Next R36 Nissan GT-R to Draw on Vision Gran Turismo Concept

As we speak, just 90 examples of the Nissan GT-R are being sold in the U.S. per month and 60 per month in the Japan. These relatively slow sales figures shouldn’t come as a real surprise considering the GT-R is the better part of seven years old. Consequently, the Japanese marque is hard at work creating its successor and it has emerged that design wise, the new GT-R could draw heavily on the Concept 2020 Vision Gran Turismo unveiled a couple of months ago.

2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH

According to a source from Motoring, the next-gen GT-R will be a toned-down version of the 2020 Vision Gran Turismo. As a result, we can expect the new GT-R to still remain recognizable as a GT-R yet one which is well and truly up with the times.

2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH

Beyond the design, the GT-R will be extremely significant in that it will adopt a hybrid power-train for the first time. The current 3.8-litre twin-turbocharged V6 engine of the existing car is likely to be maintained along with its all-wheel drive system to keep costs down. Thanks to the addition of a new electric motor co-developed by Williams, the new GT-R will boast significantly more power.

Torque could quite conceivably jump from the existing 442 lb-ft in the GT-R Nismo into the region of 737 lb-ft of torque. This will necessitate a brand new transmission and that is expected to come in the form of an eight-speed ‘box in place of the existing six-speed.

In terms of power, the Motoring source believes the next-generation Nissan GT-R could deliver close to 800 hp. Due to the huge increases in power and torque, additional cooling will be required for the Japanese supercar which is reportedly one of the main reasons for the design change. The new design will help provide effective cooling for the hybrid system.

It remains unclear just when the new GT-R could launch, but a concept could be unveiled at next year’s Tokyo Motor Show before the production-spec car arriving in 2018.

[Via Motoring]

2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH36 Concept
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH
2020 GT-R R36 Concept RacingHeritage RH

Nissan’s Next GT-R to deliver 784hp

The Nissan GT-R is one of the fastest coupes on the planet. Boasting a 0-60 mph sprint time as low as 2.7 seconds that shreds far more expensive competition, it rivals the mighty Bugatti Veyron for pure off-the-line acceleration.

2015 Nissan GT R Nismo
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Nissan GT R Nismo

Nissan product planners are under pressure to make the car, out since 2007, more desirable.
Why? Because Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn, who initially took a lead role in green-lighting the GT-R, now says he has no interest in cars that don’t sell in volume and make money. Makes sense. You see, the GT-R is not doing well. Godzilla, as we’ve come to know it, is only selling an average of 90 cars in the U.S. and 60 units in Japan each month.

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That’s why Nissan planners are making last-ditch efforts to make the GT-R a more saleable car in showrooms from Los Angeles to London to Tokyo. And to do that, they are pulling out all the stops.
They’re taking a GT-R-branded hybrid LMP1 to the legendary 24 Hours of Le Mans next year to highlight improved environmental credentials. That translated, yes, the next-generation road-going GT-R will get a hybrid powertrain.

2015 Nissan GT R Nismo
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Nissan GT R Nismo
The LM-spec race-ready “Nissan GT-R LM Nismo” will employ gas-electric technology and join other hybrids on the grid including front-runners Audi, Porsche, and Toyota.
Just as critical as a powerful, fuel-efficient powertrain however, is the car’s exterior styling. With the next car, Nissan wants to make amends. After all, the current GT-R has looks that do nothing to imply its performance.

Never meant to have a sexy exterior, the GT-R is a purpose-built scud missile for the road. When other cars were shopping for designer suits, the GT-R was taking steroids and pumping iron.

Nissan Concept 2020 Vision GT
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Nissan Concept 2020 Vision GT
Nissan wants to change that. A source close to the company says the new street-spec car will not only employ full LMP-spec carbon fibre cowling, but take on a form similar to the Nissan Concept 2020 Vision Gran Turismo (pictured above and below), revealed at the Goodwood Festival of Speed in June.
While one Nissan designer hinted that this concept points toward a future GT-R design, the styling seems too radical for a road-going car and not radical enough for a race car. “You can expect to see the next-gen GT-R get a toned-down version of the 2020 Vision GT car,” said our source. Our artist’s rendering at the top of the page takes the 2020 Vision concept and tones it down with a more road-going treatment. It still looks like it belongs in a Transformers movie, but at least it’s edgier and boasts better proportions all round.

To keep costs down, Nissan will carry over several strategic components from the R35 GT-R to the new R36 model. The twin turbo 3.8-liter V-6, transaxle layout and 4WD powertrain will remain. What’s different is the electric motor that will be just aft of the engine.

Nissan Concept 2020 Vision GTIMG_6751.JPG
Nissan Concept 2020 Vision GT
The latest revision of the R35 GT-R packs a 550-hp punch with the current Nismo model producing 600 hp. Our insider confirms also that the car’s mammoth 442 lb-ft is about as much torque as the current six-speed DCT gearbox can take.
Adding an electric motor will boost maximum torque to the neighborhood of 737 lb-ft, requiring the total redesign of the next-generation car’s transmission, which will be an eight-speed. This will give engineers a chance to attack the current gearbox’s noise level and clunkiness at low speeds.
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Our source says that the R36 GT-R’s V-6 will develop around 650 hp, with 134 hp coming from its electric motor, elevating total power output to a very healthy 784 hp. However, one problem that appears to be plaguing engineers is the cooling of the batteries used in the new hybrid system.

This is where the Le Mans experiment next year will pay off as engineers find ways to deal with the huge amounts of regenerative brake energy created under heavy braking, and then the sizable energy expended under hard acceleration.

Nissan bosses will no doubt be paying attention to similar battery cooling issues with new hybrid systems on this year’s F1 cars and Japan’s Super GT championship.
As our source said, “that is why the styling of the new GT-R will have to be so radically different. It’ll have to be penned to enable much more efficient cooling for the hybrid system as well as gain more efficient aerodynamics.”

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But unlike many other carmakers who rely on electronics companies for their Li-ion batteries, Nissan designs and builds its own while co-developing next-generation hybrid systems with the Williams F1 team.

Nissan Race Car Teaser

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Nissan Race Car Teaser
So all the pieces appear to be falling into place for a hotter-than-ever GT-R. Right? Maybe not. One unexpected development that may throw a wrench in the works is the untimely departure of Executive Vice President Andy Palmer, who resigned in August to take up the top job at Aston Martin. Palmer had been in charge of the GT-R project and was one of its strongest proponents.
Questions are already being asked. “Who will take over?” “Will they be able to convince Ghosn to see the project through?” We think so, although it might be slightly delayed.

If the R36 GT-R does get the green light, and we expect it will, keep an eye out for a concept version at the 2015 Tokyo Motor Show and a production model in 2018.

Via MOTORTREND & Peter Lyon

Rendering courtesy of Holiday Auto magazine.

MCLAREN: F1 TO M1

20 Years ago McLaren boss Ron Dennis said of the F1, that it was “….the finest supercar the world was ever going to see”.
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The F1 represented a step-change in itself…

In Geneva recently he proudly unveiled the latest addition to the McLaren family: The 650S. And in a first season for Jenson Button since the death of his ever present father, the waxing and waning of the generations is sure to be particularly poignant.

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But if there are any qualms over fatherly loyalty, Ron Dennis can let himself off on a hereditary technicality. This new machine is a full-series production car and is from a completely different familial line than the balls-out, stripped down and uncompromising, limited edition F1.

…but the coupé is, for us, the prettiest in the sector.

That said, like its F1 uncle, the 650S can trace its DNA right back to the crucible of top level motor racing and McLaren’s particular genius with power-to-weight-ratios.

From 1966, when they created in the M2B their first Formula 1 car in McLaren has always been an innovator with chassis design. By 1968 Bruce McLaren himself won at Spa in the M7A (see image at top of page). By 1981 a zenith was reached when they instigated a step change in Formula 1 by racing the first fully carbon fibre chassis in the sport.

It was, however, the 1988 season with Senna at the wheel of the most successful car in the history of Formula 1, that saw the conception of a new branch of the McLaren family tree with the development of the groundbreaking F1 supercar, bringing Formula 1 engineering to the streets in its rawest.

Scissor doors are a perfect twist.

The 650S learns from both the F1 and the recent P1 and like them is inspired and informed by the latest track developments and based around that carbon fibre chassis.

The 650 refers to the power output (650 PS) of the twin turbo V8 engine which will get the car from 0-100kph in three seconds and reaches a top speed of 333kph. The S stands for sport and harks back to the McLaren obsession with weight and handling.

650S Spider’s carbon acreage tells a tale…

This super lightweight model (1330kg) uses all the aerodynamic tricks learned from its forefathers to keep it on the road and to maximise agility while retaining a level of luxury and utility more at home in a high end saloon.

And just take a look at it. There’s everything that’s good with the combo of wind tunnel and CAD here: but there is, for us, more of an aesthetic loveliness about it than any of the previous McLaren issues.

So if you absolutely need Bluetooth technology in your Formula One precision engineered supercar, but missed out on the oligarch-only P1, this latest chip off the McLaren block should be up your street.

Ancient and Modern: McLaren has always known how to integate past and future…

650S Spider’s carbon acreage tells a tale…

and the signature lines are distinctive….

Retractable hardtop competes with Ferrari’s 458S

The McLaren 650S coupé is, for us, the prettiest in the sector.

Scissor doors are a perfect twist.

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