Post #17
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Sunday, 15-Jul 2012 @ 8:51am
Edited by
beetwenty
Sunday, 15-Jul 2012 @ 9:18am
Yeah, you are right Neil, those figures are not realistic for the original Question, Sorry Gary.
I would consider a G13B-NA, G13B-Turbo, 4AG20V-NA, CA18-NA or I believe there was talk about a single rotor 13B-Turbo creating a 6.5B-Turbo on here a while back.
Looking up the
Light vehicle modifications page on the Qld Transport and Main Roads site, in
Part 1 of the Code of Pratice...
Engine Capacity Limits (on page 31 of the PDF) As far as I understand the engine laws up here in QLD we go by the weight of the car
*Factory Weight would be for a sedan @ 625kg without extra options such as Deluxe models, and not based on heavier models either, so if you have a sedan you can't go off the wagons weight of 645kg.
For NA motors in cars under 1100kg we multiply that weight in kg's by 3 to get the maximum capacity (CC's) of an engine you can legaly put into your car, Turbo Motors are x 2.5 and Rotary engines are calculated at twice their capacity.
So for a 625kg car...
NA = 1875cc
Turbo = 1562.5cc
For rotary engines a 13b is considered to be a 2616cc engine (1308 x 2)
So up here in QLD an SR20DET or a 13B-Turbo is out of the question.
I believe there is now a National Code of Practice for all other states,but for cars under 800kg's the same rules apply.
Gary, you should go by the NCOP as you are in WA.
Engine swaps require split or dual braking system and a collapsable steering column.
The engine rules are on page 11.
http://www.infrastructure.gov.au/roads/vehicle_regulation/bulletin/pdf/NCOP3_Section_LA_Engine_01jan2011_v3.pdf All other mods for the NCOP
http://www.infrastructure.gov.au/roads/vehicle_regulation/bulletin/vsb_ncop.aspx