Nissan massages its wondrous GT-R with newfound comfort and refinement that do nothing to diminish its amazing performance. But has age wearied the Japanese supercar warrior?
WHAT IS IT With a sub-3.0sec 0-100km/h sprint time, the eight-year-old V35 GT-R is a Porsche 911 Turbo-troubling upstart from Japan, offering a 3.8-litre twin-turbo V6, all-wheel drive, and genuine room, comfort and refinement.
WHY WE’RE TESTING IT Over the past eight years or so, many observers have reckoned that better ride comfort and refinement would boost the Nissan GT-R’s appeal, particularly as it already has the sort of performance to embarrass Lamborghini – never mind Porsche. Now their prayers seem to have been answered, thanks to a series of suspension and other mechanical upgrades that promise to put the grand touring back into the Nissan GT-R.

THE WHEELS VERDICT Nissan has successfully evolved the already incredible GT-R into a more rounded and appealing everyday proposition, thanks in no small part to a series of suspension and other mechanical upgrades that take the hard edge off the V35’s ride quality. Throw in explosive performance, a quieter and more refined cabin, and sublime handling, and Japan’s only supercar (for now) remains a unique and relatively bargain-priced alternative to machinery from BMW, Porsche and even Ferrari and Lamborghini.
PLUS:Startling speed and dynamics; improved ride and refinement; relative value MINUS:Low-speed AWD graunching; some cheap switchgear; road drone; rubbish Bluetooth
THE WHEELS REVIEW IN AN era of instant refresh, there is something reassuring about a car that’s allowed to breathe with age. Nissan’s V35 GT-R is now a sprightly eight years old and Japan’s sole supercar continues to defiantly march to the soaring sounds of its own twin-turbo V6 baritone.

Additionally, the brakes are now more progressive, the tactile steering no longer vibrates at idle, more noise insulation abounds, and the infamous transaxle and driveshaft shunting is cut, though not eliminated.
All this fleshes out the Nissan’s GT-ness, supported by an exemplary driving position, sumptuous front seats, adult-size rear seats, practical boot (a disassembled bike fits) and solid build quality.
However, the console knobs are Navara-grade, the column-mounted (rather than wheel-mounted) paddle shifters are awkward to use when arms are twirling through tight turns, the speedo is out, the cruise control sucks and the tinny Bluetooth is infuriatingly low-fi.

Even Lamborghini’s $800K Aventador can’t match Nissan’s 2.7sec 0-100km/h claim. Speed is obviously instantaneous – and ballistic in Race mode – with ferocious acceleration, split-second ratio shifts from the sometimes clunky six-speed dual-clutch, and axis-tilting Brembo braking.
The GT-R glides through corners with grin-inducing glee, accompanied by enormous grip, but be prepared for relentless coarse-chip bitumen drone.
Incredibly, our 13.1L/100km average over some 1000km at the wheel matched the trip computer’s result exactly.
The MY15 V35 is a more liveable supercar, its evolved civility evoking something akin to a Porsche 928/911 Turbo lovechild. With 46 years of Skyline GT-R heritage behind it, age is mellowing Godzilla gracefully.
SPECS Model: Nissan GT-R Premium Edition Luxury Engine: 3799cc 6cyl, dohc, 24v, twin-turbo Max power: 404kW @ 6400rpm Max torque: 628Nm @ 3200-5800rpm Transmission: 6-speed dual-clutch Weight: 1740kg 0-100km/h: 2.7sec Economy: 11.7L/100km Price: $177,000 On sale: Now



