That's a dead sexy downpipe!
Do you guys have a mandrel bender up there, did you get them done custom, or did you buy the bends and weld them in?
The more I hear about it the better your project car sounds![]()
That's a dead sexy downpipe!
Do you guys have a mandrel bender up there, did you get them done custom, or did you buy the bends and weld them in?
Peugeot 306 XTDT 1.9 Turbo Intercooled Diesel
1976 LS parts vehicle
Used to have: Mk1 Swallowtail LS DIESEL!
Thats fantastic, great write up. In its current state of tune it would have to fly i'm sure.
What does the mk3 weigh? The low weight will help the smaller 1.9 no end, as i would say you would now have the same performance but better economy than my tuned GT. Oh yeh, and for alot less money.
Looks the business too!
Keep up the good work and let us know when you get it on the dyno.
Cheers,
Jamie
Me likes the way you think. Very nice fabrication, and no doubt the sort of thing a few of us DPF types would like to bolt in. Good to see you keeping the oiler modding bug alive well and truely!!
And Geez Gregoz, haven't you ever heard of the great Aussie concept of wacking a huge engine in an otherwise stock car, without any other mods? Brakes, tyres, suspension...BAH...stuff for wussies. Being FAR too sensible!![]()
2014 Skoda Yeti TDI Outdoor 4x4 | Audi Q3 CFGC repower | Darkside tune and Race Cams | Darkside dump pDPF | Wagner Comp IC | Snow Water Meth | Bilstein B6 H&R springs | Rays Homura 2x7 18 x 8" 255 Potenza Sports | Golf R subframe | Superpro sways and bushings | 034 engine mounts | MK6 GTI brakes |
Yeah, guilty as chargedI like to see people enjoy the fruits of their labour for a while, rather than wrapped around a tree or on the side of the road with a blown motor. I believe it is possible to mod your car and have fun, and remain alive and legal as well - it just takes a bit more effort is all
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Even when I was a young fellah (and I admit that was some decades ago), I was never a great risk-taker. I was the one who would ride my Yamaha 1100 around the corners at 8/10ths, and then catch up on the straights with a good dollop of power. Several crashes on dirt bikes reminded me about what happened when your adrenaline and ambition exceeded your skill and ability
I know about BIG motors in normal cars without mods - probably the best I knew was a 1969 Monaro that came with a 186ci motor that the owner jammed a big block chevy 428ci into (without changing anything much at all, and trust me, a 1969 Holden 6 cylinder wasn't a good platform to start from !).
He couldn't use full throttle at anything less than about 100Kmhr, as the tyres just went up in smokeIt didn't half accelarate after that though, but was very scary in anything less than a straight line, and it took forever to stop
At the time we had yearly rego inspections, so he just swapped the original motor back in every year for the inspection (he could do it in an arvo - lots of practice). He didn't worry about being pulled over, RWC's etc, as it was the late 70's and he was a cop. I think they called it "extending a professional courtesy" in those days. I valued my life even back then, so didn't ride with him very much at all.
i doubt it would keep up with your GT, and am sure i wouldnt get better economy... though i dont know what i'm getting now after the new additions...
before i was getting 6.5l/100km on biodiesel 100% and about 5.9l/100km on normal diesel. we shall see what improvements there are in time.
i'm not sure what the mk3 weighs, thats a good question. i think it would be less than a tonne, but as to how much less i dont know.
the point of it all is however that its a cheap car - if i get to GT speed then i'll be happy, but this car cost me 7 grand outright and it still has 2 airbags, power windows, remote central locking and good a/c. it still gets nearly as good fuel economy and even with all the stuff i've done to the car, i wouldn't have spent an extra 2 grand yet.... plus its a little lighter, and thus i expect it outhandles the younger models a little.... so for me its the ideal daily driver...
YUP - not project car - DAILY DRIVER - hahahahhahaaa i love VW's.
'07 Touareg V6 TDI with air suspension
'98 Mk3 Cabriolet 2.0 8V
'99 A4 Quattro 1.8T
Yep mine too! Have had many a performance car but the best thing i like about my dub is that its got performance and economy
I think you would be surprised about the performance, we should get a G-Tech and compare. If your under the tonne mine is 1.4t. Our power to weights would be dam close.
My economy is averaging 6.6L/100 we when driving like miss daisy and when pushed i can easily get 10L/100!
I gave a good friend of mine a drive, he's the M car specialist at BMW and he thought it would be good for a 0-100 somewhere in the 6's. Surely yours wouldn't be far off that when tuned with the new exhaust.
Last edited by Jaymz; 19-05-2008 at 08:01 PM. Reason: GT
Cheers,
Jamie
The third-generation Golf was elected European Car of the Year in 1992. For the first time, a station wagon derivative was produced, bringing it into line with key competitors like the Ford Escort and Vauxhall/Opel Astra which had long been available as estates. The GTI variants (especially with the straight-four 4 cylinder engine) are considered to be the poorest of the performance Golfs, with significantly increased weight, but with minimal power increases. A "best of breed" VR6 variant exists which was available in a well regarded "Highline" trim; this 2.8 L VR6 engine gave a significant boost in power to 174 PS (128 kW/172 hp) for the Mk3, a car weighing only about 1285 kg (2836 lb). Compare that to the Mk2 GTI that weighed 285 kg (629 lb) less but had only 139 PS (102 kW/137 hp) and a much smaller engine to tune (1.8 L). A convertible version of the Golf Mark 3 was launched as the Cabrio (Typ 1E). The VR6 offered a top speed of 138 mph (222 km/h) - almost unbeatable on any hatchback of this size available in the early 1990s, outperforming even the Ford Escort RS2000, Rover 220 GTi and Vauxhall Astra GSi.
A 16-valve version of the third-generation Golf GTI was introduced in 1993. This model was greeted with a muted sense of disenchantment by the motoring press[citation needed]. The engine was enlarged to 2.0 L, with power now reaching 150 PS (110 kW/148 hp). While underpowered compared to the VR6, it was still relatively popular with driving enthusiasts in Europe (North America didn't get the proper GTI version, but had the name applied to the VR6 engine). Once again the Golf Driver version took its place as the official GTI-look-alike but with a more humble single-point injected 1.8 L engine.
The Golf Mk3 was also the predecessor of the "diesel craze" that swept through Europe in the late 1990s and early 2000s, when Volkswagen introduced the direct-injection system with the 90 PS Golf TDI in 1993. The 1996 TDI, at 110 PS (81 kW/108 hp) for a 1.9 L engine, wasn't the first diesel engine installed in a road car to achieve over 50 hp (37 kW)/L, but it showed the public that diesel engines could be powered without losing their fuel efficiency, while also retaining massive amounts of low-end torque, in the TDI's case, 235 N·m (173 lbf·ft) at 1900 rpm.
1998 Volkswagen Cabrio GLSAlso offered was a naturally aspirated (i.e., not turbocharged) version of the 1.9L diesel engine, the SDI, offering 47 kW (64 PS/63 hp). This variant is considered to be particularly durable.
During the 1990s, Volkswagen sponsored three high-profile rock bands' European tours, and issued a special-edition Golf, with distinctive exterior markings, for each: the Golf Pink Floyd Edition (1994), the Golf Rolling Stones Edition (1995), and the Golf Bon Jovi Edition (1996).
In 1996, Volkswagen produced a limited quantity of 1000 special-edition 3,5 door GTI Anniversary model, celebrating 20 years of the GTI model. This had the usual GTI specification but came equipped with special chequered Recaro front sport seats and matching rear seats bearing the GTI logo, red seat belts front and rear, half-chromed and leather golf ball gear knob, red stitched leather steering wheel and handbrake gaiter. The release knob on the hand brake was also red and silver instrument dials. Floor mats also had red pipping along their edges. The red theme continued externally with a red striping on the bumpers and red brake calipers. The wheels were 16" x 7.5" split rim BBS RX II alloys, visually similar to the 15" that were found on VR6 model. Brush stainless steel rear twin tailpipes on the exhaust and smoked front fog and indicator lamps to match the rear lamps. 3 optional extras were made available; electric sunroof, air conditioning and metallic black paintwork. Insurance was based on the standard GTI which made this version a very desirable model. The edition was sold in only 6 colour schemes and the 1000 number figures that were produced was as follows; 600 8 valve models, 150 16 valve models and 250 TDI models. The diesel model was only produced for the European market and wasn't sold in the UK. Unfortunately many of the models fell into the UK company car and lease market prior to the second-hand market and its believed only a few hundred still survive.
I want a Rolling Stones version!!!
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Last edited by Jaymz; 19-05-2008 at 08:20 PM. Reason: Rolling Stones
Cheers,
Jamie
Last edited by GoLfMan; 21-05-2008 at 04:13 PM.
VW: it aint just a car, its a way of life
There are few things more satisfying in life than finding a solution to a problem and implementing it
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