Are cars really cheaper to buy in Japan? More specifically, are GTR's cheaper in Japan? Well lets find out as I go to a used car dealer yard in Japan. I take a look at JDM used cars for sale in a car ...
A grimy Welsh B-road feels a different universe to the warm, dry tarmac of Hakone’s surprisingly wide, high-speed turns. Far ...
"Handbuilt by Takumi Kurosawa," a nameplate you can find on Nissan GT-R engine blocks, describes the actions of one of four takumi who build VR38 engines for the Japanese supercar. Each of Nissan ...
The electric GT-R weighs about 809 pounds more than the stock ... projects by students from its in-house technical college in Japan. The highlight was a Z station wagon based on Nissan's Stagea ...
The R35 Nissan GT‑R is archetypal of the kaizen philosophy of continuous improvement. That is to say, a car that’s been tinkered, tickled, nipped and tucked almost beyond all recognition.
According to our friends over at the GTChannel, the GT-R's integrated computer limits the vehicle's speed in Japan to 111 mph (180 km/h), but once the GPS system detects that you've arrived at a ...
More on that later. That’s right, in October this year, the GT-R R35 will disappear from Nissan’s lineup in the U.S. And to celebrate the end of an era, Japan’s third biggest carmaker is ...
The GT-R first appeared in Japan as the top-spec performance Skyline back in 1969. It faded away in the early ’70s before returning in 1989. The GT-R finally hit U.S. dealerships as a 2009 model ...