More Spec-M Spy Photos, and a GT-R v. Datsun drag race that will shock and awe
The 2012 Nissan GT-R Spec M is being seen by everyone now, it seems! I'm half expecting to spy on at my local grocery store this week! Of course, the actual likelihood of that happening is slim to none, as there are so many different grocery stores in my city it's doubtful the GT-R Spec M driver would choose to shop at mine. All jokes aside, here's more spy photography of the 2012 Spec M in all of its beautiful Godzilla glory. The vehicle really does look fantastic. I think Nissan has gone an exceptional route with the small stylistic changes they've provided the already beautiful GT-R.
Click thumbs for larger images:
Now, for the drag race no one saw coming. What would you think if I told you that a Nissan GT-R and a 1972 Datsun 1200 were going to race? You'd laugh at the thought of the Datsun slowly pushing through the smoke left in the GT-R's wake, right? What if I then told you that the Datsun was an all electric modification? More humor. What if, I then told you that the Datsun wins?
I hate showing GT-Rs losing (and thankfully, those videos are so few and far between that I never really have to) but this one is too cool to pass up. Of course, the '72 Datsun 1200 in question (affectionately called White Zombie) is no normal Datsun. This 1200 runs off an all electric drive-train which delivers an immediate 772 pounds of torque. That's right, 772 pounds of torque delivered to all 4 wheels the second the accelerator is hit. That power makes this Datsun the fastest electric car on Earth. This incredible vehicle uses a cavalcade of batteries to power the vehicle for as much as 100 miles of driving, or if you're more interested in speed than conservation, 1/4 mile of all-out hauling ass. The EV Datsun 1200 hits 0-60 in 1.8 seconds and finishes a 1/4 mile run at a very very respectable 10.4 seconds. Not even the monster that is Godzilla can top this thing. The stats are impressive, but it's even more fun to watch. If you don't get a sick laugh watching a '72 Datsun 1200 run a 10 second 1/4 mile, you probably don't have a car-loving soul.
2012 GT-R Spy Photos
Over the last week various spy photos have been coming out of the 2012 GT-R at the Nurburgring. The vehicle's modifications, while not too extreme, are great looking. It also seems that Nissan is actively testing and providing final tweaks to them to ensure they provide the 2012 GT-R with the best of both style and function. The new wheel style is my favorite aspect of it, as well. That's not to say that the new brake ducts, rear diffuser and other touches aren't good also, just that I really like the new wheel pattern and look. Here are all the images I've been able to find thus far, arranged below for you, click the thumbs for full HD images:
Awesome Video! GT-R and ZR1 videos on Nurburgring juxtaposed!
This was one of the more entertaining videos I've watched in a while now, and is definitely worth checking out. We get to see two drivers running time trials around the Nurburgring and compare how their vehicles handle the fiesty track. On the top left you have the Corvette ZR1, whose sound should be coming out of your Right speaker. On the bottom right, Godzilla himself, the Nissan GT-R, whose sound will be heard through the left speaker. You can turn one up or down to hear the different exhaust notes and tire squealing noises around the different turn, or just to listen to them both at the same time for a symphony of awesome. Great drivers too! These guys took some turns at speeds/angles where I would be almost certain an accident was upon me, but they handle the track with finesse. A fantastic watch, hope you enjoy it as much as I did!
Great Article from Times Live South Africa on GT-R
Chasing volcanoes
Motoring: Nisan GT-R
In fact, being bigger than GTI and so much more interesting than STI, the mythical letters G-T-R sparked a reaction akin to the unexpected return of some long-lost Messiah.
Wherever you went, whatever country you found yourself in, this curious new Nissan was staring at you from the cover of some glossy motoring magazine or a swanky backlit airport billboard. Looking like something that would devour your pets if you left it alone in your driveway for too long, the GT-R also made bold claims about being the fastest production car on Earth.
Of course nobody really knew what this meant at the time but after hearing important-sounding words like "Nürburgring" and "record breaking" uttered by the chaps on Top Gear, even the most desperate ranks of the auto-illiterate could work out that the GT-R meant business. While a nervous topic of conversation among Porsche and Ferrari- driving adults, word of this exotic oriental spilled unceasingly from the lips of the Playstation generation.

Nissan GT-R
In every school, in every crowded playground, eager boys with overly developed thumbs could be found extolling the virtues of its "awesome" abilities and its onboard computer, dreamed up by the gurus responsible for their favourite racing game, Gran Turismo 5 Prologue.
Bizarrely enough it was through playing this heralded driving simulator that I got my first taste of GT-R mania. The disc arrived inside a glossy black box and I immediately slid it into our office console and spent many a lunch hour admiring its form rolling across the glossy plasma screen. Even in this high-definition world built up from millions of microscopic pixels, the way the Nissan looked, drove and - if you can believe this - sounded struck a chord inside me and, from that day on, I knew that this was definitely a car I had to drive before the Reaper scythed me down.
Unfortunately, being such a complex animal and one made in relatively limited numbers, this notion seemed very much like wishful thinking, especially for us petrolheads stuck down on the very southern tip of the Dark Continent.
For although I was confident that the Japanese knew where South Africa was on the map and that its inhabitants did, in fact, shimmy around terra firma in cars and not, as many Americans still believe, on the back of elephants, something told me that they weren't planning on supplying us with their Lamborghini-slaying supercar any time soon.
Things echoed pretty poorly in the rumour mill, too, and when I heard via the motoring grapevine that the GT-R wouldn't be coming anywhere near our country - filled with foul fuel and rubbish roads - I surrendered all hope and quietly went back to the cold, virtual comforts of Gran Turismo. But that, as I quietly beat all the other cars into submission, just made me feel worse.
And then, just as some of my biting disappointment waned, Jeremy Clarkson wrote a review that somehow had the misfortune of landing on my desk. Not only had the big, balding oaf just been to Japan but - in-between whingeing about the island's mammoth population and horrendous traffic - it turned out that he actually got to sample the Nissan GT-R on its home turf and around a twisting mountain pass no less. He also, quite surprisingly, managed to keep some of his allotted word count for describing what this perceived banzai maniac was like to drive.

Nissan GT-R in South Africa
"This, then, is an extraordinary car, quite unlike anything I've driven before," he said somewhere near the end of the last paragraph. "You might expect it, with all its yaw sensors and its G readout on the dash, to feel like a laptop. Or you might expect, with all that heavy engineering, for it to feel like a road-going racer. But it is neither of these things. It certainly doesn't feel like it could do a 7.29-minute lap of the Ring. Even though I've seen a film of it doing just that."
Complimentary, perhaps, but not exactly the clean-cut words of praise I was expecting from the outspoken Yorkshireman.
To tell you the truth I wanted to hear fireworks from Clarkson, you know, one of his metaphorical sentences that punters would quote forever more. Instead, all I got from the god of motoring was a rather cryptic summary concluding that the GT-R was too good a car for the average mortal.
"I dare say that if Michael Schumacher were to find himself in the eye of an Arctic blizzard," Clarkson continued, "escaping from an exploding volcano, he might discover 10% of this car's abilities. But you? Me? Here? Forget it."
Skip forward roughly about a year and, with this sentence replaying in my mind, I find myself in a most unlikely scenario: It's summertime and freezing cold and, making things even more surreal, my eager fingers are just inches away from touching the paintwork of a bright red Nissan GT-R standing right here on South African soil. Disproving all the critics and even my own biting cynicism, Japan's über-car had arrived.
Unexpectedly large in real life, its presence rekindled the riotous hype of days gone by and I thought, once I fire up that engine, the next few hours would cause my adrenal gland to swell to exponential proportions.
Taking out my camera, I'm determined to document every nuance of this experience. But, most of all, I want to be - unlike Clarkson - utterly blown away by the high-performance innovations beneath its bonnet.
Apparently I'm way easier to please because even in the first 10km of my assault on the R512, I'm whooping and yelling like a girl at a Beatles concert. For despite the Nissan's uncanny ability of feeling dead calm during its storming displays of performance, the way it covers ground is gobsmacking.
Seemingly attached to the Earth through some devious form of black magic, a blood pact with the gods of gravity, the way it sticks through corners is awe-inspiring; a lateral rollercoaster ride that stretches your tendons, joints and neck muscles to snapping point with every flick of that leather-wrapped steering wheel.
True, the experience might lack the tactile qualities of something Italian and, yes, that cabin could benefit from an extra spattering of supercar fairy dust. But, for the money, no other car on this planet offers up such an eye-bulging pageant of easy speed.
Now even though I'm not Michael Schumacher, and didn't get trapped in the eye of a blizzard or end up anywhere near a volcano, my brief stint inside the GT-R confirmed everything I had suspected about this car in the first place.
So by all means believe the hype, believe those enthused musings from your TV-bound son but, most importantly, believe me when I tell you that this really is one of the most spellbinding supercars released in the past 10 years.
Fast facts: Nissan GT-R
The Basics:
Price: From R1175000
Performance: 0-100km/h in 3.5 seconds, 311km/h
Power: 357kw at 6400rpm, 588Nm from 3200 - 5200rpm
Thirst: 12.41l/100km (combined)
The Best:
- Proper supercar looks
- Explosive performance
- Huge bang for your buck
- Surprisingly practical
- Exceptional dual-clutch gearbox
Source: TimesLive
Nissan GT-R: A Question Of Character
by Angus MacKenzie
I hate flying in this country. I hate the whole experience. I hate being herded like cattle through airport security and shoehorned into shabby old planes at the mercy of underpaid pilots who sometimes forget to land. I hate how they sting me 15 bucks for checking a bag (if it's about offsetting fuel costs, surely it would be fairer to charge passengers weight). I hate how they charge me six bucks for a cardboard box of processed pap they have the gall to describe as a meal. Flying used to be fun, glamorous, exciting. Now it's just tedious in the extreme.
I live 10 minutes from LAX, and 300 miles from Las Vegas. So when it came to heading across the Mojave to the SEMA Show, I did the obvious thing: I drove.
My ride was our long term Nissan GT-R. I've done a bit of commuting around L.A. in the 2009 COTY winner over the past few months, but this was to be the first long road trip, and to be honest I wasn't sure whether I'd made the right call. Don't get me wrong. I like fast, exhilarating, extreme cars as much as anyone, but I know from experience that something capable of getting the adrenalin pumping hard on a 20-mile blast along a canyon road can quickly lose its sparkle droning along the interstate. And no matter which way you go, there's plenty of interstate between L.A. and Vegas.
I needn't have worried. The GT-R's a surprisingly civilized freeway cruiser. Sure, the ride's on the firm side, and there's some tire noise on poor surfaces, but it's no worse than a Porsche 911. Just leave the dual clutch tranny in auto mode, dial up 75-80 mph on the cruise control, crank up your favorite satellite radio station, and go with the flow.
And for something that's fast enough to frighten a Ferrari, it's remarkably fuel efficient. According to the trip computer the GT-R averaged 20.9 mpg for the 128 miles from LA to Barstow, and 22.3 mpg for the 67 miles from Barstow to Baker. I forgot about the fuel consumption after Baker, because that's where I turned off the freeway and onto the two lane Route 127 that heads north towards Death Valley, bound for the township of Shoshone, and the junction with Route 178 which would bring me into Pahrump, then into Vegas from the west on Route 160.
The cruise and control and the radio were switched off, the shifter flicked into manual mode, and the GT-R and I got down to business as the road swept across the desert, past Dumont Dunes and into the mountains. I reveled in the relentless, urgent, seamless surge of power from the twin-turbo V-6 as I fanned the paddle shifter, and delighted at the marvelously planted feel of the chassis as we chased the horizon. The massive Brembos shrugged off the speed with easy assurance whenever the road suddenly jinked left or right, and only a gentle squirming of the steering wheel betrayed the furious calculations constantly routing and rerouting the torque to all four wheels as we punched past their apexes.
It was a satisfyingly rapid run to Shoshone, and accomplished with neither of us breaking a sweat. In fact, it was almost too easy.
The Nissan GT-R is a supremely competent supercar. But is it too competent? Is the GT-R - whisper it - a sanitized supercar for a video-game generation; a digitized speed experience that lacks grit and soul and character?
I'll take competence over character every time when it comes to driving truly fast machinery. Character does not excuse the psychotic Ferrari 348 that once tried to kill me; that cold knot in the pit of my stomach every time I hustled a pre-993 Porsche 911 hard on a wet road; having to take fast corners in old big-banger Lamborghinis like I was riding alongside a Mafia hitman with a bad temper and a hair trigger. Character is cool when you're noodling down to the local car show in your DeTomaso Mangusta, not when you chasing tenths of a second on the Nurburgring Nordschleife.
The coolly calculated Nissan GT-R may not have the rosso romance of a Ferrari Daytona, the charming idiosyncrasy of a Porsche 911, or the aw-shucks muscle of a Corvette ZR1. But in form and function it is a supercar that deftly defines both its era and its origin. All gigabytes and manga, GT-R is a supercar like no other; a supercar that only Japan could have created. I'd call that character.
Best looking GT-R at SEMA? Seibon’s Carbon Car
Been looking through photos from SEMA and I came across these of Seibon Carbon's SEMA GT-R, and was simply amazed at how fantastic this iteration of the GT-R looks. Ignore the emblems and stickers all over the vehicle and just look at that body kit! Those lines are a fantastic touch to the already awesome and mean looking GT-R, I especially love the front bumper and the rear diffuser.

Click on the gallery images below for full shots! Definitely worth a look, these are great looking exterior mods!
- Front end of the Seibon Carbon GT-R at SEMA, what a mean looking front bumper!
- Side image of the SEMA Seibon Carbon GT-R. Looks awesome!
- Rear Quarter image here, look at the rear diffuser around the Exhaust area, as well as the dry carbon rear trunk. I bet the weight savings from this full kit are incredible!
- Great shot of the side skirts here, this looks like a fantastic full package for the GT-R!
- One more side shot of the SEMA Seibon Carbon GT-R. Can anyone deny the sexiness of the Nissan GT-R? I think not.
If you want to purchase these, I did a lot of web searching and it looks like www.SouthernCarParts.com carries the product line at the best prices I've found anywhere. Definitely worth a look!
GT-R Named World Performance Car, but we all already knew this without the award.
Nissan GT-R awarded 2009 World Performance Car
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Baku. Nijat Mustafayev – APA-ECONOMICS. The Nissan GT-R was awarded the 2009 World Performance Car award during the New York International Auto Show. The GT-R was chosen from a field of 23 cars that included the Porsche 911 Carrera and the Corvette ZR1, said Nurgun Motors, the official distributor of Nissan in Azerbaijan.
The winner was judged by fifty-nine World Car jurors from twenty-five countries. The jurors observed that, “The Nissan GT-R stole the headlines in the sports car world in 2008. This GT-R – the R35 – throws even former GT-Rs into the weeds via an all-new 3.8-liter bi-turbo V-6 providing 480 horsepower and 430 pound-feet of torque. The drive of the GT-R, especially on a track, reveals an incredibly flexible all-wheel-drive chassis that lays down the rubber whenever you request it. Acceleration to 60 mph from a stop takes just 3.5 seconds, or a tick behind fellow Performance finalist the Corvette ZR1.”
The GT-R was also chosen “2009 Motor Trend Car of the Year” and “2009 Automobile of the Year” by Automobile Magazine. The GT-R also received top honours from Automobile for “Design of the Year,” “Man of the Year,” and “Technology of the Year.
Source:APA
New GT-R Hits Dealers in Japan
Nissan Releases New-Spec Nissan GT-R
YOKOHAMA (Oct. 21, 2009) – Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. today announced the release of the latest version of the Nissan GT-R, which goes on sale on December 7th at Nissan dealers nationwide in Japan. The updated GT-R receives a number of enhancements, including a revised navigation system, recalibrated suspension settings and an improved-flow catalyst system. It is scheduled to go on sale in other global markets beginning next spring.
Nissan GT-RSince its introduction in the Japanese market in December 2007, the Nissan GT-R has gone through continuous evolution, remaining on the cutting-edge of multi-dimensional performance. The GT-R has also been acclaimed globally, winning more than 50 top awards in various categories since launch. Nissan also supports GT-R owners with exceptional after-sales service.
The latest revisions to GT-R include a new HDD-based CARWINGS navigation system with enhanced entertainment functions. A USB port with iPod®*1 connectivity allows the driver and passengers to enjoy their favorite music in the car, creating an even more pleasant interior environment. *2
In addition, the GT-R’s suspension has been retuned to offer enhanced, premium quality ride comfort, while still providing the driver with a feeling of direct contact with the road surface. The accuracy of the front shock absorbers and springs has been increased and the stiffness of rear suspension radius rod bushings has been strengthened. Rear diffusers with cooling ducts, previously available only on the GT-R SpecV, have been expanded to non-SpecV models, improving cooling performance around the rear floor area.
The exclusive Nissan GT-R SpecV models receive revised rear shock absorber settings, enhancing the characteristic combination of supple ride comfort and flat, predictable handling. In conjunction with this change, SpecV now comes standard with Dunlop tires. The previously standard Bridgestone tires are available as a factory-installed option.
Finally, both the Nissan GT-R and GT-R SpecV achieve improved low- and mid-range engine response, thanks to newly adopted hexagonal meshed catalyst cells that reduce ventilation/airflow resistance.
Nationwide MSRP Pricing in Japan (including consumption tax)
Drivetrain Engine Grade Transmission Price (yen) 4WD VR38DETT GT-R GR6 dual clutch
transmission8,610,000 GT-R Black edition 8,820,000 GT-R Premium edition 9,240,000 GT-R SpecV 15,750,000 * SpecV goes on sale at seven specially selected Nissan dealers throughout Japan.
*1 iPod is a trademark of Apple Computer, Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries.
*2 May not be applicable in selected countries.Source: Nissan Motors




















