Supra Owners, Chime In
But back to the original topic, I would take a TT 6-speed pre OBDII FTW. If you like to tackle projects like I do, an NA-T 5-speed is a pretty easy way to get a 12 second car with less than 5k invested in upgrades.
Last edited by dasboost; Dec 7, 2008 at 09:15 AM.
get a TT 6 speed. Also do the guy that said na-ts are junk my previous na-t was making 500rwhp with stock internals. Not that much hp by any means but its still pretty descent.
for americans living over seas you can just call USAA and they will insure you at a slightly higher rate but still well within a reasonable price. UK insurance is based on engine size and some other things. They have certain type of licenses too. What Ive been told is anything 2.0L + is considered a sports engine or something to that effect so insurance is high as shit. Thats why all the ricers around here rock 1.3L POS's.
they have the same bottom, minus the oil squirter. the rods are the same i think.
the pistons are different because of higher compression.
head is different.
some 7m guys are swapping 2jzge vs 1jz and going na-t with them in their mk3s.
http://www.supraforums.com/forum/sho...d.php?t=119214
the pistons are different because of higher compression.
head is different.
some 7m guys are swapping 2jzge vs 1jz and going na-t with them in their mk3s.
http://www.supraforums.com/forum/sho...d.php?t=119214
I don't know what it is that makes ppl say NA-Ts are weaker. Whatever it is, it still makes plenty of power. Check out some of the bolt on setups on supraforums. They are still making some serious power.
Looks like right now its a toss up between having a manual transmission or a twin turbo car. It seems like manual turbos are hard to come by, in England at least.
I think it all depends on your ultimate goals for the car. The NA-T's W58 tranny can hold up to about 450 safely. I think the biggest struggle with the NA-T supras is the tuning for daily driving. The AEM EMS is still going for $1200+ and then you have the tuning and dyno time on top of that to pay for. Once you start talking 450+ you are talking about either a getrag transmission which is still pretty damn expensive, a R-154 from a MKIII which you have to buy a bunch of 1jz parts to fit, or an american tranny conversion kit which will probably come to about $4000+ once all is said and done. If you could find a TT for a reasonable price then I would just bite the bullet. If you want to go NA-T it's going to take a lot of research and time to make it a quality ride.
Last edited by bmantis; Dec 10, 2008 at 01:06 PM.








