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Its what i like about this forum , and funny enough, how old this car is... There is just so much information on this car, its limits mods and DIYs helpful people ( definitely not like the mustang forums :):):) ) Without the obscene amount support, (and from specZ 350s ) it would be tough get to where I am at.
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Part of the selling point for me on the Z34 was indeed the age of the car. It's nice to have an idea of the reliability of the product, the common flaws, and the fixes to them. If you can get tied in with the group in the Off-Topic thread, the amount of data and problem solving available to you is fantastic. Very knowledgeable people, even for those of us with more limited wrench-turning experience. I wouldn't be where I am today without them - not even close. |
Yeah keeping it local usually tends to be a bad idea. I've done it a few times an it usually ends bad, same goes for shop rates, places that are cheap, or even average, can't keep good workers. And the people that stay behind are the ones that can't get work at better paying shops because that don't have the capability. They also willing to take short cuts to do more work in less time to make up for it.
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Agreed. I shipped mine 18 hours away
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yeah . . . Sorry to hear about all the troubles, but as you will agree the first "wrong turn" was AAM instead of Fast Intentions. Several threads discussed how poor their quality control is.
I'm glad Specialty Z was able to sort you out. guess i should be happy i live in California. Despite all the emissions crap, if I ever TT my car, it's a few hours trip to Fast Intentions to install the kit in-house and then a short trip to Specialty Z for a tune, and done. I would have no worries. Really is amazing that those two places are . . . maybe 30 minutes, not even, from each other. Makes projects easier to plan and when you're down there, Mackin's warehouse is not far . . . |
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I've had to clean up after mechanics multiple times over the years, because I do as much of my own work as possible, but life in general has dictated getting it to a shop from time to time. Multiple times I've found myself under the hood, or under the car, looking at missing bolts or a leak that wasn't there before while muttering, "I paid them to do this?". |
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TT can be quite the adventure!
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Wow...
Yeah I've concluded you just need about $25,000 in cash, and ship the car to fast intentions and plan on not seeing it again for 6 months, and plan on random phone calls: "...you might want to add this...." Or, just take the $25,000 and get a used GTR and finance the rest, but then the challenge is finding one that doesn't have transmission issues and/or has not been destroyed. In the end, I've decided just to keep the car as a daily, leave it where it's at, and fingers crossed Nissan gives us a factory turbo updated 370z where you can just do bolt ons/ecu tunes. Otherwise, there are other platforms to consider. Best part: with this whole "virus" thing, there's going to be some great used car deals to be had, so I'm keeping my eyes open. Quote:
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Nice write up. I also run the AAM kit and recognize the attention points you named. Also check the water hose running over the drivers side turbo manifold - mine needed a better angle preventing it from melting.
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Unfortunately, people lie to massage their egos or shops promise you the world, as did the shop i brought mine to. Getting the gear is simple research .. thats the easy part... now going to a shop... its like going to jail and asking who there is innocent. Who to tune my car, what software to use, all my parts fell under the research category. Who to install on my car... crap shoot. At first, I ws going to transport my car out to AAM - they built the kit, theyt should know how to put it in... right? but after the fiaso w them, that was a no. Then I thought, Soho, or Z1... after getting a quote, I could literally buy another 370z... point of diminishing returns there. So after this process started becoming a bit scary, I decided id canvass local. IDEAL: is to find the local gem that is magic to your car... form a great relationship and dont have to transport the car every time theres a glitch. local dyno , tuning, maint etc.. This is what my mind was now thinking. summary: You cant just trust people, because everyone is right, and everyone is wrong. If you can see things first hand and shops are local dealing in your car, then perfect, if you live 1000 miles away from shops that may or may not be reputable, then there are hard decisions to make. In my case, I decided the best shop is in my garage and scored. But again, ill say it, it sucks repairing what paid certified mechanics couldnt |
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LOL to add insult to injury, the install shop used a hodgepodge of vacuum lines ( I very well would have paid for new vacuum lines - they are cheap) and they turned to dust when i moved them around.. (WTF!!!) I replaced them, with some high temp vac lines. zzz. |
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Well, I will say this. How people spend their money, is completely their own affair. As with anything there are pitfalls in life. It is not how you fall, its how you get back up. Your consideration to spend the equivalent money on a used GTR35 (at 50k prob going to be a CBA) with questionable history and very expensive to repair parts is your choice. For someone who looks at the $$$ first (what im guessing from your post) then you are making a sensible decision to keep your car stock, to later trade it in for something perhaps more modern and perhaps faster.. Thats a great idea. My choice, was a personal one. I i like this car like a Ed Bolian (VinWiki) likes manual Lambo Merci's. When you love your car, you are willing to make different financial decisions.. Me personally, I have enjoyed turning wrenches on this car just as much as I have driven it. It is a hobby I enjoy. People have different motivations, but this one is mine. What im trying to drive home is this: I made this thread to share my account. I love reading other people's stories, so I thought Id share mine. I hope you Z gives you the same enjoyment as mine has. :usa: |
Since this topic contains some tips about the AAM kit, ill add another experience here:
The turbo oil feed on the passenger side runs quite close to the turbo exhaust housing, and the hose sits under a 90 degree angle. Due to the angle, my heat sleeve which runs over the oil feed line had a small "opening" on the end just before the 4AN connector. After 25.000km of hard driving, it leaked last weekend after a trackday on the nurburgring. I replaced it with a stainless PTFE series 600 line and new kevlar heatsleeve where i wrapped stainless security line around the sleeve on the connecter, so it wont open anymore. You can do this whilst everything is on the car, but be prepared for 4-5 hours of wrestling ;-) |
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