Posts Tagged ‘Nissan’

The Ten New Cars We'll Lust After in 2010

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

Stare into the crystal ball. The motoring industry tugs us in two direc­tions. On the one hand it fuses the heights of driving passion, design discernment and techno­lo­gical exactitude to produce the most dizzying hypercars of which we could ever have dreamed.

On the other meanwhile, that same passion and techno-​​savvy explores new ways of powering, driving and being on the road.

Somewhere in the middle lay the worse of marketing-​​led product launches and misguided nods to trend. Meet our heroes and villains of the next 12 months.

Anniversary Z-Car For the 'States

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Z-Car_anniversary A special edition model 370Z to commem­orate 40 years of the Z-​​car is to be released in the USA.  Although the original timeless classic that is the Datsun 240Z was intro­duced on October 22, 1969, the 370Z 40th Anniversary Edition will go on sale in the states sometime in early 2010.

The basis of this special edition will, appar­ently, be a standard issue 370Z Touring model, equipped with the 3.7L twin-​​cam V6, 6-​​speed manual and Sport Package. The anniversary edition adds an exclusive paint job and red leather interior  – as well as special edition branding.

Does life begin at forty? We drove a regular 370Z  a few weeks ago, and there certainly looks to be life in the old dog yet.

Nissan 370Z Roadster: A Beauty From the Orient

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

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With the ongoing debate here on the merits and aesthetics of Nissan’s Skyline , we couldn’t ignore the company’s latest release. Whatever you think generally of the look, feel and performance of cars from Japan, if you’ve got a sense of beauty in your body, we think you’ll have to agree that the new 370Z drop top is a stunning creation.

Due to hit Nissan showrooms in the UK in late summer this year, the car looks like a truly authentic roadster designed from the ground up rather than a chopped coupé. We loved the coupé, but thought it was a little hunkered down and possessed an overly aggressive, very macho kind of attract­iveness. According to Nissan the soft-​​top roof was designed with an emphasis on three key areas: to provide a sleek silhouette matching the new Z’s styling with the top up or down, to offer easy single-​​action open-​​close operation, and to provide an enjoyable top-​​down exper­ience with reduced wind turbu­lence and all-​​climate driver and passenger comfort.

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We haven’t seen pictures with the rag top in the closed position, so we’re unable to comment. And you can read what you will into the fact that Nissan haven’t released top-​​up pictures at time of writing. Topless however, the shortened windshield and aerody­nam­ically rounded rear deck enhance the car’s kinetic lines. When in the down position, the convertible top is concealed beneath a full body-​​colour hard cover, which extends forward to help create the Roadster’s classic “double cockpit” style interior.

Compared to the previous gener­ation 350Z Roadster, the new Z convertible picks up 26 horsepower and 2 lb-​​ft of torque (332 horsepower @ 7,000 rpm and 270 lb-​​ft of torque @ 5,200 rpm, compared with the previous 3.5-litre V6’s 306 horsepower @ 6,800 rpm and 268 lb-​​ft of torque @ 4,800 rpm.

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Along with its larger displacement, the 3.7-litre engine gives better power delivery all the way to the 7,500 rpm redline, improved low-​​end power and more high-​​end torque. Key to the enhanced performance is the VVEL system, which is able to optimise intake valve open/​close movements, allowing the needed air to be sent promptly to the combustion chamber at the precisely optimised time. Since the VVEL system can adjust to open the valves slightly, it improves fuel efficiency by reducing camshaft friction and fuel waste. It also provides cleaner emissions by allowing for quicker warm-​​up of the catalyst and by stabil­ising combustion when the engine is cool.

The release of a roadster in the wake of a sports coupé is tradi­tionally thought of as appealing to a feminine consumer. But retaining the burly presence of the coupé, we think the drop-​​top Z Car will have aficionados of the most steroid-​​wracked Skyline dreaming of having the wind in their hair.

Tell us what you think.

Japanissimo!

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

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Japan’s final victory in its long campaign to dominate the global car industry only came last year. General Motors had been the world’s biggest carmaker for 75 years, and last year celeb­rated its centenary. Toyota’s birthday gift to the General was to steal his long-​​held, long-​​cherished number-​​one slot. Japan overtook Germany as the world’s biggest car exporter back in ’74, and the US as the world’s biggest carmaker in 1980, but it took until 2008 for a Japanese carmaker to become the biggest in the world.

And when it finally came, it was a very Japanese victory. There was no corporate crowing. Toyota’s bosses wouldn’t discuss it; not even a press release was issued. Maybe they’d foreseen the cataclysmic sales slump that has since hit every major carmaker, Toyota included, and decided that making a big noise about numbers would be a bad idea.

But the slump won’t threaten Toyota’s number one position. And what do you notice about those two other red-​​letter dates in Japan’s automotive history? Each follows a major global economic crisis, namely the oil panics of ’73 and ’79. In each case Japan’s car industry was hit hard. But in each case, as the world’s economy rebounded, chastened car buyers wanted more of the small, reliable, economical and affordable cars the Japanese build so brilliantly. You can count on the same thing happening again.

Honda, First International Automaker To Build A Car In America

So where did it all go right for Japan? As a global car super­power, it was a very late starter. In the 1920s and ‘30s, as the US and European carmakers were bringing motoring to the masses and building fabulous Bugattis and Duesenbergs, the Japanese government classed anything with four wheels and an engine as a munition, and controlled what was built. So the first Japanese car firms – Mitsubishi, Isuzu, Mazda and Toyota – mostly built grim military trucks.

But the government also passed an act which made it almost impossible for foreign carmakers to continue to operate in Japan. Ford and GM estab­lished themselves in Europe before the war and still dominate. They also controlled virtually all of Japan’s car production until the mid-‘30s, and might still do if they hadn’t been booted out.

The Americans might have lost another oppor­tunity to stifle Japan’s nascent car industry during the war, when a massive bombing mission on Toyota’s main factory was called off after the A-​​bombs were dropped and Japan capit­u­lated. Not that Toyota and its rivals then had it easy; in the bleak post-​​war years they were reduced to making pots and pans to keep their factories open.

But the Americans helped out again, twice. First, while still controlling Japan they banned car production. So the Japanese concen­trated on building cheap, efficient motor­bikes, which found an instant, vast and desperate global market. By 1960, Japan was the biggest bike maker in the world, and firms like Honda and Suzuki got their start. Then the Korean War brought US money flowing into Japan, creating demand for military trucks, reopening the car factories and super­charging the Japanese economy.

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But the real inflection point came in 1955. The Japanese government again stepped in, but this time with a positive suggestion. It proposed a ‘people’s car’; something small, light and cheap that cash-​​strapped post-​​war car buyers could reasonably aspire to, with tax breaks to encourage firms to build them and buyers to buy them. It was the birth of the ‘kei-​​car’: the tiny, distinctive city transport still popular in Japan today. But more import­antly it brilliantly foresaw the kind of car the world would want in two decades’ time, and it wasn’t the gross-​​out, gas-​​guzzling, wings’n’fins monstros­ities that Detroit was producing.

Japan’s small-​​car expertise is the single most important reason for its success. But the Japanese also pushed hard to export them or – better – make them overseas, and built them with an efficiency and quality never seen before. Taiichi Ohno rose from the factory floor to create the fabled Toyota Production System; an obsessive-compulsive’s guide to carmaking now studied in business schools around the world, complete with its own language and the reason Toyotas have won die-​​hard loyalty for their utter depend­ab­ility. “If you want to go into the Outback, take a Land Rover,” runs an old Australian saying. “But if you want to come back, take a Land Cruiser.”

Japan’s reputation as a purveyor of passionless white-​​good-​​on-​​wheels is undeserved. True, their engineers’ passion is directed more towards faultless build quality than naked dynamism, but that’s hardly a bad thing. But this is also a car industry that got into Formula One and world rallying in the ‘60s, as soon as it could afford to. Honda’s first car was a sports car, and Nissan-Datsun’s 240Z one of the seminal sports cars of the ‘60s and ‘70s.

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But it wasn’t until 1989 that the Japanese really started to cut loose, launching the Mazda MX-​​5, which would become the world’s best-​​selling sports car, and the Lexus brand, which showed the Japanese could do luxury as well as – or better than – the Europeans. In 1990 came the incom­parable Honda NSX, which married Ferrari looks and responses to Corolla reliab­ility and running costs. And from ’92, Subaru and Mitsubishi put increas­ingly absurd amounts of power into the road-​​going saloon versions of their world rally cars.

All of these cars, and others, have fanatical followings at home and abroad, but it’s still hard to get excited about any aspect of a Toyota Avensis. Our feelings about Japanese cars run from utter indif­ference to total obsession. That won’t change. Right now, the Japanese car makers are hard at work on the plug-​​in hybrid, fuel-​​cell and battery-​​electric cars we’ll all be desperate for in a decade. Like those first kei-​​cars half a century ago, they won’t be exciting, but they’ll be ready when the world needs them.

And at the other end of the scale, there’s the new Nissan GT-​​R. It exceeds even icons like the NSX with its towering, staggering performance and intellect. But it differs from most of the stand-​​out Japanese cars of the past in being distinct­ively, self-​​confidently Japanese; its styling inspired by the giant Gundam robots of manga rather than the work of the famous European car design houses. Consider it a gift from the Japanese car industry to itself. And expect more of the same.

By Ben Oliver

If you need Japanese import insurance then try Adrian Flux, call 0800 089 0050.

Skyline: The Evolution of a Japanese Legend

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

Our Favourite Skylines

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We love the Skyline. You love the Skyline. Let’s face it, everybody loves a Skyline. But the model had evolved hugely from its first conception at the end of the fifties to the current supreme example of passionate Japanese engin­eering and design. The GT-​​R Spec V is targeted specifically at enthu­siast drivers who desire race car-​​level performance in a street-​​legal vehicle.

Developed around the multi-​​dimensional Nissan GT-​​R sports car, which was intro­duced just more than one year ago to universal global acclaim, the new SpecV model builds on the original’s “ultimate supercar that anyone can enjoy driving anywhere, at anytime” philo­sophy – taking it to an entirely new level of “oneness between man and machine.” The SpecV model includes unique body, interior and performance equipment and modific­a­tions, raising the GT-R’s unmatched performance to even higher levels.

The GT-​​R SpecV’s new exterior features include a carbon fibre rear spoiler, a carbon fibre grille, and carbon fibre brake ducts. The SpecV is available exclus­ively in Ultimate Black Opal (RP) body colour. Inside, the SpecV’s unique two-​​seat interior (non-​​SpecV GT-​​R models also include a two-​​place rear seat) offers special Recaro carbon fibre bucket seats, while carbon fibre insets embellish the rear centre storage box, instrument panel and other trim areas.

Performance is enhanced with a new high gear boost control device, which moment­arily increases boost of the engine’s twin turbochargers for greater torque in the intermediate-​​to-​​high speed ranges to provide a more powerful feeling of accel­er­ation, while also allowing the engine to operate at a lower speed for improved fuel economy. Other modific­a­tions include a titanium-​​coated exhaust system and carbon-​​ceramic brakes that provide powerful stopping performance.

The GT-​​R SpecV is also equipped with light­weight, racing-​​style forged aluminium wheels that were developed for this model and have been sold by Nissan Motorsports International (NISMO) since September 2008. The lighter unsprung weight provided by the new wheels, together with the enhanced braking capab­ility, an exclusive suspension and high-​​grip tyres, combine to deliver the SpecV’s excep­tional performance.

Here are ten of our high-​​points of the evolution to the super­lative GT-​​R V-​​Spec launched earlier this year.

Adrin Flux have great deals on Skyline insurance, click on the link or call 0800 089 0050.