I have a 1992 Nissan Atlas in Australia. On the rear tandem drive it has 15.5inch rims. I need to change these rims to 15 preferably or if necessary 16 inch rims. Can you tell me which rims will fit my truck. there must be other trucks with the same bolt pattern but other size tyres, thanks Judith
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What's the problem? Your local Nissan dealer will be able to supply/order the correct part-numbers for your vehicle. Then, I assume that you have the mechanical skills to take the brakes apart, replace the parts, and reassemble everything.
Shakes? Not very specific. It could be a loose wheel, wheel out of balance, the balance weights may have come off one or more wheel rims (check for the marks on the rims inner and outer rim where they used to be). As 1996 model, it could also be worn out suspension bushes. If you drive on a straight road, and you change from accelerating, to decelerating, does the car skew (turn left or right slightly), this would indicate worn suspension bushes at the rear, acceleration pushes the rear axle forward, deceleration pulls it back, if there is wear (slop) in the rubber bushes, the changing alignment of the rear axle causes the car to "throttle steer". At cruise, this could potentially set up a sort of harmonic motion, and cause a form of "shaking".
need to replace the camshaft sensor also in tandem w/crankshaft sensor. trouble codes need to be removed from computer. after repair. both the air & fuel filters need replaced. how's your oil change doin ? try this brandi, see if that takes care of it .
Nissan Terrano's have an Electronic Computer that controls the gearbox. It is hidden behind the left hand rear Speaker box, right hard up against the rear seat back rest. This system controls all functions regarding the gearbox and it's rev rates. If your vehicle is shifting back on long drives then it is possible that the computer sees any slight increase in revs as a desire to "Kickback" the gearbox to a lower gearing, hence it dropping out of overdrive. Unfortunately a gearbox specialist with a computer "Plug-in" is needed to fix this, but it is fixable. This problem should not be too expensive in comparison with a new gearbox.
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