
edit to add.
I accept that a diesel will make better torque low down but i guess what i am trying to say is i think its about setting up gearing to suit your setup and adjusting your driving style accordingly.
Bulletproof wrote:rangimotors wrote:with low enough gearing you should be able to build lots of torque at high rev's
I don't believe that is right. For most 4 wheel driving you want torque at 1000rpm and then you have complete control because you still increase the revs.
Because in a lot of situations you need momentum from a higher gear.
Cheers Richard
Bulletproof wrote:haynzy wrote:Did your turning circle improve with the prado diff, Its the one thing that gets me about my lux, it sux even with 50mm wheel spacers on
My turning circle sucked badly with the 35x12.5s while I had the leaf springs. Since I fitted the Nissan Suspension and moved the diff an inch forward my turning circle is good even without spacers but could be improved with 25mm spacers.
turoa wrote:Bulletproof wrote:haynzy wrote:Did your turning circle improve with the prado diff, Its the one thing that gets me about my lux, it sux even with 50mm wheel spacers on
My turning circle sucked badly with the 35x12.5s while I had the leaf springs. Since I fitted the Nissan Suspension and moved the diff an inch forward my turning circle is good even without spacers but could be improved with 25mm spacers.
how the hell does a turning circle change by changing the suspension let alone get better WITH a longer wheelbase
swampa wrote:25mm wheel spacers, rims are turned inside out, to be honest the turning circle is better but not massively in mine
yorick wrote:2) Diesels do NOT automatically develop more low end torque than a petrol. Take two naturally aspirated engines of the same capacity and tune them for a flat torque curve and the petrol will walk all over a diesel. It's down to tuning and design. It's just that most petrol motors these days are designed for peaky torque and power at big revs. However, a Commy 3.8 up against a japanese diesel of the same capacity would be a winner every time.
KiwiBacon wrote:yorick wrote:2) Diesels do NOT automatically develop more low end torque than a petrol. Take two naturally aspirated engines of the same capacity and tune them for a flat torque curve and the petrol will walk all over a diesel. It's down to tuning and design. It's just that most petrol motors these days are designed for peaky torque and power at big revs. However, a Commy 3.8 up against a japanese diesel of the same capacity would be a winner every time.
When do you find vehicles with a naturally aspirated diesel and petrol of the same size?
I have a turbo diesel of 3.9 litres, I'll happily put it up against a commodore 3.8. Personally I have no love at all for those V6's and can't understand why so many people want to install them.
I've got around 250Nm from idle and you can spin the two and five around once you pass 1500rpm.![]()
The commodore has about 290Nm at 3000rpm. That's average.
http://www.uniquecarsandparts.com.au/ho ... ations.htm
albundy wrote:Safaris don't have electrics under seats. Terranos do, It was a terrano stuck in the Hope wasn't Richard. I waterproofed my terrano and apart from the ecu being under the seat it was preety waterproof. Regularly had it in water over the bonnet. Kept a bilge pump in it to keep the water from the ECU, also regularly sprayed it with silicone
Al
Bulletproof wrote:albundy wrote:Safaris don't have electrics under seats. Terranos do, It was a terrano stuck in the Hope wasn't Richard. I waterproofed my terrano and apart from the ecu being under the seat it was preety waterproof. Regularly had it in water over the bonnet. Kept a bilge pump in it to keep the water from the ECU, also regularly sprayed it with silicone
Al
Hi Al
It was a safari with an auto and it had to be put in some special mode to get it back. I might be wrong about it being under the seat because I never saw it and may have heard them wrong but my understanding was something to do with the computer getting wet.
It sat in the river for a long time and water got in somewhere.
Cheers Richard
PS Did Rude send a video of your trip ? I wouldnt mind getting a copy if he did and will send you some money
yorick wrote:That's a meaningless statement. Manufacturers always put in bigger diesels to retain similar performance, which just strengthens my argument.
yorick wrote:Um that's a VN spec, 20 years old. They were/are shit I agree, a VR or VT Ecotec is a different barrel of monkeys and they are 305 nm. Tell you what to make it fair, I'll match your 3.9 turbo motor against a supercharged 3.8 VT ... just to be fair.
yorick wrote:Interesting stuff. However a couple of things that bear debating.
1) The SWB vs LWB debate has been around since the dawn of time... or at least since the 107 Series 1 and I've had both. There are advantages and disadvantages to both and your comment about 9 out of 10 doesn't hold water across all uses. LWB is better for climbing no argument. But ramp over angle is bad. LWBs needs spring lift to attain the same ROA as a similar SWB. Of course that immediately lifts the COG so stability on a sidling is compromiseded. If you stick to tracks then use a LWB, but a SWB is better for bush crashing or on open pasture. To each one its own.
yorick wrote:Um that's a VN spec, 20 years old. They were/are shit I agree, a VR or VT Ecotec is a different barrel of monkeys and they are 305 nm. Tell you what to make it fair, I'll match your 3.9 turbo motor against a supercharged 3.8 VT ... just to be fair.
No problem, if the petrol stations are more than 400km apart, you'd be walking.![]()
KiwiBacon wrote:I didn't find anything on the 2.3 kompressor. But the 2 litre SLK200 kompressor engine only does 120kw and 240Nm.
BMW's 2 litre 120d pumps out 130kw and 350Nm.
NJV6 wrote:Peeps,
This thread is not about Petrol vs Diesel or LWB vs SWB! Bulletproof has explained why he has what he has and I thought this was about HIS hilux....... Many many many other threads to discuss the merits of each.
Back to your thread Richard... - It was a good read.