phat7 said:ps: ramsing where is my beer? you tfk me too many time liau!! ;)
phat7 said:we malaysians are fortunate enough to have access to second hand parts. If not for this i dare say only the extremely wealthy would be able to afford any kind of modifications. Buying everything new even in Malaysia would render cost which would baffle the average malaysian but thats what you pay for reliability.
As ramsing pointed out, no point modifying the car only to have it go kaboom after 30 minutes. In other countries labour cost factor is huge in any sort of fab/installation work.Nevertheless i see your point - us being the poorvo-pots and USD15k x 3.8 is a managers yearly salary and all.
ps: ramsing where is my beer? you tfk me too many time liau!! ;)
trex92 said:ermmm... fortunate enough to have second hand parts...? :D :D sorry, i think we are unfortunate to be using second hand parts in the first place coz prices of cars too expensive so we have to resort to modifying our car to get the bhp that we want but can't afford to buy in a new car and coz of the expensive prices of cars we have here, naturally the spare parts for them also marked up to be expensive. I received one e-mail written that was forwarding around on our Proton and the expensive cars we have here and it wrote something like "those cars deemed too old in japan are scrapped and we here in malaysia buy these scrap metal to be used, kinda like using people's rubbish". It was kinda sad the way it was written but it makes sense and speaks the ironic truth.
:frown:
eh, btw, u mean FFK here la... :D :D u let him TFK u...? :D :D just kidding!!
phat7 said:Second hand parts are the only thing keeping the racing scene alive for many. The govt should impose regulation on the prices of the abovementioned parts considering proton looses revenue in terms of spare part sales.
Back to the topic. if you intend to undertake suck a big project as above then like ramsing said there's much to look into such as fuel,suspension,ems etc.