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 ...
"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 ...
It doesn't look like a giant city-crushing monster, so why is Nissan's GT-R called "Godzilla"? We talked to the man who ...
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.
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 Nissan GT-R is a Japanese performance icon. Dating back to the late 1960s, the model has been among the pinnacles of what the automaker has been able to produce. The automaker is now preparing ...
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 ...
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 ...