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2011 Nissan GT-R Reviews

You'll find all our 2011 Nissan GT-R reviews right here. 2011 Nissan GT-R prices range from $61,490 for the GT-R to $75,240 for the GT-R .

Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.

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Nissan GT-R 2011 review: snapshot
By Peter Barnwell · 14 Jun 2011
It must be galling for wealthy punters who put down half a million bucks on the latest Ferrari, Porsche or Lambo to know there's a car out there, a third of the price, that blows them into the weeds in performance terms and most probably handling too.It mightn't look a sweet as the new Ferrari 458 Italia but man oh man, the 2011 version of Nissan's R35 GTR makes up for any styling shortfall in the way it goes.Nissan's comprehensive revamp of the GTR makes it the best yet in every sense.The hand-made, twin-turbo, 3.8-litre, V6 engine moves up to 390kW/612Nm output while at the same time uses less fuel rated at an average of 12.0-litres/100km. For the mechanically attuned engine detail changes are numerous but it's mostly about more turbo boost. There are larger diameter intake and exhaust tracts and the exhaust system is free flowing. This plus an engine computer re-calibration and altered valve timing.The dual-clutch manumatic transmission has been uprated for quicker shifts and "predictive" operation based on accelerator position. The all wheel drive system is improved offering a drive split of up to 100 per cent to the rear wheels and a torque vectoring function is achieved through electronic controls and limited slip differentials front and rear.Six piston front brakes measure 390mm in diameter and are squeezed by Brembo calipers. Rear brakes a four piston. Bilstein aluminium dampers offer comfort and sport modes and the 20-inch wheels weigh less than before and carry specially made Dunlop Sport rubber.Nissan matched the performance boost with new styling inside and out featuring LED front driving lights, new bumpers and a larger front grille. Aerodynamic drag is now down to 0.26 - extremely low.The interior retains all of the previous model's features including a comprehensive read-out panel offering info' right down to cornering g forces and rate of acceleration. Equipment levels are luxury car level. You get leather heated seats, big screen satnav, premium audio with a 10 gig music "box", column mounted gear change paddles in magnesium and Recaro seats among a host of goodies.What's it like to drive? Sledgehammer springs to mind. Makes mug drivers look and feel like champions. There's brutal acceleration everywhere and a redline of 7000rpm accompanied by a superb exhaust note. Testing reveals the newly tweaked GTR stops the clocks for a 0-100kmh sprint in "around" 3.0 seconds.We actually got close to that time simply by engaging the "launch control" mode that is easily accessible through the GTR's multi- mode dynamic controls. Basically you put everything in R, put your left foot on the brake, push the accelerator to the floor with your right foot then side-step the brake pedal.The effect is much like a theme park ride (the slingshot) where your eyeballs and guts are pushed back into your body and you feel queasy after the second go. We experienced no brake fade even though the discs are steel and it never put a wheel out of place.Driving this car was an awesome experience. And all for a trifling $168,800.Any downside? The hard ride would wear thin after a short while and it's difficult to get 100 octane fuel though 98 is OK. The styling grows on you but we still think the bum is too big. And you can hear the gearbox shuffling through the ratios downchanging.
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Nissan GT-R 2011 review
By Paul Gover · 05 Apr 2011
Godzilla has had its teeth and claws sharpened for a new year in Australia. There is more power and torque from its thumping twin-turbo V6 engine, a little less weight and drag, and the added bonus of more refinement inside. The 2011-model R35 also comes with bigger brakes and new tyres, some chassis strengthening, LED daytime running lamps and an extended aero diffuser under the tail.The upgrade work is all designed to make the car quicker and more responsive - and shave time off its laps at the Nurburgring in Germany - as well as re-igniting passion for the car among Australia's keenest drivers.That passion was reflected in a giant turnout at Phillip Island to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the GT-R's first Bathurst win, at an event attended by Mr GT-R - Katzutoshi Mizuno - and Aussie racers Fred Gibson and Jim Richards. "The GT-R is really the heart-and-soul of Nissan," says Dan Thompson, managing director of Nissan Australia.The downside on the third version of the R35 is a starting price that has blown out to $168,800, and a more extreme driving experience that could be too much for some people in day-to-day conditions. But get it on a track, like Phillip Island . . .The GT-R has been a bang-for-your-buck winner from the beginning, even back in the days of the R32 model that introduced the car to Australia as an official Nissan. But things have slipped this year, with the decision to drop the entry- grade car and tougher opposition from the German supercar bunkers.It's still a massively impressive package, but the $168,800 bottom line comes in well above the starting price for a BMW M3 at $152,300 and the Mercedes-Benz C63 AMG from $152,800, and also available with a Performance Pack tweak and an extra 22 kiloWatts.The GT-R is better equipped for 2011 - with everything from Recaro- designed sports buckets to seat belts made from softer material - but the bottom line is still a $13,000 jump from the previous starting mark for Godzilla. And it doesn't get the capped-price service protection of the rest of the Nissan family."It still is much cheaper for the performance that it gives," says Nissan's local product specialist, Darren Holland. "The money has gone into performance improvements. The power, the torque, and the engineering that's gone into the car."The GT-R has always been a techno treat and this time around is no different, with the 3.8-litre V6 engine tweaked to release 390 kiloWatts and 612 Newton-metres - up by 33 and 24 respectively - while also cutting fuel economy to a claimed average of 12.0 litres/100km.The suspension has been tweaked with alloy shock absorbers, a strengthening bar across the front-suspension towers, and a support panel on the dash ahead of the passenger. The Brembo brakes are now a monoblock design, there are forged alloy wheels from Rays, and the startline ability of the GT-R has been boosted by a system - engaged through R-Mode and VDC-R - that promises consistent 0-100km/h sprints in around 3.0 seconds. Although you do have to cool the transmission after four consecutive runs.Only a GT-R fan - and there are plenty - will pick the differences for 2011. The basic body shape is unchanged and the tweaking is all in the details - like LED daytime lamps, a large grille, the rear diffuser and what Nissan calls a two-level 'rectifier' to channel air around the nose.Inside, there is real carbon fibre in the dash, the new seats and belts, and a soft-touch panel on top of the dash that gives a more upmarket look and feel.There are no real changes to the safety package, although the latest Dunlop Sport Maxx tyres and bigger brakes are claimed to give better grip in all conditions and much better braking on wet roads. Mizuno says the GT-R generates more wet braking grip than a 370Z on a dry road. Of course, it comes with a six-airbag cabin, ABS brakes and ESP stability control.The GT-R has always been an extreme machine, and the tweaking to the 2011 model makes it even more of a love-or-hate machine. We love its punchy performance and the admiring glances from rival drivers, as well as the knowledge that any stop-light contest is a no-contest.And it is brutally quick. But the suspension is brutal too, even with the adjustable settings switched to comfort. And the amount of noise and slap and harshness from the transmission system rivals a World Rally Car on the way to a special stage.It's not a car to drive if you want a quiet or easy life. But GT-R fans will love the improvements, which make it brilliantly better when you want to goooooooooo. The launch control system is stonkingly good and truly the best Carsguide has sampled - with the ability to turn stomaches to mush.The extra power and torque means the car is going fast for more of the time, with better response and less lag. The chassis feels a little more responsive on the road, and when we get to Phillip Island it really shows its best side. The GT-R can run without fear or favour on a racetrack, and easily tops 260km/h down the front straight, with incredible cornering grip and slingshot exists from all corners.It's not as finely edged as a Porsche, and overheats its tyres quickly if you push hard, but it will get away from an M3 or C63 with a sympathetic and talented driver. The Series III GT-R is even better than before and incredible fun, provided you can put up with the ride and wide turning circle and restricted three-quarter vision and difficulty in parking.At Phillip Island, all that day-to-day stuff is just fluff. And the GT- R is brilliant.
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Nissan GT-R 2011 review: road test
By Paul Gover · 28 Mar 2011
There is more power and torque from its thumping twin-turbo V6 engine, a little less weight and drag, and the added bonus of more refinement inside. The 2011-model R35 also comes with bigger brakes and new tyres, some chassis strengthening, LED daytime running lamps and an extended aero diffuser under the tail.The upgrade work is all designed to make the car quicker and more responsive - and shave time off its laps at the Nurburgring in Germany - as well as re-igniting passion for the car among Australia's keenest drivers.That passion was reflected in a giant turnout at Phillip Island to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the GT-R's first Bathurst win, at an event attended by Mr GT-R - Katzutoshi Mizuno - and Aussie racers Fred Gibson and Jim Richards."The GT-R is really the heart-and-soul of Nissan," says Dan Thompson, managing director of Nissan Australia.The downside on the third version of the R35 is a starting price that has blown out to $168,800, and a more extreme driving experience that could be too much for some people in day-to-day conditions. But get it on a track, like Phillip Island .The GT-R has been a bang-for-your-buck winner from the beginning, even back in the days of the R32 model that introduced the car to Australia as an official Nissan. But things have slipped this year, with the decision to drop the entry-grade car and tougher opposition from the German supercar bunkers. It's still a massively impressive package, but the $168,800 bottom line comes in well above the starting price for a BMW M3 at $152,300 and the Mercedes-Benz C63 AMG from $152,800, and also available with a Performance Pack tweak and an extra 22 kiloWatts.The GT-R is better equipped for 2011 - with everything from Recaro-designed sports buckets to seat belts made from softer material - but the bottom line is still a $13,000 jump from the previous starting mark for Godzilla. And it doesn't get the capped-price service protection of the rest of the Nissan family."It still is much cheaper for the performance that it gives," says Nissan's local product specialist, Darren Holland."The money has gone into performance improvements. The power, the torque, and the engineering that's gone into the car."The GT-R has always been a techno treat and this time around is no different, with the 3.8-litre V6 engine tweaked to release 390 kiloWatts and 612 Newton-metres -up by 33 and 24 respectively - while also cutting fuel economy to a claimed average of 12.0 litres/100km. The suspension has been tweaked with alloy shock absorbers, a strengthening bar across the front-suspension towers, and a support panel on the dash ahead of the passenger.The Brembo brakes are now a monoblock design, there are forged alloy wheels from Rays, and the startline ability of the GT-R has been boosted by a system - engaged through R-Mode and VDC-R - that promises consistent 0-100km/h sprints in around 3.0 seconds. Although you do have to cool the transmission after four consecutive runs.Only a GT-R fan - and there are plenty - will pick the differences for 2011. The basic body shape is unchanged and the tweaking is all in the details - like LED daytime lamps, a large grille, the rear diffusor and what Nissan calls a two-level 'rectifier' to channel air around the nose.Inside, there is real carbon fibre in the dash, the new seats and belts, and a soft-touch panel on top of the dash that gives a more upmarket look and feel.There are no real changes to the safety package, although the latest Dunlop Sport Maxx tyres and bigger brakes are claimed to give better grip in all conditions and much better braking on wet roads. Mizuno says the GT-R generates more wet braking grip than a 370Z on a dry road.Of course, it comes with a six-airbag cabin, ABS brakes and ESP stability control.The GT-R has always been an extreme machine, and the tweaking to the 2011 model makes it even more of a love-or-hate machine. We love its punchy performance and the admiring glances from rival drivers, as well as the knowledge that any stop-light contest is a no- contest. And it is brutally quick. But the suspension is brutal too, even with the adjustable settings switched to comfort. And the amount of noise and slap and harshness from the transmission system rivals a World Rally Car on the way to a special stage. It's not a car to drive if you want a quiet or easy life.But GT-R fans will love the improvements, which make it brilliantly better when you want to goooooooooo.The launch control system is stonkingly good and truly the best Carsguide has sampled - with the ability to turn stomaches to mush.The extra power and torque means the car is going fast for more of the time, with better response and less lag. The chassis feels a little more responsive on the road, and when we get to Phillip Island it really shows its best side.The GT-R can run without fear or favour on a racetrack, and easily tops 260km/h down the front straight, with incredible cornering grip and slingshot exists from all corners.It's not as finely edged as a Porsche, and overheats its tyres quickly if you push hard, but it will get away from an M3 or C63 with a sympathetic and talented driver.The Series III GT-R is even better than before and incredible fun, provided you can put up with the ride and wide turning circle and restricted three-quarter vision and difficulty in parking. At Phillip Island, all that day-to-day stuff is just fluff. And the GT- R is brilliant.
Read the article