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This is one fast MQ
This is one fast MQ
A friend of mine gave me an old Mag (last year) that had a story about an OLD MQ Patrol with some serious horse power under the bonet a whole 777hp at 6500.
I looked a little further and found it has near broke the 9 sec 1/4 times. This is one fast SWB MQ. I would say it is the quickest in Australia, lol...
They had to fit some wheelie bars for its last run at Calder park on the 13th of March... here is a PICCY
Casey
I looked a little further and found it has near broke the 9 sec 1/4 times. This is one fast SWB MQ. I would say it is the quickest in Australia, lol...
They had to fit some wheelie bars for its last run at Calder park on the 13th of March... here is a PICCY
Casey
I disagree. I have factory steel flares and they do not have a cout out for the petrol thingy. Aftermarket plastic is where my money would be, or from a non Australian model.ozy1 wrote:those flares i believe are factory steel flares, i had a mate with a set a while back, but he sold them off for good money
I can sell someone some factory steel ones if they like, but they have to buy the whole truck
Regards,
g@z.
I disagree. I have factory steel flares and they do not have a cout out for the petrol thingy. Aftermarket plastic is where my money would be, or from a non Australian model.ozy1 wrote:those flares i believe are factory steel flares, i had a mate with a set a while back, but he sold them off for good money
I can sell someone some factory steel ones if they like, but they have to buy the whole truck
Regards,
g@z.
mk
No not factory flares.
these are factory steel flares
these are factory steel flares
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Remember some days your the pigeon and other days your the statue
God of Magnificant Ideas!
The flare argument.........
The flares seen on it are PLASTIC ( not fibreglass ) & are an aftermarket product and are similar in design to the flares on the A9X Toranas.
This style of flare did not encroach into the wheel arch as such leaving room for a slightly larger tyre which would rub on the body before it ever touched the flare. The biggest down side to these flares was the method of attachment, they used long screws through the body rather than as we know em these days as through the wheel arch lip. The screws were around 3" long and went through the flare from the outermost part of the flare & just up from the actual inner wheel facing area through the body and then into the wheel arch cavity where a nut was then fitted.......
If I've not explaind that clearly then imagine the screws being horizontal through the body all the way around the flare rather than screwed up into the lip !
Although they were really smick looking flares they had some major drawbacks, .......
1/ They were made of plastic so took a bit more to break than the fibreglass flares but when they broke they really fell apart, the plastic was similar to that which we see in "COKE" bottles.
2/ If they had a reasonable knock or hit the plastic part of the flare may survive it .... however the screws would often damage the body in an unseen mannor ( hidden behind the flare )
3/ Because the attachment screws went through the body & through the inner guard, the holes drilled left a open area for mud/water to enter the rear 1/4 far easier so they caused a premature rust problem..... the design didnt allow for a reasonable way to seal up the holes because you simply couldnt get to them !!!
Unfortunately you couldnt see the rust forming because it was hidden by the flare and it wasnt untill one noticed that the inner guard had rotted out that one generally found that the rear 1/4 was in worse condition.
I removed a set of em about 8 years ago from a MQ that did a lot of offroad and farm work, the amount of mud inside the rear 1/4 was so large that I collected nearly 4 buckets of dried mud from each 1/4. The passengers side was that bad that the mud had moulded itself around the speaker fitted to the inner trim and had made its way forward enough to cause major structrual damage to the lower seatbelt attachment area aswell.
Kingy
P/S
I've known for years that MQ stands for .......
Mighty Quick
The flares seen on it are PLASTIC ( not fibreglass ) & are an aftermarket product and are similar in design to the flares on the A9X Toranas.
This style of flare did not encroach into the wheel arch as such leaving room for a slightly larger tyre which would rub on the body before it ever touched the flare. The biggest down side to these flares was the method of attachment, they used long screws through the body rather than as we know em these days as through the wheel arch lip. The screws were around 3" long and went through the flare from the outermost part of the flare & just up from the actual inner wheel facing area through the body and then into the wheel arch cavity where a nut was then fitted.......
If I've not explaind that clearly then imagine the screws being horizontal through the body all the way around the flare rather than screwed up into the lip !
Although they were really smick looking flares they had some major drawbacks, .......
1/ They were made of plastic so took a bit more to break than the fibreglass flares but when they broke they really fell apart, the plastic was similar to that which we see in "COKE" bottles.
2/ If they had a reasonable knock or hit the plastic part of the flare may survive it .... however the screws would often damage the body in an unseen mannor ( hidden behind the flare )
3/ Because the attachment screws went through the body & through the inner guard, the holes drilled left a open area for mud/water to enter the rear 1/4 far easier so they caused a premature rust problem..... the design didnt allow for a reasonable way to seal up the holes because you simply couldnt get to them !!!
Unfortunately you couldnt see the rust forming because it was hidden by the flare and it wasnt untill one noticed that the inner guard had rotted out that one generally found that the rear 1/4 was in worse condition.
I removed a set of em about 8 years ago from a MQ that did a lot of offroad and farm work, the amount of mud inside the rear 1/4 was so large that I collected nearly 4 buckets of dried mud from each 1/4. The passengers side was that bad that the mud had moulded itself around the speaker fitted to the inner trim and had made its way forward enough to cause major structrual damage to the lower seatbelt attachment area aswell.
Kingy
P/S
I've known for years that MQ stands for .......
Mighty Quick
[color=blue][size=150][b]And your cry-baby, whinyassed opinion would be.....? [/b][/size][/color]
mk
mine is done simply.4130warrior wrote:Doc that looks wild. Do you have any more pics of the rear wall of the cabin? I am thinking through various options at the moment to turn it into a softtop or a styleside ute.
Lift up ally lid and canvas rear. works well
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Remember some days your the pigeon and other days your the statue
shit yeah i like that a lot doc. how secure is it? i live in parramatta and am very apprehensive about leaving things unsecure.
on a side note i noticed that chris chapman (nissan patrol nsw club, son of trials organiser) has the exact same flairs on his shorty MQ. same fuel filler cut-out and everything -- didn't think to ask about their origin but i will.
on a side note i noticed that chris chapman (nissan patrol nsw club, son of trials organiser) has the exact same flairs on his shorty MQ. same fuel filler cut-out and everything -- didn't think to ask about their origin but i will.
I know it's completely impractical as a fourby but that looks awesome .... and yes ..... I'd hit it!!pongo wrote:I found this . Very nice indeedy
nissan patrol , big block twin turbo , he make in uae ( Dubai ) 400 meter 8.3 sacend
The throttle that is .. you dirty minded buggers
TD 80 Series, F&R Lockers, Winch etc
This is one fast MQ
The flares look like the ones I had on a '82 MQ shorty years ago. They were part of a Nissan option called an "A Pack". This gave you aircon, tinted windows and the flares. Actually they looked pretty dopey above the 7.50x16 split rims as there was no wide wheel option back then. Also they weren't real tough and mine split (due to a stress fracture?) at the fuel filler cut out. Fixed that with a strip of aluminium and a couple of pop rivets. The flares were held on by a series of black counter sunk self tappers about 100 mm long punched straight through the body work which led to rust quick smart. I wouldn't recommend them.
cheers
wtmudd
cheers
wtmudd
does it have IFS
ps theres a link to a vid here:
http://fullboost.com.au/video.php
havent seen it yet (damned company firewall) but will when i get home.
thing. is. horn.
ps theres a link to a vid here:
http://fullboost.com.au/video.php
havent seen it yet (damned company firewall) but will when i get home.
thing. is. horn.
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Re: This is one fast MQ
saw it at OBC 05, couldnt get off the start line. he had problems with his front shaft. Majority of 4bs drove over it..... (looks fun tho.)kc_ksom wrote:A friend of mine gave me an old Mag (last year) that had a story about an OLD MQ Patrol with some serious horse power under the bonet a whole 777hp at 6500.
I looked a little further and found it has near broke the 9 sec 1/4 times. This is one fast SWB MQ. I would say it is the quickest in Australia, lol...
They had to fit some wheelie bars for its last run at Calder park on the 13th of March... here is a PICCY
Casey
Actually it does have IFS.4130warrior wrote:does it have IFS
ps theres a link to a vid here:
http://fullboost.com.au/video.php
havent seen it yet (damned company firewall) but will when i get home.
thing. is. horn.
Theres pics of it in 4wdm you can see the hole front end of it cuse its a front on shot with its wheels up in the air.
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