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In Japan, as usual, things were better.
The same car was available as the 180SX, which looked like
our fastback 240SX, or the Silvia, which was identical to
our 240SX coupe from the A-pillar back, but used fixed
headlamps. Both cars were available with a variety of
engines, but the one we care about is, of course, the
SR20DET. Producing anywhere from 202 to 247 hp in stock
form, the SR20 is capable of 400 hp at the wheels with
relatively little work.
The S13
Silvia and 180SX were so popular during their initial
production run that when their heavier, more luxurious
successor, the S14 Silvia, was introduced in 1995, the S13
180SX remained in production. After more than eight years of
production, S13s are abundant in Japanese junkyards, making
for a constant supply of imported used engines and front
clips.
Even
though the rear-drive SR20 was never sold in the United
States, this swap is popular enough that many of the most
important parts are available here.
Picking the Chassis
The S13 240SX came as a fastback, coupe and convertible. The
convertible is heavy, flexible and was only available with
an automatic. If you're building a sports car, don't start
here. Of the remaining body styles, the coupe is slightly
lighter (about 50 lbs., depending on options) and stiffer,
thanks to the added structure behind the rear seats.
The
240SX was available with ABS, a viscous limited-slip
differential, and Super HICAS four-wheel steering. ABS from
this era is relatively primitive, so we tend to avoid it.
The HICAS system is probably another one to avoid. The
rear-wheel steering is sometimes in phase and sometimes out
of phase with the front wheels, and many people find it
unpredictable and unsettling. There are several kits
available to eliminate the system on cars that have it.
We've
only experienced the system on Skylines, where it works
quite well, so we can't comment on its effectiveness in the
S13. A limited-slip differential is absolutely critical for
what is about to be a very powerful car, but only cars with
Super HICAS had the limited slip. If you can't locate a car
with one, you can find one in a junkyard from a 240SX (all
Canadian 240SXs had them) or a 300ZX, or there are
aftermarket limited slips available. If you get a 240SX
limited slip, be sure to get the driveshaft as well; it's
about an inch shorter.1989 and 1990 models had a single-cam,
12-valve KA24E, while '91 and later cars used the twin-cam
KA24DE. Since you're removing the engine anyway, this
matters little, but the swap is a little easier starting
with a twin-cam car. The power-steering lines from the
earlier engine don't line up with the SR20's power-steering
pump, and the tach signal from the SR20 won't drive the
single-cam tach.
We found
a relatively straight 1989 240SX coupe with 270,000 miles
and a hole in the engine block for $800. It has no ABS, no
HICAS, and, unfortunately, no LSD. It also has no sunroof,
which is critical for tall drivers. Still weighed down with
air conditioning, power windows and a fender full of Bondo,
it tipped the scales at 2,710 lbs. before the conversion.
We found an early 1989 240SX Coupe
with 270,000 miles and a hole in the engine block for
$800. It's not pretty, but the price was right.
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Picking the Engine
You'll need an engine and transmission for this swap.
Ideally, you should also have a wiring harness, ECU and
countless little brackets and doodads. If you're putting off
the inevitable front-mount intercooler, you'll also want the
stock side-mounted intercooler and piping. The easiest way
to get all the parts you need is to buy a front clip, which
includes the whole car from the A-pillar forward. We bought
a 180SX front clip with 66,000 km on it for $1,500 from
Venus Auto Parts in Sacramento, Calif. Venus sells the clips
without bodywork. We also bought the Silvia fenders, hood,
bumper and headlights for $500.
Ultimately, you'll probably want
an intercooler more like this than the stock one. This
intercooler on Ralph Kenyon's 240SX is the most
efficient layout we've seen, with two small cutouts in
the core support allowing this huge core to be used
without adding miles of intercooler piping. If you
aren't in a hurry, you may want to build something like
this. We were in a hurry, so we slapped in the tiny,
stock intercooler--for now.
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If you
buy the engine separately, check the lower oil pan for
dents. The SR20's oil pickup is mounted very close to the
oil pan, and a dented pan can pinch off oil flow, usually
resulting in immediate rod bearing failure. The pan only has
to be very slightly dented for this to happen, so if you
have any doubts, remove the lower pan (that's the stamped
steel part, not the aluminum part) and check for score marks
from the pickup. You can either hammer the pan back out,
replace it (you have to get one from Japan) or upgrade to a
GReddy or ARC high-volume pan. (The GReddy pan is baffled,
the ARC is not.) With a stock capacity of only 3.5 quarts,
the high-volume pan is a good idea.
There
were several different versions of the SR20DET, which we've
detailed in the table below. If you plan to upgrade the
turbo, there's little advantage to the more powerful newer
versions. A turbo upgrade on the earliest S13 engine will
see it pumping out far more than the S15 engine in no time.
If you simply plan to max out the stock turbo, the later
turbos do have more potential.
Our engine, which came in a
complete front clip, was an early red top with 60,000
kilometers on it. With the transmission, turbo and
alternator, the SR20DET weighs 490 lbs. The KA24E we
removed weighed 493 lbs.
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Engine Removal and Prep Work
If your car has air conditioning, you'll want to have the
system evacuated before removing the engine. If you plan on
keeping the A/C, you must switch to the SR20 pump, and
venting the A/C to the atmosphere is illegal. In a pinch,
the twin-cam KA24DE's pump will bolt to the SR20 bracket,
but only two or three bolts line up.
Next,
remove the radiator, disconnect the power-steering lines
from the pump, remove the entire engine wiring harness from
the car, disconnect the fuel lines and unbolt the
driveshaft. Slimy fluids come out when you do most of these
things, so be prepared. Also remove the hood.
Now,
yank the engine and put it on eBay.
We had to swap our early-model
power steering lines for a set from a 1991. This is a
pain. To get a wrench on these lines you'll want to
remove the engine mount. Be careful installing the new
lines, as they're easy to cross thread. Don't ask how we
know.
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If you
bought an entire front clip, you'll have the pleasure of
pulling the SR20 as well. Do yourself a favor and don't drop
the new engine on its oil pan.
If you
started with a 12-valve KA24E, the stock power steering pump
will have been on the passenger's side. Since the SR20
power-steering pump is on the driver's side, none of the
lines will reach. If you want to retain power steering,
you'll need to search the junkyards for all the lines from a
'91-'94 twin-cam 240SX. Your other option is to remove the
stock lines, crank the steering back and forth a few times
to pump out any excess fluid. Then cap off the power
steering fittings. Voila. Manual steering.
Now is
the time to clean the engine compartment and possibly even
paint it. Check below the master cylinders for peeling paint
and repair it now while you can get to it.
Something has to explain how a
60,000 km Silvia ended up in a junkyard. This clutch is
a clue. Silvias are very popular with drifters. No
wonder we only got the front half of the car.
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There
are a few things you'll want to take care of on the SR20
before installation as well. Two of the studs on the bottom
of our turbo outlet were missing. We replaced them with new
studs for a VG30DE (Nissan part number 14064 7B000). Our
engine also had an AIV valve, which is an emissions control
device that lets air into the exhaust manifold at idle to
keep the catalytic converter working. Later SR20s eliminated
the need for this valve by simply leaning out at idle.
Jim Wolf
Technology can reprogram the ECU to use the later idle
control strategy, and since a JWT ECU is one of the first
upgrades we have planned, we removed the AIV valve and
capped off the fitting in the turbo outlet with Nissan part
number 14052-21R00. The AIV valve has no effect on
performance, so leaving it in place is harmless. If you
don't care what comes out your tailpipe, removing it is also
harmless.
The A/C compressor on the left is
from our SR20DET. The one in the middle is from a
twin-cam KA24DE. Some of the bolts do line up, so you
can use it in a pinch. The compressor on the right is
from a single-cam KA24E; it doesn't fit at all.
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We also
removed the heatshield from the bottom of the turbo. This
shield can contact the steering shaft under cornering loads,
possibly locking the steering.
While
you have the engine on the ground, this is a good time to
consider replacing the clutch. Our engine only had 60,000
kilometers on it, so the stock clutch could be fine, but it
doesn't take much imagination to guess how it ended up in a
junkyard so early. When we removed the stock clutch, we
found a severely abused three-puck racing clutch.
For a
replacement, we used a 9-lb. chrome-moly TODA Racing
flywheel. Even though it only fits the rear-drive SR20, AKH
Trading had the flywheel in stock in the United States. The
Silvia clutch happens to be interchangeable with any
front-drive Maxima clutch, so we used a JWT street clutch
designed for a Maxima. The JWT clutch uses an organic disc
for smooth engagement and a stiffer pressure plate for
increased torque capacity. Despite the stiffer pressure
plate, the clutch is still light enough to be easily
depressed by hand when we were bleeding the hydraulic
system.
A chrome-moly TODA Racing flywheel
replaced our charbroiled stock piece. The TODA part
weighs only 9 lbs. and is available in the United
States.
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Right-hand and left-hand-drive cars have their heater core
inlets in different locations, so some of the heater hoses
need to be rearranged. Before installing the engine, the
hoses on the back of the head need to be rearranged to point
toward the passenger's side. See the photos for exactly how
they need to be routed.
Mounting the Engine
Installation is the reverse of removal. No, really. At this
point, the SR20 should simply bolt in. The SR20 and KA24 use
the same engine mounts, so use whichever are in the best
shape. Remove the shifter (you'll need snap ring pliers),
bolt the transmission crossmember to the transmission mount
and lower the whole thing into place. Once you have the
engine mounts in place and bolted down, simply raise the
transmission into place and bolt the crossmember to the car.
The U.S. driveshaft should slide right in.
A JWT Maxima clutch bolts to the
Silvia flywheel and should be good for 400 hp. The
organic disc gives it smooth, stock-like engagement
qualities and the pedal effort is still light enough
that it feels stock.
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Now is a
good time for new fuel hoses and a new fuel filter. You
should also consider upgrading the fuel pump. The stock fuel
pump, if it's in good shape, will support the stock SR20DET,
but a tired pump or an increase in boost could be trouble.
We're saving the pump upgrade for our first round of
upgrades.
The JDM
radiator, fan shroud and hoses should be used if possible.
If you have to use the U.S. radiator, the radiator outlets
will be in the wrong place. A few 90-degree radiator hoses
and a length of aluminum pipe make an easy crossover pipe.
With a U.S. radiator, you'll need to switch to electric
fans, since the stock fan shroud won't fit. If, like us, you
have the JDM parts and you plan to keep air conditioning,
you'll have to trim the fan shroud to clear the A/C
receiver/drier.
The heater hoses are originally
intended to go to the left side of the firewall.
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If you
plan to use the stock intercooler, you'll need to enlarge
the small hole in the inner fender below the stock air
filter box. The intercooler inlet, outlet, and compressor
bypass valve hoses need to pass through this hole. 1991 and
later cars have the correct shape embossed in the panel
already, otherwise refer to the front clip we keep telling
you to buy.
The
intercooler should bolt into place in the inner fender. Our
car was missing one bolt hole, since it was built before the
SR20DET was used in this chassis, but the remaining mounting
bolts were enough.
Rearranging the stock hoses like
this will get you halfway to making them reach the right
side, where the U.S. heater core resides.
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The
exhaust should bolt to the 240SX exhaust, (though you won't
want to use it) as long as the downpipe came with the
engine. In many cases the downpipe is missing, which gives
you a good excuse to upgrade to a larger, 3-inch
replacement. The missing downpipe problem is common enough
that GReddy actually stocks 3-inch Silvia downpipes in the
United States. We bolted the 3-inch GReddy pipe to our
restrictive stock cat and exhaust just to get home. The
GReddy downpipe came complete with the necessary gaskets and
a mounting bracket to hold the pipe to the transmission,
just like the stock one.
This small hole used for the stock
intake resonator needs to be enlarged for the stock
intercooler piping.
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Hooking
up the heater hoses will require two 5/8- to 3/4-inch
adapters to mate the U.S. and Japanese hoses. A little
finesse and a good supply of pre-bent heater hose fragments
will go a long way here.
Neither
the U.S. nor the Japanese throttle cable is long enough to
follow the stock routing, but the Japanese cable will
stretch straight across the engine compartment. We also used
the Japanese gas pedal, since it has a stiffer return spring
and mounts a little closer to the brake for easier heel/toe
downshifts.
The stock intercooler and bypass
valve are mounted together. All three tubes have to pass
through the hole you just cut.
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Wiring
You have two basic choices to make your new SR20DET run. The
simplest is to use the harness and ECU from a Silvia or
180SX. Once again, your life will be easier if you have a
front clip to pull parts from. If you can't get the harness
and ECU and you have a harness from a 1991 or later U.S.
car, it's possible to convert a U.S. harness and ECU to run
the SR20.
Unfortunately, the SR20DET uses a direct coil-on-plug
ignition system with four coils, and U.S. ECUs are only
capable of driving a single coil. The Japan-only non-turbo
rear-drive SR20DE uses a single coil and distributor that
can used on the SR20DET, if you can find one. Once this
distributor is in place, Jim Wolf Technology can reprogram
the ECU for the new engine. A few of the crank angle sensors
and coil wires may have to be moved, but JWT has detailed
instructions for this change.
If you didn't get a front clip to
pull parts from, you probably don't know where all the
intercoooler pipes go. Do it like this. The parts you
can't see are the vacuum line from the port just above
the throttle body to the blow-off valve mounted in the
left front fender, and the line from the upper front
intercooler pipe to the wastegate actuator.
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Because
we had a front clip, of course, we used the Silvia ECU and
harness. The harness obviously plugs into the engine, but
because of the switch from right-hand to left-hand drive,
the harness tries to place the ECU at the driver's feet.
Apparently, if you don't mind sloppy harness routing, it's
possible to simply twist and stretch the harness into place
in a left-hand-drive car. We took a more complex, but
ultimately far more sanitary approach.
All our
harness work was left in the capable hands of Ralph Kenyon,
the Northern California Silvia enthusiast who guided us
through most of this swap. He unwrapped most of the harness,
laid it out on a board that already had the proper wire
lengths marked out on it, started cutting and lengthening
wires appropriately. Having done this harness conversion
enough times to justify making the board, he has also
salvaged enough wires from other harnesses that he was able
to lengthen the wires using the exact same wire. Unless you
want to send your harness to him, you'll have to use the
engine compartment as your board. (Kenyon will convert JDM
Silvia harnesses for a fee; his e-mail address is
SPRISO_SILVIA@hotmail.com.)
The SR20DET ECU differs from U.S.
ECUs in that it has four coil drivers for the direct
coil-on-plug ignition. This means a U.S. ECU can't be
converted to run the SR20DET without downgrading to the
non-turbo SR20DE.
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Start by
unwrapping the main stem of the harness from the firewall
grommet to the area where the injector leads fork off. Plug
in the injectors, temperature sensors, idle air bypass,
knock sensor and crank angle sensor wires and lay the main
stem along the back of the firewall so the firewall grommet
can sit in the hole where it belongs. You'll now see the
wires to the A/C compressor, power steering pump, mass
airflow sensor, O2 sensor and the five wires to the igniter
need to be lengthened. If you're shy about lengthening the
igniter wires, simply mount the igniter closer to the
harness, but we preferred to use the stock mounting location
and stock bracket. By the way, if you have a missing or
damaged igniter, a '92 or later Infiniti Q45 igniter, part
number 22020-50F00, is a direct replacement.
A 3-inch GReddy downpipe took the
place of our missing stock piece. This swap is so
popular, GReddy stocks these in the United States.
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The O2
sensor wires and the mass airflow sensor wires are both
shielded, and should be lengthened with shielded wire as
well. Any large electronics supply store should have
suitable wire. Once everything is the right length, simply
rewrap the harness with electrical tape and whatever wiring
loom you prefer.
The
remaining complication with the Silvia harness is two
connectors in front of the battery tray. Apparently, Nissan
has standards for which color wire it used for different
functions, and what kind of connectors it used, but when the
wiring harness teams designed the U.S. and Japanese
harnesses, there was no common standard for which pin on the
multi-pin connectors each wire should go to.
Having converted several harnesses
the hard way, Ralph Kenyon built this board to simplify
the process. After unwrapping the entire harness, the
connectors are placed in the final locations and the
wires lengthened or shortened as necessary.
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Several
wires therefore have to be swapped around in each of these
two connectors to make them match the U.S. connector. A
small tab holds each pin in to the connector, and if you
depress that tab with either a special pin removal tool or a
shaved-down paperclip, you can remove the pin and relocate
it. Simply rearrange the wires so the colors match (red wire
to red wire, green wire to green wire, etc.).
There
are only two tricky parts in these connectors. On the car
side of the brown connector, there are two brown wires. You
want to connect the outer one to the brown wire on the
engine side of the plug. On the engine side of the grey
plug, both the black/red and the blue/red wire need to be
connected to the black/red wire on the car side of the
connector.
When rearranging the wires in the
stock connectors, a pin removal tool like this comes in
handy. If you can't find one, a paperclip and some
finesse can do the job.
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Finally,
the white connector under the dash needs its pins rearranged
to match the car and the wires need to be lengthened
slightly.
Body
Of course, you can do this swap with the stock bodywork, but
we preferred the look of the Silvia front end, and
especially preferred the 24 lbs. we removed from the nose of
the car. Swapping the bodywork is very straightforward, but
there are a few things you need to note. You need to remove
the pop-up headlights first to access all the bumper
mounting bolts. Several bolts on each side hold the bumper
and front fenders together. Once the bumpers are removed,
the fenders come off easily.
When
installing the Silvia parts, there are two vertical
headlight support brackets in front of the radiator that
need to be replaced with Silvia brackets, so be sure you get
these with the body panels. Our front bumper came from a
non-turbo Silvia, so we also had to cut an intercooler duct.
Luckily we were able to trace the stock duct shape from a
damaged turbo bumper, cut out a template, and trace the
shape onto ours. To cut the holes, we used a hole saw and
then ground away the plastic with an electric die grinder.
After removing the pop-up
headlamps, you'll be able to access the hidden bolts
holding the bumper cover to the fender.
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The
Moment of Truth
Call every car friend you have and get them to look at your
installation and find your mistakes before you start the
car. Meanwhile, you should be adding octane booster to that
87-octane crap you were running in the KA24.
Fire it
up. When that doesn't work, your friends can help you
diagnose it. If you need a wiring diagram for the Silvia, we
found scans of the diagrams and much of the Australian
service manual on www.silvia.hl.com.au.
When
ours finally ran, we immediately set out on a 400-mile
midnight drive through the most desolate twisty two-lanes in
California. Stupid? You bet. But it was also inspirational.
Despite tired shocks, blown bushings and an inescapable
stench, the Silvia shows amazing potential. Blowing through
a tiny stock exhaust, the engine makes far more torque than
power and turbo lag is far worse than it should be, but it
still cruises effortlessly at triple digit speeds and shows
handling balance that rivals the much smaller Miata. This
one will be a giant killer.
Another bolt lies hidden here at
the back of the front fender. You need to remove the
inner fender liner and use a long extension to reach
this one. Another, less hidden bolt is at the top of the
door opening, facing rearward.
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Make sure you get this bracket to
mount the Silvia headlights. If you are buying the body
panels by themselves, these brackets (there are two) may
be missing.
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After air flows through the
intercooler, it has to go somewhere. We used the stock
louvered fender liner from our 180SX front clip. If you
didn't get one and you are using the stock side-mounted
intercooler, you'll have to cut some vents in the U.S.
fender liner.
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The U.S. headlight connector will
plug into the Silvia headlights. You may have removed
this connector and its short, 1-ft. harness with the
stock pop-up headlamps. If so, go get it.
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Our Bumper came from a non-turbo
Silvia, so it didn't have the intercooler duct. We
traced the duct from another Silvia bumper onto a piece
of cardboard, cut out the cardboard and traced the shape
back onto our bumper. We cut the hole very roughly with
a hole saw, then used an electric die grinder to work
out the final shape. Since a front-mounted intercooler
is in the near future, we added a matching vent to the
other side so both can be used as a brake ducts in the
future.
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Know Your
SR20DET |
|
Source |
Stock Output |
Stock Turbo |
Features |
Identification |
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1991-1993 |
202 hp@6000 rpm |
Garrett T25,
0.64A/R Exhaust, |
High-port head,
370cc/min injectors |
Red valve cover |
|
S13 Silvia & 180SX |
203
lb-ft@4000rpm |
0.80A/R
Compressor |
|
|
|
1994-1998 S13 180SX |
202 hp@6000 rpm |
Garrett T25,
0.64A/R Exhaust |
High-port head,
370cc/min injectors |
Black valve
cover, flat on top |
| |
203 lb-ft@4000
rpm |
0.80A/R
Compressor |
|
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|
1994-1998 S14 Silvia |
217 hp@6000 rpm |
Garrett T28,
ball bearing 0.64A/R |
Low-port head,
VTC variable intake |
Black valve
cover with a hump |
| |
203 lb-ft@4800
rpm |
Exhaust 0.60A/R
T04B Compressor |
cam timing
370cc/min injectors |
that peaks at
cylinder No. 3 |
|
1999-2001 S15 Silvia |
247 hp@6400 rpm |
Garrett T28
ball bearing, 0.64A/R |
Low-port head,
VTC variable intake |
Black valve
cover with a hump |
|
(manual trans only) |
202 lb-ft@4800
rpm |
Exhaust,
0.60A/R T04B Compressor |
cam timing, 444cc/min injectors,
better materials in turbo and better wastegate flow
design |
that peaks at
cylinder No. 3 |
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