evildky
evildky Dork
11/17/11 12:22 p.m.

At least the Nismo 370Z adds power over the standard model. I think Nissan got a lot of flack for the Nismo 350Z which had all the other tricks (weight reduction, aero, chassis tuning, suspension) but no additional power.

jstein77
jstein77 SuperDork
11/23/11 10:21 a.m.

I'd like to hear from someone who has actually tracked the car, especially concerning the brakes.

Grantsfo
Grantsfo New Reader
11/29/11 12:24 a.m.

I have tracked the car a couple times. It needs work to be run on the track even in Nismo tri. Needs a big oil cooler, better shocks and springs. I opted for JRZ clubsports coil overs, needs bigger/better front brakes (I use same front brake as grand Am race cars - Brembo race caliper), needs deep sump oil pan with doors to hold oil in the turns and finally it fuel starves on hard right handers with anything less than 3/4 of a tank. Oh and it needs a real LSD. I went with OSGiken

It is very nice handling car. Does 1:44 lap times on Laguna Seca on stock width wheels with DOT R tires. That pretty quick for

Here is my car http://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-RMPQT1kGTcw/TaxV7vJwvVI/AAAAAAAAAB8/BZa1u9Z-YXA/s1024/JR1N0711.JPG

Alan Cesar
Alan Cesar Dork
12/10/13 12:00 a.m.

The Nismo version of Nissan's 370Z is the same basic car with quite a bit more sex. It's all curves and flares, the kind that makes you want to grab a handful. Big exhaust tips hint at the extra power over the comparatively milquetoast standard car: it boasts almost 20 more horses, for a total of 350.

It's turned on in the places you can't see, also. Nismo, Nissan's performance arm, gave the suspension underneath a complete rework, adding stiffer springs and anti-roll bars, revised damping, more bracing, a viscous limited slip, and—what's this bit of exotica?—a carbon fiber driveshaft.

Presumably to reduce weight, it’s also a stripper—not many standard or optional comfort features here. There's a storage bin where the navigation screen would be, for example, but there are touches to remind you this isn't just a base model. Plenty of real aluminum trim reminds you of its track-ready purpose. Our tester, equipped with the optional Nismo carpeted floor mats ($115) and performance brake pads ($580), checked in at $10,000 over the base Nissan coupe.

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