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-   -   Boost or Buy Boosted? (http://www.the370z.com/nissan-370z-general-discussions/132541-boost-buy-boosted.html)

CMadison 12-03-2019 05:33 PM

Boost or Buy Boosted?
 
Love my Z and I have a few mods, but it really isn't as fast as I'd like anymore and I want to graduate to forced induction. I would appreciate some advise and opinions alike from folks who've TT'd their Z or bought a TT Z. Should I keep my Z and TT it or sell it and buy one already TT? My current Z is a champ; I haven't had any trouble at all with it and I'm coming up on 81k miles. It is not my daily driver, either.

tvfreakazoid 12-03-2019 05:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CMadison (Post 3892798)
Love my Z and I have a few mods, but it really isn't as fast as I'd like anymore and I want to graduate to forced induction. I would appreciate some advise and opinions alike from folks who've TT'd their Z or bought a TT Z. Should I keep my Z and TT it or sell it and buy one already TT? My current Z is a champ; I haven't had any trouble at all with it and I'm coming up on 81k miles. It is not my daily driver, either.

Buy boosted. At least u know how your car has been driven.

Sent from my SM-G965U1 using Tapatalk

Spooler 12-03-2019 05:58 PM

It is always best to TT your own car. RT Tuning has a Fast Intentions stage 1 kit for sale that is slightly used for 1000 miles. 9K You will need some more mods to go with it. If you can find one that was done by a reputable shop with the best parts for the right price it is no doubt worth looking at.

OptionZero 12-03-2019 06:36 PM

It is almost always better to do it yourself than buy used thats been modified

You just don't know what someone else has done or how it was done and they sure as hell aren't gonna warranty it after you buy it

If YOU do it yourself, you pick the parts, you pick the shop, you put the plan together, its all under your control.

This is particularly true when it comes to boost and small things can lead to big problems. It rarely works out where you come out ahead instead of having to spend more to fix ****

obviously if you insist on buying used, you should demand as much documentation as possible and to talk to the shop that put it together and tuned it and make sure these people know what the **** they're doing

Jayhovah 12-03-2019 08:47 PM

If the work was done by a reputable shop, it's hard to beat the price on someone else's build... Though I always wonder(worry?) why folks sink a bunch of time/cash into a build and then sell the car like 5 seconds after its finally finished. I love my TT Z so much you'd have to pry it from my cold, dead hands.

My suggestion:

Can you do the work yourself?
Then boost your Z - a lot of the investment is tied up in the labor costs and you will know the installation better than anyone.

Would you farm out a boosted build?
Buy a car that was built by a reputable shop and has documentation, and take some of that savings and have a reputable shop go through the install and tune with a fine toothed comb to make sure everything is in good shape.

JARblue 12-04-2019 08:36 AM

:iagree: You have two good options as pointed out by Jay

2011 Nismo#91 12-04-2019 08:45 AM

Personally I would never buy someone else's project. Its going to be a mystery box and who knows what was done and how well it was actually done. Boosting your current car you will know exactly what was done and would know what parts were done to "that's good enough"; where as in the other situation you have no idea what good enough was for the prior owner.

Unless your current car has some issues AND you can get a good deal on the other car (enough to deal with the problems that are sure to pop up) it's generally a bad idea to buy another car.

Spooler 12-04-2019 09:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jayhovah (Post 3892854)
Can you do the work yourself?
Then boost your Z - a lot of the investment is tied up in the labor costs and you will know the installation better than anyone.

We have seen a several failures in this department lately. This is especially a big problem if you try to go over 600hp. If you want that, take it to a qualified shop who has been recommended on here.

Felix 808 12-04-2019 11:07 AM

There are a number of times in life you can not afford to be cheap. Boosting a car is one. There are a number of supporting mods needed to do it right & reliably.
I would avoid buying a boosted car unless I knew the history / owner of said car & really knew what I was getting into. The last thing you want to do is blow a lot of $$$$$ on someone's nightmare as it will smoke any savings you had & then some to make it right.

370zBoyz 12-04-2019 12:38 PM

buy a GT-R

vtec to vvel 12-04-2019 12:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 370zBoyz (Post 3893000)
buy a GT-R

Fail. Totally irrelevant to what OP is asking.

OP, IMO and as others have stated, I would want to do the build myself, as you will know what has/has not been done and build to your liking.

There is nothing wrong with buying a Z that’s been FI, but like others have stated, I would ask for documentation.

Spooler 12-04-2019 12:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 370zBoyz (Post 3893000)
buy a GT-R

No thanks, not my thang.... Besides, I can kick the crap out of those things. They need major money to be spent to keep up with me.

NecioVato 12-04-2019 01:11 PM

I'm curious about what people feel is the best route as well. I was wondering about the following (not trying to hijack the thread but to add to this)

- Would you guys consider buying a boosted Z if you could take the car to a reputable shop to find out what would need to be done/best to be replaced/weak points etc vs the huge costs - in particular the labor costs associated with boosting your car?

I hear that on average if you look to boost your Z and you pay a shop to do it - you're looking at anywhere between $15-20k - if i'm wrong - please let me know. If that is the case - since you can't get your money back on most mods as well as seeing some boosted Zs going for a little more than a regular Z - why not?

For instance there is a YT vlogger that came across this which honestly would be hard to pass on:
https://youtu.be/sGk3RAxwrCE

OptionZero 12-04-2019 04:03 PM

i wouldn't touch a youtube car with a ten foot pole

the real issue is:

are you looking to save money (up front) or do it right and not worry?

Again, when YOU pick the parts and YOU pick the shop and YOU work with the tuner, YOU know what if any problems may arise and YOU pick the solutions

There are very few people who will properly document their build sufficiently to allay those concerns

The ONLY way you should do it is you KNOW the shop that did and they're willing to vouch for it by putting their money where their mouth is and putting some guarantees in on the work. MAYBE this would work if the car in question were a shop car built for a show or event and they no longer needed it, so they're going to let it go to recoup part of their investment

i mean, if Fast Intentions and Specialty Z built a turbo car to show off at SEMA or ZDays and decided to sell it, i'd feel pretty good about buying it (Esp if you're within driving distance of them and they can walk you through it)

but some no-name shop you've never been to and can't come back and visit? hell naw

Spooler 12-04-2019 05:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NecioVato (Post 3893009)
I'm curious about what people feel is the best route as well. I was wondering about the following (not trying to hijack the thread but to add to this)

- Would you guys consider buying a boosted Z if you could take the car to a reputable shop to find out what would need to be done/best to be replaced/weak points etc vs the huge costs - in particular the labor costs associated with boosting your car?

I hear that on average if you look to boost your Z and you pay a shop to do it - you're looking at anywhere between $15-20k - if i'm wrong - please let me know. If that is the case - since you can't get your money back on most mods as well as seeing some boosted Zs going for a little more than a regular Z - why not?

For instance there is a YT vlogger that came across this which honestly would be hard to pass on:
https://youtu.be/sGk3RAxwrCE

You don't know squat about that build. I watched the video. A car lot has it and they are not where you would want to buy such a car. Looked like a very very basic AAM kit. That is not what you want. It depends on how many mods you already have while pricing out a TT kit. No mods that you can use at all, you are looking at around 25k to TT a Z with a quality TT kit and using a quality shop. Lots of junk builds come out of Florida. They were done piss poor from the get go. If a car was on here and everything was posted about the build and it was high quality. Folks will fight over it and you are not going to get it cheap. Cheap low quality TT builds are a dime a dozen done by no-name shops.


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