I agree with this guy.The parts you have listed will be over $6k if you buy new and from reputible sellers. Labor is another thing all together.ericb382 wrote:I know someone on here will probably argue with me...
ok I will pass on the intake manifold.DuckyD wrote:
I agree with this guy.The parts you have listed will be over $6k if you buy new and from reputible sellers. Labor is another thing all together.
I wouldnt bother the Greddy Intake Manifold, you will lose low-end torque. If you really need an intake manifold, get the ISIS mani at 1/3 the price.
Don't get a HKS SSQV. Everyone has them (including me). If you are getting tuning, get something that sounds cooler (like a Greddy Type-R).
With the parts listed, you should be over 300hp on an Enthalpy tune.
Modified by DuckyD at 2:23 PM 11/9/2009
thanks for the link, ive been searching for a super nice s14 for over 6 months. i dont want a car with cosmetic issues, all painted up, different body panels, body kit, replaced body panels, or frame damage.rc1honda wrote:GReddy doesn't make a SSQV BOV. The HKS SSQV btw is the best bov on the market in my opinion. Self adjusting and sounds the best.
To the OP,
Seeing as you are not going to do the labor or swap yourself I think your are going about this the compleltly wrong way. You said you like to drive the car not work on it which i respect. Swaps are labor intensive and so is anykind of engione work. You are going to pay way to much in labor alone to justify this kind work.
What you should do, and i really think you will be happier with more money this way.
You should sell the kouki you have now for 6.5-7.5K or whatever you can get for it. Take the 12 grand you have now, Then get back on these forums and buy a car that has been already built.
There are a lot of great s14's for sale on the forums right now. This way the work is all done and you can foucus on what you like to do most which is driving. See some people build these great cars and motors then sell them right when they get done. See for some people building it is all the fun, they can care less about driving. These are the cars you wanna buy.
Someone else spends all the money and you reap the benefits. I can tell you first hand that building a car and doing swaps, is not the way to stay on a budget at all. I will never build another S-chassis ever again, they are money pits and you never get what you paid back out of them.
Here is a car a found while looking in the Nissans for sale section here.
zer...t-11k
Also im sure this guy would take 9,500 cash for the car if you showed up on his doorstep. Sell your car take the money and buy a pre-built car.
Modified by rc1honda at 2:19 PM 11/9/2009
Modified by rc1honda at 2:20 PM 11/9/2009
Enthalpy (and JWT) are just Rom-Tuned, kinda like chipping your stock ECU.You send your ECU in (or he can send you a new ECU and you send him back your core) and he solders chips to your ECU and then can program stuff in.bm3r wrote:how does the enthalpy tune work? are you talking alcohol water injection of some sort?
what are your mods? is that 270 to the wheels?DuckyD wrote:
Enthalpy (and JWT) are just Rom-Tuned, kinda like chipping your stock ECU.You send your ECU in (or he can send you a new ECU and you send him back your core) and he solders chips to your ECU and then can program stuff in.
You're looking at $400 which isn't bad IMO.
I actually just got a tune for my stock'ish s13 blacktop. Still on t25, still on stock fuel, and the car feels much much better. Doesn't fall on it's face after 5000rpm like it used ot. Before I was dyno'ing at 225hp and Martin @ Enthalpy was claiming this tune was good for as much as 270hp. My butt-dyno seems to have to agree.