Nissan's Nismo division has offered up a range of rapid vehicles during its history, but its most powerful was introduced ...
Is this truly goodbye? After 17 years, it's hard to reconcile it—the R35 Nissan GT-R is one of the longest-lived sports cars of all time. But this generation has now been retired in North ...
Please verify your email address. The Nissan GT-R is one of the most recognized and well-revered exotic cars in the market. Sadly, after a 15-year run, the R35 generation of the GT-R is being retired.
Australian police are scrambling to find the bold thief who managed to steal a rare Nissan Skyline GT-R right out Nissan Headquarters. Motor1 reports via Australia’s News.com.au that Nissan ...
If you’re the kind of auto enthusiast who grew up playing the early Gran Turismo games, chances are you have a special place in your heart Skyline GT-R. “Godzilla,” as it’s sometimes known ...
Nismo, Nissan’s motorsport division, was charged with developing the car, not least because the R32 GT-R would replace the soon-to-be-retired R31 GTS-R racer on the track. To this end ...
Thieves stole a rare 1991 R32 GT-R from Nissan Australia’s heritage fleet during a brazen heist. The model was the first R32 to be delivered Down Under, and remained in pristine condition.
Since stepping down as the head of Nissan design in 2017, Shiro Nakamura, the designer responsible for the R35-generation Nissan GT-R, as well as multiple other Nissan and Infiniti models ...
This is where it all started. This is where the legend began. Back in 1992, the Nissan GT-R won the Bathurst 1000 in Australia, on a rain-soaked track, with an almost torn-off left front wheel ...
When a legendary Nissan GT-R designer and a hi-tech Japanese parts supplier THK join forces to create a car, the industry pays attention. That’s what happened at the Paris Auto Show recently as ...
Godzilla has gone AWOL Down Under. Earlier this week, a 1991 Nissan R32 Skyline GT-R was stolen in Australia — taken, in fact, directly from Nissan’s Australian national headquarters.