Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast
Results 1 to 25 of 60

Thread: 2009 Nissan GTR Unveiled...

  1. #1
    1991_Vn2nV's Avatar
    1991_Vn2nV is offline Donating Member
    Ride
    91 VN Berlina & 03 VY Berlina

    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Gumeracha, Adelaide Hills
    Posts
    8,715

    Cool 2009 Nissan GTR Unveiled...

    So whats everyone think? Bit of a step up from the old skylines...

    The 2009 Nissan GT-R will go toe-to-toe with the Chevrolet Corvette Z06 and Porsche 911 Turbo.

    Its got a twin-turbo V6 with a top speed of 192mph or 309km/h and a 0-60mph time of just 3.5 seconds!!!

    The V6 cranks out 473hp or 352kw and 433 lb-ft of torque, driving all four wheels through a rear-mounted transaxle. Transmission is a GR6 dual-clutch six-speed automatic with paddle shift.

    All that for a base price of just under $80,000 US...

    Pics (check out the shifter):









    Last edited by 1991_Vn2nV; 18-10-2007 at 08:04 PM.

  2. #2
    Ride
    1995 HSV Clubsport T5, 1991 VN Berlina

    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Melbourne
    Posts
    5,037

    Default

    automatic? what the hell?

    1995 Manual HSV Clubsport
    Wade Cam :: 9.2:1 CR :: Pacemaker headers :: Twin 2.5" Exhaust :: VT Brakes
    1991 Supercharged VN Berlina
    9 PSI SC14 Intercooled :: Genie headers :: Twin cats :: HM Twin 2.25 exhaust :: 3.45:1 LSD




  3. #3
    Wagon_Wheel's Avatar
    Wagon_Wheel is offline Drop A Patch....
    Ride
    Blown VS Clubsport, VP Wagon Daily

    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Mt Martha, Vic
    Posts
    1,590

    Default

    WTF..... thats errrr different looking... certainly got the balls to back it up but.
    Only auto???? Im sure they'd have to release it with a manual.
    Shifter is tiny lol

  4. #4
    1991_Vn2nV's Avatar
    1991_Vn2nV is offline Donating Member
    Ride
    91 VN Berlina & 03 VY Berlina

    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Gumeracha, Adelaide Hills
    Posts
    8,715

    Default

    Nope auto only....

    Drivetrain: 3.8-liter, 473-hp, 433-lb-ft twin turbocharged V6; AWD, six-speed automatic

    Curb Weight: 3792 pounds

    0-60: 3.5 seconds

    Quarter Mile Time: 11.7 Seconds

    Fuel Economy (EPA Combined): 21 mpg

  5. #5
    dijm8's Avatar
    dijm8 is offline What You Looking At
    Ride
    VZ SS LS3

    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Adelaide
    Posts
    1,177

  6. #6
    1991_Vn2nV's Avatar
    1991_Vn2nV is offline Donating Member
    Ride
    91 VN Berlina & 03 VY Berlina

    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Gumeracha, Adelaide Hills
    Posts
    8,715

    Default

    More pics:







    First test drive:

    Yes, it lives up to all the hype!

    The coming Nissan GT-R is a world-class supercar: Top speed of 193 mph, 0-60 in 3.5 seconds, a 473 hp, 433 lb ft twin-turbo V6 mounted in the front and driving all four wheels through a rear-mounted transaxle. Take a breath. Okay, continue. And a dual-clutch six-speed automatic you can operate via paddles on the steering wheel.

    After a full day driving it on the Nurburgring, the Autobahn and up and over numerous little German country roads we can easily say this is one car that was not over hyped. It is truly a world-class supercar on par with, if not just ahead of, the iconic Porsche Turbo. (They had a Porsche Turbo on hand, too, and we thought the GT-R felt better tied down.)

    But it’s one thing to put a license plate on a race car and call it streetable. Chief engineer Kazutoshi Mizuno said the new GT-R was designed and engineered as an all-around, all-season, all-weather car that is comfortable to drive every day, even at normal speeds on a normal day.

    During the few minutes we drove at what could be called a “normal pace” that day we’d have to say we agree with him. But given only a few hours at the wheel of this, the most highly anticipated supercar in years, we were only in “normal” mode for very brief spurts. The rest of the time we were at some level between “pushing it” and “hammering on the mutha’.”

    Our first time behind the wheel was on the A48 autobahn in Germany somewhere out around Koblenz or Koln or some other K-town where the German socialist government had not yet succeeded in adding those awful 120-km-hr speed limits. It was like Bonneville with elevation changes and guardrails. The only limitation out here was aerodynamic. Hence, we were obliged to go all-out whompin’ fast the whole time.

    Rolling right out of the autobahn rest stop where we rendezvoused with the Japanese engineering support crew, we nailed the throttle to the floor and man did the throttle respond. The 3.8-liter VR38 V6 sits up front, with two of its six cylinders forward of the front axle and four aft. Two bagel-sized IHI turbos sit right at the exhaust manifold for quick response. The 433 lb ft of torque rails across the tach from 3200 to 5200 rpm. Peak 473 hp comes at 6400 revs.

    A carbon fiber prop shaft (“Good damping and stiffness”) runs back to the transaxle, incorporating the clutch, transmission and transaxle altogether. The shifting is done via a direct, twin-clutch system. One clutch handles the odd gears and another clutch handles the even ones. Shifts take 0.2 seconds. There are BorgWarner triple-cone synchronizers for all gears. Another shaft runs forward from that transaxle to send power to the front wheels. Below 25 mph the torque split is 50/50, above that, under normal driving, the split is 40/60. But it can split up to 2/98 under hard acceleration, which was what we were giving it.

    Our car rode on 20-inch wheels wrapped by Bridgestone Potenza RE070s, 255/40 in front and 285/35 rears. Front suspension was upper and lower A-arms and the rear was a five-link.

    It’s always fun to go from zero to warp factor in a right hand-drive car using a jet-lagged left hand-drive brain, trying not to turn on the windshield wipers when you think you’re hitting the turn signal.

    The GT-R lists quarter-mile time at 11.7 seconds and entering the Autobahn we had no reason to doubt that. The turbo boost was, as promised, very progressive, with little or no discernable lag, just smooth, even power delivery.

    Despite the late-morning hour and the mid-week day, there were still a few cars in the way. When we eased onto the 15.2-inch ventilated cross-drilled Brembo brakes from well into triple-digit speeds the car slowed without drama. But then traffic would clear out and the GT-R resumed its high velocity chase with ease.

    There are three settings for the Bilstein Damptronic shocks: R, Sports and Comfort. We went out in Sports.

    Top speed is listed at 193 mph but with traffic the best we could do was 176. You wouldn’t try that in any country but Germany, where you can usually assume everyone else is paying attention. There was a Japanese engineer riding shotgun over on the left whom we dubbed “Bushido engineer-o” or brave engineer. He thought that was pretty funny.

    While the coefficient of drag is an impressive 0.27, more than almost any production car, the GT-R also produces downforce at each axle, something very few production cars can claim.

    “Cd is more important than downforce on a G35,” said chief designer Hiroshi Hasegawa. “But in the case of the GT-R we have to make downforce.”

    At 193 mph you might appreciate that philosophy.

    The first time we went out, the right front wheel felt just a little out of balance, so we came back in and they changed all four wheels. They’re efficient, these guys. After that the car was smooth as well as stable and safe, due in equal parts to the German roadway and the Japanese engineering.

    The whole car sits on the new PM platform, PM meaning Prime Midship. The PM incorporates what Mizuno-san called a “hybrid superstructure body.” There is carbon-injected material in the front end and carbon composite material underneath for aerodynamic downforce. There’s even some polypropylene in the body, too.

    We truly enjoyed the Autobahn experience. This is the perfect car for such a top-speed run—it gives such a sense of control at those speeds that you feel like you could do anything.

    Next on our agenda of “anything” were some miles of country road. We were able to drive the GT-R back-to-back with a Porsche Turbo.

    “Okay now, please enjoy,” said the Nissan technician as we exited the company compound down the street from the Nurburgring.

    After “much spirited driving,” we can say the Turbo had a good deal more lag and more dive and squat than the GT-R. But once the Porsche got spooled up, achtung, baby. It felt lighter and the steering felt quicker, too. The biggest difference between the two was that the Turbo demanded more of its driver while the GT-R was easier to handle, flatter and more stable. We’d be happy with either one, if you’re considering a birthday present or anything.

    Next up on this Disneyland of a day was Der Nurburgring. This is what all those teenagers whose parents have not taken away their Playstation access really want to do: drive an actual GT-R around the actual Nurburgring as fast as grip, guts and gasoline allow.

    Man-oh-flippin’-man. The real deal is about 100 times more thrilling than any computer simulation, even those with the little plastic steering wheel and feet pedals attached.

    This was the new Nurburgring, too. Nissan wasn’t foolish enough to turn this small squadron of car writer hacks loose on the narrow, blind, crazy-dangerous Nordschliefe. At the time of our drive there were only three prototype GT-Rs extant in the world, and all the apologizing on Earth wouldn’t bring one back if you crunched it.

    The new Nurburgring is faster, with wide, sweeping turns bordered by runoff areas so huge that even the most no-talent buffoon could likely stay on the pavement. So we did.

    All the Japanese engineers and executives had been telling everyone that there was a 35-mph speed limit in the pits, but in all the excitement we kind of forgot about it and nailed the throttle right out of the parking spot right there in pit lane. The wide, low, squealing run-flat tires laid down long patches of black rubber as we launched past the closed garages, pulling back on the right paddle to shift the rear-mounted dual-clutch six-speed transaxle every time the engine got close to its 7000-rpm redline.

    In no time at all we were roaring onto pit-out near the end of the straight and directly into the low, evening sun. By the time we got fully out on the front straight and were shifting up from four to five or so, the sun was directly in front of the GT-R and streaming into the windshield; we were trying to remember if that first right-hander came at this rise or just past it. It was just past it, but we’d already started braking and downshifting, the GR6’s “synchro-rev control,” which perfectly matched each downshift with a throttle blip much better than we’d ever have been able to match it.

    Tiptoeing through the first couple turns to avoid the infamy of the run-off gravel, the car felt perfectly safe and willing. So we hammered it up through the gears down the hill and to the far 180-degree turn and started to feel more confident. By the end of the first lap we were flat out on the front straight, roaring up through all six gears for all it was worth.

    Nissan lists lateral g’s at 0.99, and we certainly bumped up against that in many a Nurburgring corner.

    We only got three full laps and no one was timing us, so you’ll just have to assume we set the lap record. Earlier, Mizuno-san had offered some lap times from the Nordschliefe for various cars driven by the German magazine SportAuto. Those times are driver-dependent, track-knowledge-dependent, weather-, traffic- and bunny-crossing-the-track dependent. But Mizuno suggested the GT-R could get anywhere from 7:44 on up, with most laps coming in between 7:55 and 7:58. So he suggested the GT-R’s strong suit was that it offered “the best cost per lap time.” For whatever that’s worth.

    The GT-R will be worth somewhere in the low-$70,000 range, which does make it perhaps the best cost per lap. We’ll know for sure when it enters U.S. showrooms in May or June. Japan will get first crack at it, we get second and the Europeans, who did such a great job of getting out of our way during our Autobahn drive, will have to get it third.

  7. #7
    Ride
    VY SS UTE

    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Australia
    Posts
    95

    Default

    The back looks nuts, rest of the car kinda looks ummm weird. Should have a true manual also i think. Decent power tho!

  8. #8
    AttaBoy is offline WTF?!?!
    Ride
    VS Acclaim V6

    Join Date
    May 2005
    Posts
    1,525

    Default

    SOOOOOOO HOT. SEXY THING THAT IS!!!!! I'm stiff.

    I'm pretty sure there will be a manual coming out later. It'll be crazy not to have a manual.

  9. #9
    padrickz88's Avatar
    padrickz88 is offline Rick =]
    Ride
    VN V6, nothing special

    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    sunshine, melbourne
    Posts
    1,529

    Default

    that is sex

    and i worked it out to only be about 11L per 100km....

    thats insane, great power + great economy! *jaw drops*

  10. #10
    Ride
    '92 HSV VP GTS

    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    SE Queensland
    Posts
    2,069

    Default

    Certainly is different. Looks like a R34 smashed in with a 350z. 1720KG, not that light, but not heavvy. I don't mind it, but for looks I say the GTR34 is still my favorite for sure, I never liked the 350z.

  11. #11
    Ride
    Vt Commodre 6

    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Posts
    0

  12. #12
    AttaBoy is offline WTF?!?!
    Ride
    VS Acclaim V6

    Join Date
    May 2005
    Posts
    1,525

  13. #13
    Boonz's Avatar
    Boonz is online now the holden mechanic
    Ride
    green 355 VG ute , silver vx s pac L67

    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    berri, south australia
    Posts
    4,000

  14. #14
    azzfox's Avatar
    azzfox is offline slideways
    Ride
    VN SV3800 #012, N13

    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Yarra Valley, VIC
    Posts
    1,370

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by AttaBoy View Post
    $80,000 US!!! how much is that in AU dollars roughly??

    $140,000????
    80,000.00 USD = 89,820.56 AUD
    My (ex)Ride

    Quote Originally Posted by ari666 View Post
    LMAO!!! bracelets!!! and neck chains?!?!? they are as gay as aids.
    Quote Originally Posted by Not_An_Abba_Fan View Post
    Nice 4 year old thread dig dude....got a permit to mine that deep?

  15. #15
    drewins's Avatar
    drewins is offline swear word
    Ride
    VS Commodore wagon

    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    Gawler S.A.
    Posts
    411

  16. #16
    AttaBoy is offline WTF?!?!
    Ride
    VS Acclaim V6

    Join Date
    May 2005
    Posts
    1,525

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by drewins View Post
    Attaboy is living back when exchange rate was 60c.
    LOL.... yes I'm living back in time.

  17. #17
    xlr8_87's Avatar
    xlr8_87 is offline No longer a commy driver
    Ride
    '96 Prado 4x4

    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Melb, VIC
    Posts
    372

    Default

    thats awesome

    would take that over any HSV!
    <<<Rob>>>
    Ecotec VP, 135rwkw, 427nm

  18. #18
    Ride
    cammed Vx ss m6

    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Perth
    Posts
    412

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by padrickz88 View Post
    that is sex

    and i worked it out to only be about 11L per 100km....

    thats insane, great power + great economy! *jaw drops*
    i doubt anyone with that much money is worried about fuel economy

  19. #19
    Ride
    VE II SV6 Sportwagon

    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Melbourne
    Posts
    605

    Default

    V6??? thats stupid, i reakon they shoulda stayed with tha inline, v6 is jus guna b like a ramped up 350z, takes tha skyline'ness' away from it!!

  20. #20
    Troy711's Avatar
    Troy711 is offline Moderator Puppeh
    Ride
    2007 WM Statesman

    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Canberra, ACT
    Posts
    6,776
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by 1991_Vn2nV View Post
    Nope auto only....

    Drivetrain: 3.8-liter, 473-hp, 433-lb-ft twin turbocharged V6; AWD, six-speed automatic

    Curb Weight: 3792 pounds

    0-60: 3.5 seconds
    Quarter Mile Time: 11.7 Seconds

    Fuel Economy (EPA Combined): 21 mpg


    zero to sixty in three point five... baby you got the keys... shut up and drive

    sorry, had to do it

  21. #21
    Boonz's Avatar
    Boonz is online now the holden mechanic
    Ride
    green 355 VG ute , silver vx s pac L67

    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    berri, south australia
    Posts
    4,000

  22. #22
    Troy711's Avatar
    Troy711 is offline Moderator Puppeh
    Ride
    2007 WM Statesman

    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Canberra, ACT
    Posts
    6,776
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default

    cos it was playing at the gym... and it was in my head

    come to think of it, that friggin song is on EVERY time i go to the gym!

  23. #23
    Ride
    VE II SV6 Sportwagon

    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Melbourne
    Posts
    605

    Default

    hahah why o why wat? despite tha stigma surrounding tha rb engines and cars, u cant deny there a good engine! plus ive neva been a fan of tha 300zx or 350z, so mayb thats y im sayin it

    EDIT, u were talkin to tha otha troy? lol oops

  24. #24
    VN_Luke's Avatar
    VN_Luke is offline ƃuoɹʍ ʇsnɾ sı sıɥʇ
    Ride
    VT, RB30EST VN

    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Posts
    1,512

    Default

    i just love the way 60km/h is sooooooooooo low on the speedo!

    11 second car.... and 21mpg - sold

  25. #25
    VX Clubby's Avatar
    VX Clubby is offline VX Clubby
    Ride
    2001 VX Commodore V6

    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Sydney - Northern Beaches
    Posts
    0

    Default

    Looks Great
    My Clubsport

Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast

Similar Threads

  1. Monaro may return in 2009
    By hightekhosting in forum General
    Replies: 8
    Last Post: 02-12-2007, 09:24 PM
  2. 2009 Camaro Gets Starring Role in New Movie!!!
    By 1991_Vn2nV in forum The Pub
    Replies: 50
    Last Post: 05-12-2006, 03:10 PM
  3. 2005 Holden FJ concept unveiled!!
    By buddyforu in forum The Pub
    Replies: 16
    Last Post: 18-10-2005, 02:39 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71