Sorry if I sound like an smartass or somthing but you still havent told us the country? I am assuming that you live in the US?===o===I thought this because the Skyline isnt sold here so they need to do something different to legalize it over a car they do sell.
Ok so it is in the US. If you live in the LA area I heard there are a lot of people imorting the cars but you have to just get it legalized. I think Motorex does JDM also?===o===Sorry it is the us
===o===it is the old one
eddieturner2002Don't cars in the US have to be LHD?
altezza drifterAnd eddieturner2002 i have never seen a LHD skyline and as far as i know motorex don't convert them.
eddieturner2002Don't cars in the US have to be LHD?
Not living there I wouldn't know, but I thought this was the case because don't Motorex charge so much for an R34 because they have to totally redo the whole dash and steering assembly?
PublicSecrecyCars in the US can be RHD as long as it has a sticker on the window that says "Right Hand Drive Vehicle". Other than that they're fine. This is according to a cop anyway, in Canada.
eddieturner2002Thanks I never knew that. Why is there so much hassle for US citizens to import JDM cars then? Is it all to do with the exhaust regulations?
The359I believe something to do with the location of the turbos in the Skyline GT-R makes converting the car to left hand drive very difficult.
altezza driftereven without the turbos its hard to convert a car from LHD to RHD.you got the dashboard the fire wall and the steering box all need to be modified
eddieturner2002Don't cars in the US have to be LHD?
M5PowerNope. In fact, the government owns the vast majority of vehicles that are right-drive. The US Postal Service has registered thousands of right-drive Jeep Cherokees for use by rural mail carriers, the theory being that a) they're Jeeps so they can get through snow and b) right-drive means the postman doesn't have to get out of the vehicle to put the mail in the box (since in rural America postal boxes are set at the height of trucks, not cars). Supposedly, Toyota made right-drive versions of the late-80s Corolla All-Trac wagon, which had all-wheel drive for the same purpose. I've seen one in rural Colorado that did appear to be an ex-postal vehicle.
More recently, big-city parking meter attendants have seen fleets of right-drive Jeep Wranglers available for their job; same purposes apply. I'm not sure how popular these things are in cities without snow problems but they're common up here in Michigan.
Truthfully, they're all deals used. You can probably come up with a right-drive postal Cherokee for about twenty percent of the price of a normal Cherokee of the same year. Thing is, the postal Cherokees have lots of miles on them and usually went without the creature comforts - though they were all automatics. Still, it's kind of cool.