind/chop on them or grind/chop on the cart to make it work.  I'm OK with that.  I just wished they were all up front about it.  I just want to understand the scope of the work before I start.  I modified the cable to fit the car.  A dremel with a cut off wheel is magic/tragic for fixing/destroying parts (and fingers).

  10. It sounds like his drum brakes are at the end of life (pads or drums or both) and he wants to go in a different direction.

     

    The T3 cables for the hand brakes will require some modification to make fit.  The retaining collar on the T3 cables are different than the OEM.  The part that sits in the body bracket (above the driveshaft/diff) on the OEM one is ~7/16" and the T3 one is ~9/16".  You will have to either drill out the bracket to 9/16" or modify the cable (a few options here).  Info is for '71.

     

     

    ebrake_collar.jpg

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