thinking about mods: advice please
thinking about mods: advice please
Author
Discussion

currymonster

Original Poster:

3,942 posts

285 months

Friday 8th March 2002
quotequote all
I've started to think about mods to my 98 R 4L chimaera and thought I would ask for people's thoughts. Basically, I want the car to accelerate more quickly and to be noisier. Simple really, but hey, thats me...

thom

2,745 posts

289 months

Friday 8th March 2002
quotequote all
Remove the exhaust....

plotloss

67,280 posts

286 months

Friday 8th March 2002
quotequote all
Chip, uprated air filter (should such a thing exist) and a sports exhaust should see you well I reckon.

Matt.

currymonster

Original Poster:

3,942 posts

285 months

Friday 8th March 2002
quotequote all
quote:

Chip, uprated air filter (should such a thing exist) and a sports exhaust should see you well I reckon.

Matt.



do K&N/JR/green do one? Air filter/Induction kit I mean

jonrb

78,198 posts

288 months

Friday 8th March 2002
quotequote all
Its been said many times before, but the cheapest and most cost-effective way to upgrade a Chimaera 400 or 450 is to sell it and buy a Chimaera 500.

No, really. If you look at the total cost of modifying, including the cost of the mods themselves, insurance (most insurers don't like mods) and re-sale value (mods rarely command a premium and in many cases can make a car harder to sell), then upgrading is the more sensible option.

Not only do you get more power with the 500, but you get better brakes too. You'd have to spend a hell of a lot on mods to get a 400 up to the spec of a 500, so why not just get a 500?

Sorry if this wasn't the answer you wanted.

Regards
Jon

>> Edited by jonrb on Friday 8th March 14:39

jonrb

78,198 posts

288 months

Friday 8th March 2002
quotequote all
quote:
do K&N/JR/green do one? Air filter/Induction kit I mean
The Chimaera already has a very good induction kit - you're unlikely to get much, if any, improvement from an aftermarket one, I'm afraid.

>> Edited by jonrb on Friday 8th March 14:36

currymonster

Original Poster:

3,942 posts

285 months

Friday 8th March 2002
quotequote all
quote:

Its been said many times before, but the cheapest and most cost-effective way to upgrade a Chimaera 400 or 450 is to sell it and buy a Chimaera 500.

No, really. If you look at the total cost of modifying, including the cost of the mods themselves, insurance (most insurers don't like mods) and re-sale value (mods rarely command a premium and in many cases can make a car harder to sell), then upgrading is the more sensible option.

Sorry if this wasn't the answer you wanted.

Regards
Jon



D'oh! I've only just bought the damn thing! I couldnt afford a decent 500, and love the 4L to bits, and I'm not looking at spending a huge amount on the mods, maybe £1000-£1500. Just was interested in other peoples experiences in doing similar.

jonrb

78,198 posts

288 months

Friday 8th March 2002
quotequote all
quote:
D'oh! I've only just bought the damn thing! I couldnt afford a decent 500, and love the 4L to bits, and I'm not looking at spending a huge amount on the mods, maybe £1000-£1500. Just was interested in other peoples experiences in doing similar.
Ah. Ok. Well in that case, and for that budget, a Mark Adams rechip (including rolling road time to fine-tune it to your specific car / engine) would probably be somewhere in the region of £600, leaving some money left over for a sports exhaust. You should also budget for a hike in your insurance premium (don't be tempted to keep quiet about it as your insurers could refuse to pay up if you have a prang with undisclosed mods) and don't expect to get any of that money back when you come to sell the car.

Have fun!
Jon

jonrb

78,198 posts

288 months

Friday 8th March 2002
quotequote all
BTW, you might be interested in the following articles:

www.t-v-r-services.co.uk/tvrs_engine1.htm
www.pistonheads.com/features/dyno.htm

Regards
Jon

>> Edited by jonrb on Friday 8th March 14:59

trefor

14,685 posts

299 months

Friday 8th March 2002
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I'd second the rolling road tune on your std car. Would probably gain a fair bit more driveability and possibly some power ... may even get close to TVR's figures.

raceboy

13,481 posts

296 months

Friday 8th March 2002
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'Performance' air filter are easy enough to come by, mentioned it in an 'Air Filter' Thread recently, Look at more of a cost saving than a performane boost though!

griffchris

166 posts

286 months

Friday 8th March 2002
quotequote all
I've been considering a Mark Adams tune-up - my point regarding insurance is we all know how over inflated official TVR engine outputs are i.e. 500 quoted 340 bhp, reality approx 270.
Even Mark's tender loving hands are not going to squeeze 340 bhp out of it - in which case should I still have to inform the insurers as the power will not have been hiked above the supposed standard output anyway?

GreenV8S

30,922 posts

300 months

Saturday 9th March 2002
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Yes, if you increase the power output or make any other mods, of course you have to tell them.

brightyellowtvr

1,258 posts

283 months

Saturday 9th March 2002
quotequote all
Can anyone recomend a good rolling road (in the london area) and if poss supply a tel number....I'm sure I can get more out of my standard! 4.0L....

Cheers,

Jon

GreenV8S

30,922 posts

300 months

Saturday 9th March 2002
quotequote all
If you just want to measure it, you could just arrange a session with Power Engineering. But you probably want to make sure the car is basically working right (no duff sensors etc) first, and why not get it chipped while you're there? Suggest you talk to Tower View about arranging a 'Mark Adams' session. 0208 452 6922.

Cheers,
Peter Humphries (and a green V8S)

spnracing

1,554 posts

287 months

Tuesday 12th March 2002
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The best rolling road I've been to by far is Dave Walker's in Brixton (Emerald Cams). Its a pig to get to but he really knows his stuff and will get the maximum out of the car. This is about as far as I would go in tuning a 400 Chimeara - as previously stated the inlet anmd exhaust flow is already reaosnable so spending money on air filters and mainfolds would be a waste. I've never been that convinced by a modified chip on a non-turbo car either, gains can only be minimal.

The biggest improvement in 'real' speed would be in the braking department.

dr chuff

296 posts

300 months

Wednesday 13th March 2002
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quote:

I've been considering a Mark Adams tune-up - my point regarding insurance is we all know how over inflated official TVR engine outputs are i.e. 500 quoted 340 bhp, reality approx 270.
Even Mark's tender loving hands are not going to squeeze 340 bhp out of it - in which case should I still have to inform the insurers as the power will not have been hiked above the supposed standard output anyway?



Yes, tell them.
The insurers I spoke to (only two would insure a chipped car) knew all about the horsepower figures, they made an extremely accurate guess at the before and after figures (neither of them anywhere near the factory figures). Oddly, although it cut down the choice of insurers, it didn't hike the premium that much.

BTW, I'm insured with Sun Alliance through Sunninghill.

DrC

jeffgleed

111 posts

286 months

Wednesday 13th March 2002
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Does anyone know of a rolling road anywhere near Bristol? We have obviously committed some terrible past crime because it's always been a bit of a TVR free zone (it must be the only large affluent city without a TVR dealer in sight). We also do not seem to have any convenient specialists of this type who can ensure proper setup. As I don't get paid if I don't go to work, making long trips to somewhere like Tower View costs a fortune on top of the servicing costs.

MikeyT

17,449 posts

287 months

Wednesday 13th March 2002
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quote:

We have obviously committed some terrible past crime because it's always been a bit of a TVR free zone (it must be the only large affluent city without a TVR dealer in sight).



Errrr.... you want to come and live up here mate

griffchris

166 posts

286 months

Wednesday 13th March 2002
quotequote all

Thanks, point about insurance taken. As I live in the North-West and don't get down south much so I've been in contact with Ric Wood in Stockport (Road / Race prep expert with some background in V8 TVRs). He recommends fitting a Dastek Unichip with rolling road tuning and altering the position of the distributor coil, and possibly going down the road of water injection.

Now, I'm not the most mechanically minded bloke around so has anybody got experience of either Ric Wood or this set-up or any strong beliefs if this would be a good idea or not (Pete H?)
BTW he reckoned about 75 quid for rolling road session,
270 for chip, 100 for distributor coil, 150 for labour.
Don't know how much water injection would cost!

Cheers,
Chris