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The Nissan 200SX, or more popularly known as the Nissan Silvia, has gotten a bit of a surge in popularity over the past few years. The emergence of drifting, as well as the anime Initial D, has made the 200SX a legend. Here in the Philippines, 2nd hand units are commanding high prices despite the car being around 10 years old. Being a 2 door coupe and seeing as how Nissan Philippines only imported a limited number of units, making a Silvia stand out from the crowd should not be too difficult of a proposition.
The S14 Silvia you see here is the result of meticulous attention to detail. Starting life as a completely stock green unit, the car has transformed to a red hot coupe that is bound to turn heads. Since most units imported by Nissan were equipped with an Automatic Transmission, the first order of the day for this Silvia was a Manual Transmission conversion. With that taken care of, careful attention was paid to extracting the most power out of the already potent SR20DET. A Turbonetics T04E turbine is matched to a Greddy 24R Intercooler and Greddy E-manage to force feed the engine. A Sard fuel regulator and Sard 550cc high flow injectors take care of the fueling needs. Finally, a full 3-inch exhaust system with titanium Espelir muffler finishes off the engine work, yielding an astonishing 308 horsepower and 298 lb-ft of torque at the wheels.
Power is nothing without control, but in the case of the Silvia, people usually want to lose a bit of control by drifting. Tein Type HE Drift Spec Coilovers were installed on all four corners to better instigate oversteer. Tein, Nismo, and Greddy bars and braces add to the stiffness of the chassis. A Brembo brake system from a R34 Nissan Skyline GTR was installed at the front and coupled with Endless brake pads to ensure that if the going gets too tough, the brakes will always bite.
Arguably, the thing that sets this Silvia apart from most is the exterior. A full M Sports widebody kit including front and rear bumpers, front and rear oversized fenders contribute to the hulking stance of the car. M Sports carbon fiber front canards and diffuser adds to front downforce while a Sard carbon fiber GT Wing adds downforce to the rear. Finishing touches include M Sports carbon fiber hood and C-West GT style carbon fiber mirrors. A bright shade of red was painted over the car by the professionals from Alex Car Restoration. Finally, a set of rare and wide 18 x 9.5 Volk Racing CE28N wheels were mounted on the front while an even wider pair of 18 x 10.5 were mounted on the rear.
The interior is kept simple but all parts installed are of the highest quality. BRIDE ZETA II seats ensure that the driver and passenger are kept snuggly in place during wild oversteering maneuvers. A Nismo JTC Steering wheel and Nismo GT shift knob is utilized while Sard gauges ensure timely monitoring of engine vitals.
With a Silvia that looks and performs like this car, it’s no wonder that Nissan’s sports coupe is as popular as ever.
How do you define Horsepower? A good way to effectively explain this word is to give a glimpse of history back to the time of the British inventor James Watt (1736-1819). It was Watt who coined the term “horsepower,” to increase sales of his improved steam engines. He had previously agreed to take royalties of one third of the savings in coal from the older Newcomen steam engines. This royalty scheme did not work with customers who did not have existing steam engines but used horses instead. Watt observed that a horse could turn a mill wheel 144 times in an hour, or about 2.4 per minute. Watt calculated that the horse pulled with a force of 180 pounds (just assuming that the measurements of mass were equivalent to measurements of force in pounds-force, which were not well-defined units at the time). So:
James Watt and Matthew Boulton later standardized the figure to 33,000 ft. – lbs. / minute, the figure we use today. Horsepower is defined as work done over time. The exact definition of one horsepower is 33,000 ft. – lbs. / minute. Put another way, if you were to lift 33,000 foot-pounds over a period of one minute, you would have used up one horsepower. Engine horsepower is the relationship between known engine torque at specific engine speed divided by Watt’s equivalent unit of one horsepower. Simplified, the equation is:
TYPES OF MEASUREMENT:
INDICATED or GROSS HORSEPOWER
This is the old process that American manufacturers used as a guide for rating their cars. It was in place prior to 1972. SAE gross horsepower also measured at the flywheel, but with no accessories to bog it down. This is the bare engine with nothing but the absolute essentials attached to it; little more than a carb, fuel pump, oil pump, and water pump. SAE J245 and SAE1995 define this measurement.
SAE NET HORSEPOWER
In 1972, American manufacturers phased in SAE net horsepower. This is the standard on which current American ratings are based. This rating is measured at the flywheel, on an engine dyno, but the engine is tested with all accessories and standard intake and exhaust system. Both SAE net and SAE gross horsepower test procedures are documented in Society of Automotive Engineers standard J1349. Because SAE net is so common, this is the standard we will use to compare all others. This is what most automotive manufacturers publish as SAE net horsepower. Because SAE gross ratings were applied liberally, at best, there is no precise conversion from gross to net. Comparison of gross and net ratings for unchanged engines show a variance of anywhere from 40 to 150 horsepower.
BRAKE HORSEPOWER (BHP)
Prior to electronic bench testing, horsepower was quantified as the amount of resistance against flywheel brake. Although the method is no longer used, the term remains an industry standard. Often road test magazines will measure as “bhp”. This is just another way to talk about SAE net horsepower.
DIN HORSEPOWER
This is a standard, DIN 70020, for measuring horsepower that very closely matches SAE net. The conditions of the test vary slightly, but the required equipment on the engine and the point of measurement (flywheel) remains the same. Because the test conditions are similar, it is safe to divide DIN horsepower by 1.0138697 (metric horsepower) to arrive at SAE net. This value is so close to equal that for all but the most technical purposes DIN and SAE net are interchangeable. However, be aware that DIN “horsepower” is often expressed in metric (Pferdestärke/ps) rather than mechanical horsepower.
SAE CERTIFIED HORSEPOWER
In 2005, the Society of Automotive Engineers introduced a new test procedure (J2723) for engine horsepower and torque. The procedure eliminates some of the areas of flexibility in power measurement, and requires an independent observer present when engines are measured. The test is voluntary, but engines completing it can be advertised as “SAE-certified”. Many manufacturers began switching to the new rating immediately, often with surprising results.
ADVERTISED HORSEPOWER
This rating is measured at the flywheel. The engine is tested on an engine dynamometer or engine dyno by the manufacturers based on SAE net standards. Those horsepower figures presented in advertising materials are often based on engine tests under ideal environment to be able to advertise the best results. These figures are merely a baseline figure taken from the most powerful engine tested or an average of the engines tested.
EFFECTIVE HORSEPOWER
In automobiles, effective horsepower is often referred to as wheel horsepower. Most automotive dynamometers measure wheel horsepower and then apply a conversion factor to calculate net or brake horsepower at the engine. Wheel horsepower will often be 5-15% lower than the bhp ratings due to a loss through the drivetrain.
The most common chassis dyno, the inertial dynamometer (popularized by DynoJet), measures the horsepower as delivered to the wheels – whether front (fwhp), rear (rwhp) or both (4whp). This kind of machine measures the horsepower produced by the engine and computes for the torque from the engine speed. In other chassis dynos like Bosch, Dynopack, etc., the torque output measurement is rather based on the relationship of horsepower and the wheel speed. That is why the torque figures in the first, second and third gears are completely different.
SURPRISE HORSEPOWER
Factory ratings are all well and good. But manufacturers, measure horsepower at the flywheel (test on an engine dyno in a controlled environment). Ironically many enthusiasts measure horsepower at the wheels (test on a chassis dyno), mainly because they are not interested in ripping the engine out of their car to have it tested on an engine dyno. And, to the surprise of many, the horsepower numbers presented in advertising and brochures aren’t always accurate.
The dynamometer is a measuring machine, in order to make a proper comparison, it should be made using the same type of measuring machine.
Well, without taking into consideration the circumstances under which it is measured, testing wheel horsepower (whp) makes it difficult to convert from what the dyno says to what the manufacturer says. All that equipment between the engine and the wheels – the transmission, driveshaft, differential, and axles – introduce friction and inertial losses summarized as “power train loss” or “parasitic losses”. The efficiency of the driveline can greatly affect the amount of the power train loss. Some may incur more power loss, some may incur less. It really depends on the design of the drivetrain and the weight of the parts. That is why there is no real formula for converting wheel horsepower to engine horsepower (contrary to popular belief).
Kris over at GT-R Blog posted a link to this video of a R35 Nissan GT-R tuned by Forged Performance. 596 wheel horsepower at 18 psi of boost on 91 octane fuel.
Modifications on the car are :
The octane rating of gasoline tells you how much the fuel can be compressed before it spontaneously ignites. When gas ignites by compression rather than because of the spark from the spark plug, it causes knocking in the engine. Knocking can damage an engine, so it is not something you want to have happening. Lower-octane gas (like "regular" 87-octane gasoline) can handle the least amount of compression before igniting.
The compression ratio of your engine determines the octane rating of the gas you must use in the car. One way to increase the horsepower of an engine of a given displacement is to increase its compression ratio. So a "high-performance engine" has a higher compression ratio and requires higher-octane fuel. The advantage of a high compression ratio is that it gives your engine a higher horsepower rating for a given engine weight -- that is what makes the engine "high performance." The disadvantage is that the gasoline for your engine costs more.
Latest car 2009 Lotus Elise. Lotus Elise is equipped with a standard 1.8 liter, 14, 189 horsepower engine that achieves 21-mpg in the city and 27-mpg on the highway.