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I'm new here, please be gentle This is where you can "introduce yourself". A chance for you as a new member to say hello and for you to tell us about yourselves, your truck and your other interests. |
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07-04-2009, 07:53 | #1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Devon, Bideford
Vehicle: T2 97 2.7tdi SWB
Posts: 313
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Soon to be new owner of a 1997 terrano swb 2.7tdi se! with gaffa tape on wing mirrior
Hi team!
In 4 weeks time i wil be the proud owner of my girlfriends uncles p reg blue swb terrano! its all standard with side steps and a cracked drivers wing mirrior! i have a few question though, and hopefuly you guys can help me out! so here goes: 1. Is there anyone from the north devon area? as i live in bideford. 2. Are the 2.7 tdi engines gear driven as opposed to belt or chain? 3. What sort of MPG can i expect from the beast? 4. How do i remove the side steps, in order to increase ground clearance? 5. If i replace the air filter with a K&N cone how will it affect fording, is the nissan one sealed? 6. Her uncle says every year he has to get the front bearings re-tightened and the rears are sealed? anyone else have this? 7. Does any one have a mong proof guide ti putting in spot lights and a roof rack? Many thanks dan! (soon to be dan the nissan man) |
07-04-2009, 08:01 | #2 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Devizes Wiltshire
Vehicle: Nissan Note Ntec 1.5
Posts: 14,138
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Quote:
oh Ps HI Dan and welcome |
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07-04-2009, 09:04 | #3 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: All hail to the Glove of Love...
Posts: 9,212
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Quote:
A couple of add-ons t what Zipp has said: Timing is direct gear driven, straight off the crank - no belts or chains so you can forget them forever - this engine is also fitted to the London Fairway black cab - 300-400k miles is the norm for those beasties... Removing side steps-there are three pairs of bolts each side, front, middle and rear. Quite possible on an older truck that some of them will be seized, so my advice would be plenty of advance soaking in WD40 but still be prepared with a small disc-cutter/grinder to cut the tops of one or two. But you're right, makes a lot of difference to ground clearance. Also, if the front of your truck is more than 1-2 cms lower than the back, then the torsion bars need adjusting upwards - theres a workshop download on the site to help. Also helps with ground clearance. And if you can afford them, you can fit up to 31-inch diameter tyres to give you another bit of height. Wheel fitment is Jap standard (details on here somewhere) so Hilux, Shogun etc; all sorts will fit providing wheel offset is adequate (lots on here about that too) K&N filter is great, improves performance a bit as well as adding 1-2 mpg. When you fit it, you remove the entire airbox (which takes its air from inside the nearside wing which of course can fill with water just as easily)...so look at the height at which the cone will then sit in the engine bay and ask yourself if you'll ever go that deep - if you do then I suggest you need a snorkel!! Nissan recommended wading depth is 0.5 metres I think but you can go a bit deeper providing you're sensible. I've had a Mav and two Terranos (two of them from new) and covered more than 250,000 miles in them - never heard that stuff about bearings but it never hurts to carry out preventative maintenance. Rears aren't sealed to my knowledge. Re spots, unless you have an A-bar (which reduces front ground clearance and approach angle) lots of folk just mount smallish spots (6inch) straight into the front bumper using large washers either side to spread load. Re roof rack, I'd recommend you just buy a pair of Thule-type roof bars that clamp straight on (side to side). You can get roof rails (front to back) which take a bit of fitting but then you still need to buy the bars to fit them for carrying stuff and unless you want the 'roof rail' look, the Thule roof bars are the most flexible option. Loads on FleaBay. Join up and we'll give you the secret link to the on-line maintenance manual! |
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07-04-2009, 09:31 | #4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Devizes Wiltshire
Vehicle: Nissan Note Ntec 1.5
Posts: 14,138
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Um lacroupade you said...
Join up and we'll give you the secret link to the on-line maintenance manual! but hes in BLUE so he has.. must look under mind then thought side steps were only front and back. NB cant take mine off as short wife Zippy |
07-04-2009, 14:55 | #5 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: All hail to the Glove of Love...
Posts: 9,212
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Quote:
Give him the link then Zip!!! And yes, six bolts each side. Front and middle pairs bolted to side of chassis, rear pair bolted to side and top....takes ten minutes to remove them if the bolts are not seized.....so next time you go to salisbury plain, whip them off - makes a lot of difference to ground clearance when going over humpy bits! And oil the bolts before refitting to make it easier next time... |
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07-04-2009, 15:06 | #6 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Devizes Wiltshire
Vehicle: Nissan Note Ntec 1.5
Posts: 14,138
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07-04-2009, 16:04 | #7 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: All hail to the Glove of Love...
Posts: 9,212
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Quote:
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07-04-2009, 19:05 | #8 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Devizes Wiltshire
Vehicle: Nissan Note Ntec 1.5
Posts: 14,138
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sorry dsgrnmcm seam to have gone a little off your thread..
oh well, back to it. youll love the SWB a lot better to play with than the LWB i have. |
08-04-2009, 08:36 | #9 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 4,705
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Dan , I fitted a K&N cone, as said before if you want to go deeper than the std filter use a snorkel.
I reckon the K&N actually takes in air higher up than the old plastic tube that feeds into the std item anyway I've got Hiclones & K&N on the induction ide, 91 000 on the clock and return 25 - 30 mpg (carefully measured......I'm tight ) depending on how I've been driving. If you can get hold of some during the warmer months use vege oil in with the diesel. Veggie oil = 70p per litre, diesel around (or just over) £1 = near as damn it 30% saving in fuel costs. You'll have fun |
08-04-2009, 09:49 | #10 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Devon, Bideford
Vehicle: T2 97 2.7tdi SWB
Posts: 313
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Quote:
dan p.s. think i'll give the bling a miss, dont live in brum anymore! |
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08-04-2009, 10:09 | #11 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: All hail to the Glove of Love...
Posts: 9,212
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yep its the 57i kit. fitted two on my trucks, pre and post 2000 facelift.
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08-04-2009, 13:12 | #12 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 4,705
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08-04-2009, 13:28 | #13 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 4,705
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Quote:
Mine is a 2002 2.7tdi and yes thats the case. I understand theres different fuel pumps etc that handle it differently, I did the research but I'm sorry i cant remember specifics I suspect yours will be. Contrary to myth I have never found any evidenced info that veggie oil (svo) itself knackers the engine. What you do have to be aware of is that its a tad thicker. That means that there may , just may be some problems with some components in some cars that cant handle it. But effectively using the veggie oil in warmer weather means its no thicker than diesel in the colder weather. I got caught out by a cold snap and had half a tank of veggie in, It thickened up but the only effects were very poor running. I topped up with diesel, it mixed and youre away. I generally mix the stuff but certainly this time onwards approx 75 to 100 % veggie each fill. No preheaters and no fancy equipment. I may upgrade to a twin tank with preheater (to thin it ) but quite frankly cant be arsed at the mo. I get the same fuel consumption and including whilst towing the van no reduction in power. I change oil and filters on all my cars every 6 to 8000 anyway so any problems that people say may occur with fuel filters, water content etc doesnt seem to be a problem. It smells good too its brilliant in a traffic jam watching the occupants of the car behind you wondering why they can smell deep fat frying £15 @ Makro for 20 litres at the mo (my last lot was even cheaper) makes it worth buying. I'm looking for someone in our area doing filtered used oil aka waste veg oil (wvo) that seems to clock in around 40 to 50p a litre if you buy about 100 litres of it. The reason for its cheapness seems to be that theres a lot of it about, not many trucks like ours that can run on it neat and only a finite demand for turing it into biodiesel which is its main anticapted use. On a slight aside I havent tried bio diesel yet. We've had problems at work with fleet vehicles and bio diesel. I understand some problems are alleged to be caused by the chemical content in it reacting with seals etc as opposed to the more inert nature of "normal" diesel. I really dont know though. Hope that helps without sending you to sleep |
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08-04-2009, 13:28 | #14 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: All hail to the Glove of Love...
Posts: 9,212
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