Jump to content

Smokey

Members
  • Posts

    1,958
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Smokey

  1. Helping a buddy sell the kit he removed from his C5Z he bought. Looks like this was the base kit: https://www.summitracing.com/parts/nxo-22-81000 Then it has some extras that were added to it: MSD window switch box with included RPM pills as pictured Nitrous outlet x series purge solenoid zex intake fitting adaptor/nozzle pressure gauge master arm/kill electronic switch It will also come with the shown mount which fits in place of the C5 rear trunk. PLEASE NOTE: you'll need to complete the wiring for your specific car as some of the wires had to be cut for removal. ALSO: he's not sure what nitrous jet is in the kit currently. The fuel line is pretty short so I'm guessing it was designed for LS cars. would like $400 for everything shown http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/For%20Sale/3E86D0FD-7204-4CDD-9BF6-1A4E13BE78E0_zpsu2jrumrj.jpg http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/For%20Sale/5D5C64B2-8F2A-480D-836E-CD5C00E21B27_zpsuqoznzaf.jpg http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/For%20Sale/A2D2C001-5AC7-4EC8-9ED7-9D0D2A5714F4_zps7gn2iamu.jpg http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/For%20Sale/164C756E-DED2-4E10-A06E-2F39F76832A8_zps8ye9osrx.jpg http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/For%20Sale/7984C52C-80A8-431A-86D1-292288E4FE7F_zps5s7rsk3i.jpg http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/For%20Sale/3CA75F89-B24F-4A0F-AAD8-0A75B497F750_zpsyqbqwcjx.jpg http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/For%20Sale/E37DDF13-85A1-4992-A5EE-6925F4E88CE7_zpsklgpr5qa.jpg http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/For%20Sale/C4DAE598-91A7-4091-8221-67F2F43B94A8_zpsyu1a6pcj.jpg http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/For%20Sale/4D58CDFA-9A7A-49F5-B758-7719BAC6CEB3_zpsuufkzrlx.jpg
  2. My old silver car didn't have power steering and while you got more feel it was also much more effort. I felt it meant I had to be too tight/strong on the steering wheel and that reduced my ability to feel fine changes thru the wheel. I'm happy so far that I've kept power steering and intend to keep it on this car if possible.
  3. anybody know why my embedded videos wont work? edit, never mind it appears to just be on my PC.
  4. Saturday was pretty much ideal conditions in that it was overcast and cooler but still warm enough for good track temperature. It reminded me a lot of fall. My friend came up and we took tire temps as well which was helpful. Seems like the car wants more camber on slicks. I'll have to try to get some temps on the Nittos to see how they compare. I know the alignment is always going to be a compromise and I'm probably not going to change anything at the moment. On the session he was taking temps I got my fastest laps of the weekend shortly after coming out of the pits. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/87DDA39F-2C87-41E5-AE76-D2240FB0AC17_zpstbnoctfo.jpg I was definitely blown away with that level of speed with the car and for the first event on slicks. I think the weather being ideal helped too. I think that in the fall when the car always runs best if I can put together a good lap it's got a :34 in it. THe rest of the day when it warmed up I didn't get back to the :35s, but the car was consistent and plenty fast. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/33578EDE-0C3A-4068-8393-C676B18192D9_zps4fecqi8r.jpg http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/43F29F8C-0625-45D9-97CD-E0B1ED4AFBC0_zpsmrxbsz1m.jpg Unfortunately I had an issue with the GoPro. It ran out of battery during the session and didn't seem to finalize the file. Where the video ends here is where the videos split due to size (normal) but the 2nd file won't play or open in GoPro editor because the battery died while writing that file. Anybody got a good fix for this? Here's video of the 2nd fastest lap and 1/2 of the fast lap. You can see on the timer that I give up time in keyhole and whole back straight then get it back at the end of the straight (fast lap reference was an off line pass the lap before). You can also see me be hacky and throw the car over the hill in 8 and upset the car. I need to smooth that crap out, but it's part of the learning with the new tires. You can also hear something new I wasn't expecting. wheel spin during hard corner loads. You can notice it in turn 9, 11 into thunder valley and the carousel. What's happening is that with the slicks it's loading the outside tires so much that it's completely lifting the inside rear and then my torsen diff will spin the inside wheel. It's a bummer, but I'm not replacing the diff this year (hopefully), so I'll look at clutch diffs next year. Plus, I don't want to put an aftermarket diff in there until I can get the temps under control. I also had an interesting interaction with one of the NNJR guys who has a stripped/caged 996 GT2. The car is crazy fast, but he was clearly having some struggles with handling....that must have affected his ability to see in his mirrors! haha. Had to turn on the pop-up lights on him. Sometimes it's like the FD is Rodney Dangerfield on the track....can't get no respect Here's also an example of how the slicks work differently than Nittos. You're able to brake much later and carry more speed into corners. Here I'm taking a late pass going into turn 1 on someone I know/trust. Of course he was messing with me a bit not lifting when pointing....always remember students out there...lift when you point. I was good with it since I know this person, but I was also surprised how many cars would point and not lift over the weekend and I couldn't pull them..haha.
  5. First event: NNJR PCA @ Mid Ohio. This event was changed to an advanced/instructor event only which gave us TONS of track time. We'd get 5 30 minute sessions every day which means one day was roughly equivalent to a typical Sat/Sun event. The forecast called for rain Sat/Sun though which stunk, but you can't control that. So Friday I knew I wanted to get up to speed quickly. That was unfortunate for my Nittos. NT-01s are still the best track tire in my opinion in that they're the perfect mix of durability, predictability, and value as they last well. The one weakness they have though is that at full tread depth they need some easy track time to break them in. Go too hard too quick and you get this: graining on the tire. Tends to happen when you slide them at full depth. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/B0F5EA26-77F0-4DB6-B095-3B9D653B50BF_zpsfqc102cf.jpg I was able to rotate them and try to minimize the wear, but I'll have to look after them. If you keep pushing after doing this you'll just scrub the rubber off of the tire and lose tons of life and never get the grip out of them you'd want. I still want the Nittos to be my primary tire and I'd like to have this set last the full season, so hopefully I can do that. I also managed to forget the mount for my AIM Solo on Friday which was annoying. I always seem to forget something I swear. Ran the first session and the car did well. The updated catch can setup kept the amounts in the can reasonable and made removing/dumping the can easy as pie. I was still emptying every session but could probably push it to 2 if I'd want to which is nice. Of course this is still with keeping it about 1/4 level on the dipstick. I'm not sure if the PCV line is helping or dumping oil in the intake, but I'll have to investigate that later. after the 2nd session my new bearing on the idler pulley puked its guts out....DOH. Fortunately it was just messy and it wasn't making noise nor did it give further issue thru the weekend. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/DE4C7939-5C59-435B-8ABA-DA7BD8CE8159_zpst5glvuqs.jpg Friday afternoon it was time to try out the new change on the car I'd been itching to....SLICKS! http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/A84BEFD0-BBD4-4A52-95A5-6191FAE36631_zpsrqcgk2xe.jpg Driving on them is fun! It's a different experience for sure in that yes they're different than Nittos, but not so different that it feels like a different car or something. You just start to find that you can carry a little more speed and make time in a bunch of different places and it adds up over a lap. I stole my brother's Solo and got some times Friday afternoon. My best on Nittos at Mid Ohio was a 1:38.2 that was done last fall. In taking experience from my brother's use of the Pirellis they should have been about 2.5 - 3 seconds/lap quicker than the Nittos. Here's where I was Friday afternoon. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/2C5CCEAD-64CB-4B0E-9F40-27C5125BDDCF_zpsnhvqcrbt.jpg I was pretty happy to be right where I thought I should be on just the 2nd session ever running slicks. Where the slicks are a little crazy in my mind is that from Apex off of a corner the Nittos drive just as hard/fast as slicks (although slicks you're starting from higher min speed). Where you make up ALL of the time on the stickier rubber is from braking, turn in, and corner entry speed. This is also the hardest/scariest place to build up speed so it's a fun challenge. At the end of Friday I had turned almost 200 track miles and the car did great overall.
  6. Thanks Clay! finishing up prep for the first event. Got vinyl numbers from Paragon vinyl who's always done well by me. Trying to get away from using painters tape for numbers..haha. This year some of the PCA clubs are now requiring 4 sets of numbers too. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/77D534C6-6A48-4DC4-A3FA-BF9482C6C5CD_zpsl2vsolsc.jpg getting some help cleaning it up http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/007B5D03-3B05-4234-A5A5-4FE3EAB6C1F6_zps4agehd4n.jpg this event required 4 sets of numbers to now have them on front and back of the car as well. Probably as clean as this car will be for the remainder of the season! http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/7EE8D67E-D952-4FBF-AE32-804CFA0846C8_zpsfosdf68m.jpg
  7. Nittos are gone. Thanks Anthony.
  8. Got the car aligned at Auto Assets who is always great. Their head tech JJ used to work for Passen Motorsports if you remember them back in the day, and he has tons of FD experience. Ended up doing -2.3 degrees camber up front and could only keep caster to around 6.3-ish. I wanted it closer to 5.5-6, but caster is always a compromise. Front was barely toe-in like 1/16" total. Rear was -2.0 camber with zero toe. Once I got back home I torqued all of the camber bolts and marked them with the torque check paint. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/5DE5838E-D39B-43E7-A217-58AD142D97A6_zpsaob14kik.jpg After alignment it was time to road test the car a bit. The car felt good, but I was getting a mysterious black dust from the tires and/or brakes it seemed. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/C1A23D8F-B105-466D-B911-9CAE222403B3_zpssrbn0pum.jpg http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/7A7F999E-3E7C-4781-86E3-5AE4548434C2_zpsxinx7mri.jpg I was still using the street pads at this point and the dust was very light not like brake dust. The best I can figure was that it was release mold from the tires. I haven't had that previously from Nittos, but maybe it's something new? It kept happening thru the first couple of sessions at the track, but then subsided. After my street test, I noticed a decent amount of oil in my catch can....DOH. Perhaps the stock fill neck idea wasn't going to pan out. To test this theory I went to the only place in town I could find that still has an old-school "cloverleaf" and I did 20 minutes of highway on-ramp and exit ramps to see if I could test the catch can. Sure enough, got home to find this: http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/5B933498-D061-48BB-89CE-C34BE38FDF3E_zps4aez9btk.jpg well....if I could do that on the street it wasn't going to be better on track and I didn't want to risk it. So to dig back in the old parts bin I'm going back to my old ZeeHan oil fill neck. To be honest I like the design, baffles, and build quality of the IRP oil neck better, but this one allows me to run a simple 3/8" nipple to the catch can line which is WAY WAY WAY easier for me to just take out the catch can and dump it in-between sessions. That makes time and effort required much less which is what I'm going for. I'm also taking the opportunity to try out what Fritz suggested and hook back up a line from the oil fill neck to the stock PVC line which I had previously blocked off. Here's the neck and fittings http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/4BFFA5E3-6C6B-49DB-985C-811E915BF48F_zpszgddl73t.jpg Here it is installed http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/820C0054-BA06-4A3C-810D-142B5771AE3B_zpsd31po2mp.jpg http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/A1FB6BEF-1493-41E5-A918-4CE034D37DCE_zpsfckffdtz.jpg Also, since the brake master cylinder cap seems to always leak a bit on the track, I bought child wrist sweat bands to help keep the mess contained. Taking a queue from our old motorcycle days. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/2CD83F28-F870-472A-8155-3117F2C7AED8_zpsmvhttqrd.jpg
  9. I was able to get some junk worn out slicks that I used for test fit. Here they are mounted. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/83E4D821-B7B0-46CF-A8FA-82F0776B68FC_zps2cgy4vwx.jpg The tires are so damn tall up front that fitting them is a chore. I had to raise the car up a decent amount to get everything to fit and try to minimize rubbing. It's always going to be a compromise, I'm sure I could keep them off of the fender liners if I wanted, but the car would have to be stupid high. The top isn't the only concern though. Here's an example of how close the tire is to the front connection of the bumper and fender and there's this metal joint that would cut a tire. Thankfully it just barely clears. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/6B1D6B75-3448-499C-AD6C-DCEB78190140_zpsy9a0q89b.jpg I had to clearance the fender liner around that portion as well as it was catching on the tire. The white stuff is sidewalk chalk I was using to find rub areas. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/0D90DC19-16E2-4680-8751-9EF5FFE57496_zpsenkz9tui.jpg Once I agreed on a painfully high ride height it was time to corner weight the car and get it ready for its alignment. I was able to find a place in my garage where I could level the scales....JUST BARELY fits! haha. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/D75AF550-9482-4D87-8E52-637320117681_zpse9qw9qye.jpg when corner-weighting it's always good to have a good relationship with a guy who owns a gym so you can have easy ballast. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/F99DA274-D955-4112-8CE2-1D0EDB5F760E_zps2derv5by.jpg here it is on the scales (being done with Nittos and heavier wheels) http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/04758087-6FFA-43D7-BDB8-D60DF72224F7_zpshvuwws88.jpg The good news is that setting appropriate heights on the car evidently gets is really close on corner weights! Here's how it looked the first time putting it on the scales. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/B28ABE87-0C88-47C8-95B3-4E26633736F5_zpso28hg1mh.jpg Couldn't ask for better than that! I was weighing the car this time around with only about 1/4 tank of gas, so it was pretty light too, as this is with 200lbs of ballast. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/70D816AF-86C2-4376-BF59-285B7FADF6CA_zpsuxnjoztk.jpg Here's the weight with more like a half tank which is more likely where I'd drive it on track. It was good to see how the weight affected balance too, and the good news is very little. Cross weights only went to 49.8% at this weight. Gotta love how light the FD is. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/2F43924F-AF7D-4448-B35F-91EDBD5BE567_zpscerb2jiy.jpg Here's the final ride height after all said and done. Fender/tire gap isn't bad, but the rocker height tells how high the car truly is. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/40746CD3-F4FE-4B58-A0F9-775A41067721_zps0slos6pk.jpg
  10. Next up in the ongoing saga of heat management, I decided to get the cat-back ceramic coated. One of the bends runs right by the differential and couldn't be helping with my heat management issues. I've had my downpipe ceramic coated for a couple of years with good success, and since I'm doing the cat-back I also did the mid-pipe. I used performance powdercoating on the south side of town which is who did my downpipe. I think the exhaust came out pretty well. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/6DDDF9B2-2A29-4E8D-A54A-60C651F7849E_zpsplkaneqm.jpg http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/64280B5A-88C5-45AD-83E4-952AF7B2030C_zpsho4jjugo.jpg I thought about having them leave the entire muffler body untouched, but it was easier to have them just leave the polished end/tip un-coated and do the rest. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/FC7BE7D8-7625-4506-9BC1-F6E00B8ACF4D_zpsn3huzb2f.jpg the only downside was some powder left in the muffler when it was done, which I got most out and then the rest blew out when I first stepped on it..haha. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/9E8C3D73-4515-42D2-BE1C-2248AE7F92BD_zpsrmo3htyx.jpg of course why not put some new hardware on for my updated exhaust? So I got some new stainless hardware to replace the old beat up stuff. Cool right? WRONG. My dumbass didn't realize that stainless hardware is a poor choice here as stainless/stainless will ruin the threads and sieze....had to learn the hard way I suppose and it involved some breaker bar work to snap everything off...doh. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/A3CDBC6C-EEAA-499A-879E-0A834B70632B_zps2memw5x0.jpg in some of the carnage from last year, the tires had worn the fender liners around the screens I had put in last year on the passenger side. Unfortunately I was concerned that the loose edge would cut a tire so the whole screen had to come out. It stinks that the back of the oil cooler is unprotected, so I'll have to figure out a solution going forward, but for now it's just one big open hole http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/AFA8D48D-735A-4662-AFA3-3ED9B246D1B5_zpswnhuq2k3.jpg Next up was to replace the rod ends on the rear trailing arms and toe links. I have had M2 arms for 8+ years and had previously replaced the rod ends with QA1 units from JEGS. They would only last about 1.5-2 seasons though before getting play in them. This time I'm going with FK rod ends which were easy to procure through Summit Racing. I like the 3-piece design of the FK over the QA1 as well. Here's a picture of old vs new http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/BE333D80-2385-4F5D-BD93-FDEB2C67FAA6_zps2e1xolqe.jpg
  11. during the winter I felt some loose play in the driver's rear shock bushing. I figured it just needed replaced so I bought a set of super-pros to put in there. I go to replace it and upon taking it apart I discovered that the bushing wasn't actually bad, but that the nut/bolt had come loose....damn. Well let this be a lesson to you kids to make sure you're staying on top of that stuff. I typically nut/bolt check the car at the beginning of each season, but now will implement another option. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/0E1A2B13-1624-4DF9-ACA8-77AA8AA93CB2_zpsnqjixrrj.jpg This stuff is supposedly used in the aircraft world and you put on a beat like a paint pen, but it make s very clean break if/when it rotates/moves so it should be easy to see if something has loosened up. I went to town putting this shit on everything! haha. Here's how it looks on said shock bolt/nut that had loosened previously. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/7A5B351E-C515-4BF0-A783-A9B7CD93BA8D_zpsrbfrsfey.jpg Hopefully that makes it much easier to once-over the car between events during the year.
  12. Here's where I mounted the P/S cooler. I'm not pumped about taking cooling priority away, but this seems to be the best option at this point. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/860B0626-CCBE-4759-B8AF-6401D0153CEC_zpsbiirpm6v.jpg To make the lines work, I used a little bit of Home Depot engineering and used this fitting to adapt the stock line from the P/S reservoir to the aftermarket line running to the cooler. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/FD048FAB-79A6-45EA-AA8D-9C3188015955_zpszii271ra.jpg On to brake ducting: I mounted the backing plates http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/477945A8-6D87-456A-80BD-7A9A3ED86283_zpswmwunxjj.jpg I still had the stock "clamshells" for the front radiator opening on this car, so Tinman helped make some sweet ducts that would go thru them which would feed fresh air to the brake ducting. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/3D4F6D67-0C3E-423A-81F5-979A1F5E7EF9_zps6lodyvq4.jpg Here's a shot of the finished product from the front http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/41614813-F7D5-41A8-9CED-F84ACCB16552_zpsc9pannyj.jpg to run the hoses I had to trim up the underpanel a bit. I also put in some new foam to make sure all remaining air was getting directed to the radiator. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/EFC7A219-D31E-4380-8A6D-82E88435E2E7_zps0rq3uuyu.jpg Here's the routing from the wheel well side http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/5A7A52C2-DB25-4B42-8070-2547C25AD3BF_zpsyno2tjyy.jpg Underneath where it runs by the underpanel http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/853DFD69-0D7D-42D1-8B73-01342EBA0F0C_zpsfrf3bm7m.jpg view from the front bumper opening http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/98DE5177-E8EF-4DDB-9286-6C3F77243444_zps6jgj8pq8.jpg also the new wheels showed up that I'll use to run Pirelli DH slick scrubs this year. CCW C14s. I had a pair that I got used on a decent deal, and then ordered 2 new ones direct from CCW. The design has changed a bit and they no longer offer anodized finish, but I think it'll be close enough for what I'll use them for. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/109EAD2F-29F5-426E-806C-B9F3EB591AD0_zpslxrrreoz.jpg I got the Nittos mounted on the forgestars. Mounter jacked them up a bit when putting the tires on. I know they're track wheels that will get beat up, but still wasn't very happy about it. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/B069392B-2633-4788-98AB-B470630C76A1_zpslmtglhlz.jpg
  13. trying to catch up on this thread. Still prepping for the first event of 2017 in May. Trying out something different with the catch can/oil fill neck. One o the theories was to reduce as much pressure as possible, so I took a stock oil fill neck and fitted it with a -10 bulkhead fitting so I could use my existing -10 line to the catch can. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/8503AF79-6447-4D86-A82E-8BF3353643D1_zpshxen6d3k.jpg I noticed that when taking things apart that the boost juice is leaving behind some pink residue. I'm actually switching this year to mixing my own methanol. I found a source down by Athens that I can buy and it won't have the pink coloring. It's cheaper to boot which is an added bonus. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/9D5C6DEE-E6F1-4D5C-924C-0D31AAFCE9CD_zpsygnzbqft.jpg Next up I replaced the bearing in the idler pulley as mine was making noise and I didn't want it to fail. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/2709411C-D1C3-457F-BC1D-6485996B1F47_zpsptdridq0.jpg got the springs swapped on the front coilovers and then put everything back together. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/C0190CFA-7097-484E-A1E8-505E5273F57D_zpsnl1orsoe.jpg Next up was brake cooling. I had backing plates made previously, but I haven't been able to use the duct hose routing I previously did because the power steering hard line runs in the way. Last year I chose to run without the cooling ducts, but I was getting faster brake component wear than I'd like. So the goal was to come up with ducting to see if I could get better pad/rotor life. First thing was to remove the power steering hard line and put an aftermarket cooler in place. I used this little Derale cooler: http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/5EAB775C-92DF-4070-9C5F-EE34D664D198_zpskhkc6tyi.jpg Here you can see the cooler in comparison to the hard lines that came off of the car. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/white%20car/C2F5D009-AF63-457E-B4DF-8D45265DDD35_zps7rw8lar8.jpg
  14. https://www.kirkeyracing.com/product/10/70170KIT/SEAT-KIT-17-STANDARD-20-LAYBACK-CONTAINMENT-SEAT-BLACK-COVER The seat above is the exact model. Has never been mounted/used. Includes cover as pictured in black. No mounts. Save good money over new. $400 http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/For%20Sale/49242E40-8681-483A-B0B4-F07F0BD13EF7_zpsgzpqb6hq.jpg http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/For%20Sale/E997B17E-1A5E-496E-9A39-17CB0A8F4FBC_zpsvbx4xcot.jpg http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/For%20Sale/E70D447C-035D-4181-9698-EF964E60A414_zpsh2fsbsdu.jpg
  15. Have a pair of Nitto 555s in 315/35-17. Between 4-6/32nds left on them. $150 for both. Have more pics if desired. http://i193.photobucket.com/albums/z56/kutschca/For%20Sale/5F395B2B-8955-4E87-8DBF-F2976B02C741_zpssssasl8x.jpg
  16. If the engine bay shot is real, then yes, it's a 20b car.
  17. From the original thread: "I can tell you this: the quality of the book will not disappoint and the book will always be delivered after the intended date. Haha." I am bum,ed it's taken this damn long, but I will say the books are always great in the end. Even this one has taken way longer than the others.
  18. Zach if you're getting your comp license, what are you planning on racing? I'd think that should drive your car decision.
  19. LOL. I got the time to empty the catch can down this year! In all honesty the FD is an AMAZING car on the track but certainly takes some dedication to track and deal with the maintenance. But when the shit works...better than 99% of the shit out there. I'd show you in July, but there's no way you're fitting in there. Also....not fuel efficient! I used about 76 gallons of gas last weekend! Miller I vote e46 M3. Great car to learn in. Has motor compared to the 944 but Not too much that it's intimidating. Amazing chassis, good brakes, tons of support, and reasonable running costs. Just make sure you buy one well kept and hopefully with some track prep done.
  20. Remember when we had it at Blocks every other week? Tasty bagels for breakfast were awesome, but damn if it didn't confuse the shit out of people and never garnered the attention of people from the east side like they all said they would attend. It was the same people that were at Lennox and confused the shit out of everyone else. Keep it at a central location, a big lot, and a place where management lets you continue. I believe you have that.
  21. This is a major bummer to me. I watched him come up they AMA and into Moto GP. Always a good guy no matter the circumstances of where or who he rode for.
  22. I buy graphics and numbers from paragon vinyl. Perhaps reach out and see if they'll sell sheets to you.
  23. This is me for sure. Luckily my commute doesn't require using those exits but if I want to get on the highway I have to go by there. ...DOH. like Greg I'm much more concerned with how bad it'll be on the weekends.
  24. First car project and you're going for full engine swap and widebody? Agreesive. I wish you the best. Lord know I'm not taking on something like that.
×
×
  • Create New...