1991-1994 Nissan Sentra SE-R - Budget Boost
Budget Boost
/ writer: James Tate
photographer: Brian Konoske
/
Article provided by: Sport Compact Car Magazine
When the Sentra SE-R was introduced to the American market, it was a blessing for car enthusiasts on a budget. With a torquey SR20DE engine and an LSD-equipped transmission as standard, the car was an excellent candidate for weekend road racing and corner hacking on the way to work. A rear anti-roll bar made the car turn in a way that shouldn't have been possible in a front-wheel-drive layout, and its stiffer suspension sealed the deal.
Ten years later, the budget nature of the car is much more apparent-a Sentra SE-R in good condition can be picked up for around $2,500 these days-and they're relatively easy to find. Best of all-pop the hood and gleaming back at you is the same vaunted SR20 powerplant that makes the car so great in the first place.
But what about making the car better?
The Sentra SE-R is featured here not just because it is great, but because it can be made greater on a ramen noodle-size budget. See, in just about every other corner of the world, Nissan's illustrious SR20 comes with cherries on top-a turbocharger dangling off the exhaust manifold.
And because the engine has seen so many iterations since its introduction in 1989, Nissan has already tried a gazillion different turbochargers in an effort to find the most efficient one. The results of more than a decade and a half of Nissan's experimentation can now be found in junkyards around the world.
Also, because Nissan likes to make one really good engine and use it in as many cars as possible, their economic practices benefit the company and the consumer. That means there are five different Nissan exhaust manifolds that will fit on your Sentra, allowing you to hang some of Garrett's finest off the end. Best of all, you can do this without having to warm your hands over an oil-drum fire under a bridge somewhere.
The Options
Though there are aftermarket turbocharging options, the most common solution is staying true to the marque and digging through Nissan's vast parts bin. There are a number of ways to do it, but the most obvious donor is the venerable Pulsar GTi-R, which came with the strongest transverse SR20DE of the bunch and a relatively large Garrett T28 turbo. The Pulsar's individual throttle bodies mean that the intake piping won't work with the Sentra's single throttle body SR20DET. The top-mount intercooler is too big to fit under the hood, but that doesn't mean you can't use the turbo and manifold.
With these parts fetching around $500-$700 at specialty shops or on eBay and Nissan enthusiast forums, you're halfway home. Go that route, and you'll have to procure an intercooler and some piping, too. Get a decent, used front mount on the Internet for $200-$300 and either weld up some ghetto-fabulous piping yourself or try a muffler shop for a cheapo solution.
The most economical bolt-up option is to raid the engine bay of a Japan-spec Bluebird (Altima turbo) or Avenir (think G20 station wagon with all-wheel drive and a turbo), where you'll find a small T25, an even smaller top-mount intercooler with special smooshed-down piping to fit under the hood, and a cast-iron exhaust manifold. Scour the Internet and expect to pay about $700 for the whole shebang, which will bolt right on to your SR20DE without complication.
...
>>next page