finished gt4 conversion, azian_advanced |
finished gt4 conversion, azian_advanced |
Sep 4, 2006 - 6:40 AM |
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Enthusiast Joined Apr 18, '05 From Calgary Currently Offline Reputation: 20 (100%) |
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Part A - A How-To I've finally finished my gt-four front conversion.. to be honest, seeing it in person is a lot more surprising than in the pictures.. this is probably my best mod so far and was far beyond my first expectations.. perhaps i'm overexaggerating a bit but in short, this is definitely hotter than what i had in mind . it was not an easy task for me since my car was previously in an accident and the fenders, hood, and gt-four bumper didn't line up like it should. so washers were added onto bolts to fill gaps to align the fenders properly. but otherwise, you shouldn't have a problem since everything attaches the same way. i first thought that this was simply ALL BOLT ON but really wasn't. i mean, it was but it wouldn't fit and line up correctly... so a couple of things (for you future gt-four convertors) that needed modifications were: 1. cutting the st205 reinforcement bumper 2. the gap to fill between the bumper and hood the reinforcement bumper was not a direct bolt-on job... the front frame rails where the re-bar bolts on to is different on the gt4's. this is how it appears when you have it against the frame rails... as you can see, the bottom is far too forward for the upper threading to fit through... this is how it looks after being cut (using an impact metal sheet cutter): and here it is when bolted on another thing which i totally missed is when you have the bumper installed, the bar sits slightly higher than it should be. right now, it doesn't fit in the groove on the bumper absorber. that may be because my car was in a previous front end accident and things aren't lining up 100% perfect. to fill the gap between the bumper and hood, i used about 2.25" screws with a nut. the head of the screw and the nut clamps the bumper seal to the bumper plastic, and the bottom tip of the screw screws into the threading on the metal retainer. thank god i have tons of all sorts of screws in my garage. finding the right screw is gonna be hard. i've heard other members use the same thing but instead used washers to lift the bumper up high. either way is fine i guess, but i like my idea better. this is how mine looks like btw... some custom 4" lamps were put in. i bought them from a local hardware store for $8 each (which beats the ~$250 that they normally cost). though they don't mount onto the rebar but are just the lamps themselves.. i've read that another member used Mercury Topaz (or something) 4" fogs instead but i couldn't find those anywhere. besides, i like the crystaly (not sure if that's even a word ) look better. they're basically glued to the fog light housings though i'm not sure if the glue will hold because these lamps tend to get pretty hot when on. i don't think i'll be wiring them up anyway... that's all there is to know for the conversion.. it's relatively simple just takes some time. in my case, i also had the fenders that came off the clip where my bumper and hood came off of. so i ordered some jdm sidemarkers and wired them up to the turn signals.. this is also an easy mod and very appealing at night. --------------------------------------------- Part B - Becoming --------------------------------------------- Part C - Completetion [size=1] is this too many pics for one post? -------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
Sep 4, 2006 - 2:58 PM |
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Enthusiast Joined Jun 30, '03 From O-town, FL Currently Offline Reputation: 0 (0%) |
looks great. its something id love to do..but I dont have that kinda money to be tossing around. I'd even finish it with real 3 spokers.
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Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: November 23rd, 2024 - 6:36 PM |