Ever since the introduction of the R35-chassis GT-R, the GT-R and Skyline became distinct models that no longer shared a common chassis. What does this have to do with the Q50? Even though the GT-R is the one sold here in North America, you can technically say that the Skyline is also available. We just call it the Infiniti Q50.
Don't believe us? Have a look for yourself:
Sure, it does come with a different shaped nose and taillights that supposedly tie the car back to the GT-R, but the Q50 is mechanically identical to the Skyline—twin-turbocharged VR30DDTT V6 and all.
Speaking of that VR30, it's normally rated for 300 horsepower and 295 lb.-ft. of torque, though will push out 400 horsepower and 350 lb.-ft. of torque when you go for the Red Sport 400 trim, which is how our tester came equipped.
Regardless of trim, all Q50s can be configured with rear-wheel-drive or, as the spec sheet informs us, a modern version of the ATESSA all-wheel-drive system, with gear changes handled by a seven-speed automatic transmission.
The real question, however, is does this rebadged Skyline actually drive like it's a tamer relative of an actual supercar? Keep scrolling to read our driving impressions.
Like what you're reading? We rely on your financial support. For as little as $3, you can support Grassroots Motorsports by becoming a Patron today.
Become a Patron!
I seem to remember the Red Sport models having astronomical insurance bills. Apparently the key FOB was really easy to clone and they were stolen all of the time. No idea if/when they corrected this.
I want to say that when these debuted there was at least one "traditional" car mag that panned it in comparison to their perennial favorite, some sort of 3-series. I've been a little leery of their opinions for more than a decade now so I'd be interested to hear more from GRM on this one as the Infiniti stuff seems like a better bet on the used market.
Also, did these ever ship with a manual?
I think when they debuted, they had a silly steering by wire that lacked a physical connection to the wheels and made it super spooky to drive anywhere close to the limit. I would hope that they either drastically improved it or ditched it by now, it was so universally panned.
This is one of those cars that I am shocked is still around, but I'm glad it is still around. Like David said, the base car has been around since 2014. It's one of those "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" kind of vehicles. These drive really nice in their base form, and the automatic trans does exactly what its supposed to do and doesn't hinder the driving experience. Slapping another 100hp on top just makes it better. Only thing these lag behind with is the infotainment setup. It feels like it's from the early 2010's, and having to fumble around with a slow touch screen interface to put the heat on is not something I like in any car.
I've started putting these on my radar as a replacement daily once commuting becomes a thing again. Glad to hear they are everything I had hoped.
rothwem said:
I think when they debuted, they had a silly steering by wire that lacked a physical connection to the wheels and made it super spooky to drive anywhere close to the limit. I would hope that they either drastically improved it or ditched it by now, it was so universally panned.
Yeah ok I remember now. I wanted to say the reviewer said it lacked "connection" or something of the sort so that makes sense.
So what's the price of this versus a gtr? And why couldn't one buy this as a poor man's gtr? And race it with gtr parts?
I had a regular q50 for a rental car. I have been a nissan fan for a long time, but that q50 was SO NICE! Very tight, quick, very comfy. I have considered a used one if i needed a sporty sedan
I came in here expecting a small CUV.
This has been out since 2014?! Is this what they used to call a G37?
Dootz
Reader
1/6/21 8:55 p.m.
Shame we never got the Eau Rouge concept into production
The 'steer by wire' was first for a production car and did have a clutch in the system to physically attach you to the steering rack when needed. I think its highly historically significant because everything will have that at some point, somewhere along the way to losing the steering wheel entirely.
Vajingo said:
So what's the price of this versus a gtr? And why couldn't one buy this as a poor man's gtr? And race it with gtr parts?
I'm pretty sure the 2 cars don't share any parts. The engine and trans are different for sure. The chassis is different too.
Matt B (fs) said:
Also, did these ever ship with a manual?
I know the G35 sedan was offered in a manual up to 2008. I think the G37 sedan was offered in a manual. I think they dropped the manual when they switched to the Q naming.
*I'm not an expert but I did a little research a few years ago before I bought my 2008 G35 manual sedan.