West Aussie
Well-Known Member
I said it before…cars only as good as the driver
Americans just must not know how to drive ..I see no power cut here and he bangs it off the rev limiter multiple times with no issue??
I said it before…cars only as good as the driver
Americans just must not know how to drive ..I see no power cut here and he bangs it off the rev limiter multiple times with no issue??
Honestly I would agree with the latter and say it was for safety concerns seeing as they were putting the car in the hands of YouTube reviewers, and not professional drivers on an actual trackIt could be the Tokyo car has different programming allowing the driver to show off. OR, the US media cars were programmed to keep the reviewers from blowing them up. Until actual production models hit and can be driven, there's no way to know for certain.
I want somebody to translate this, some good inputs I'm sure by this popular driver, lots of subscribers. He's got some talent.
This is the driver's in-car youtube video on his channel.
They were only allowed to do lead-follow on that LV track, not taking any chances for bad driving, a good thing. The drag launches were easier to control.Honestly I would agree with the latter and say it was for safety concerns seeing as they were putting the car in the hands of YouTube reviewers, and not professional drivers on an actual track
If you hit the closed captions option and click the settings button, choose "Subtitles then 'Auto-Translate' then you can choose English and it will be translated by YouTube.I want somebody to translate this, some good inputs I'm sure by this popular driver, lots of subscribers. He's got some talent.
Yep, thanksIf you hit the closed captions option and click the settings button, choose "Subtitles then 'Auto-Translate' then you can choose English and it will be translated by YouTube.
Yeah honestly I don't know it says he's a radio DJ and a pretty known motor journalist in Japan as he is pretty cool with Mr. Drift King himself, Keiichi Tsuchiya.Yep, thanksHe said about taking it to the 'Grand Prix circuit' who is this guy, some drifter?
This is overly simplistic thinking. Between redundancy measures, logging, metrics collection, and so much more, which any good software system should do, there's no way that someone who's looking for evidence of a ECU swap and tune is not going to find it.How could they? Swap back in stock ECU and no one's the wiser. Even if they could some how know there was an ECU swap, it doesn't establish anything beyond that if the stock ECU tune isn't touched.
Not over simplistic by any means. As noted above only the ECU and TCM retain memory (and likely the BCM, but that likely won't be altered for a tune).This is overly simplistic thinking. Between redundancy measures, logging, metrics collection, and so much more, which any good software system should do, there's no way that someone who's looking for evidence of a ECU swap and tune is not going to find it.
The average dealership may not check during a service, but a warranty claims department will for a big bill.
If the ECU stores odometer data then that alone should be enough to detect that multiple ECU's have been used. Still doesn't necessarily prove anything other than just that, but I agree that it's enough of a red flag to potentially cause issues during a warranty claim.I would think it would be relatively easy to include some kind of hidden check for an ECU removal, and then include a clause in the warranty voiding it where such removal/substitution could potentially be the source of the issue for which coverage is sought. It’s possible this might conflict with the “right to repair” laws in certain jurisdictions though.
Apple has started up a DIY repair programme for their devices, but they get around that type of conflict by the last step in the process whereby the repair has to be authenticated by Apple themselves (remotely) before the device will work again. Something similar could be done by Nissan and other companies, although no doubt hackers will find ways around it anyway, as always.It’s possible this might conflict with the “right to repair” laws in certain jurisdictions though.