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Article Comments - 2009 Nissan GT-R vs. 2008 Porsche 911 Turbo

990 messages, Last post on Sep 05, 2009 at 6:04 AM
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2009 Nissan GT-R vs. 2008 Porsche 911 Turbo - Balance and body control of the GT-R are extraordinary through faster, bumpy bends that will have the 911 unsettled enough to make the driver lose confidence. I had a number of heart-in-mouth moments in the Turbo trying to keep up with the GT-R, even with the Porsche's suspension set to its harder Sport setting. (more)
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Points I've conceded on: -Nissan's warranty should not just be a repeat of the lemon law. If they won't cover damage during launches, they shouldn't have a launch function. -Nissan's 'fit and finish' leaves something to be desired for some people. It is not a luxury car. The comfort level is probably par at best. -Without a perfect launch, the GT-R does not have the top-end power to keep up with many other performance cars in a straight line. -Most people buy cars for other reasons than speed alone. -Most GT-Rs won't initially go for MSRP. -The GT2 is frickin' fast. And probably a few more. I see no point to arguing any of ^these points. What good would it do? However, unlike you two, I don't think it needs to be all-or-nothing. I don't believe that the GT-R is either the best or worst at everything. It doesn't have several things ^above going for it, but it is still a very fast high-speed handler. The balance, AWD, transmission, engine, tires, rims, brakes, aerodynamics all seem to work pretty well together to yield superior lap times. That is the ONLY point I'm making, which you two seem to be vehemently opposed to despite all logic. I've owned, tinkered with, built cars trucks and motorcycles of various types. The GT-R is just another car worthy of respect for what it does well. As I've said, if someone said something irrational about the 911, I'd have to correct them as well. Or the Corvette, etc, etc. |
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Replying to: bigmclargehuge (Oct 24, 2008 8:52 am) http://www.need4speed.ws/video-390.html Great video. Here is another. http://www.carzi.com/2008/10/20/cobb-nissan-gt-r-vs-techart-porsche-video/ The GTR's AWD setup is so much more advanced than the 911T. |
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Replying to: lemmer (Oct 24, 2008 10:20 am) The GTR will win any race with the 911 on any track except for a quater mile race. The GTR is faster from 0-60 thats due to the AWD set up, but after 120 MPH things start to change. |
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Infiniti to take on Porsche’s Panamera with 4-door GT-R The on and off again rumors of a four-door Nissan GT-R are still out there. Just earlier this year we saw a photo rendering depicting what a four-door GT-R would look like with an Infiniti badge. Nonetheless, Carlos Ghosn has repeatedly denied a GT-R based sedan for Infiniti. Well, here is some inside information or rumors, or whatever you want to call it. According to AutoExpress, sources in Japan tell them that Nissan is working on a supercar that will have four-doors and a Infiniti badge. The car, which will be a rival to the Porsche Panamera and an answer to the BMW M5, will use the four-wheel-drive chassis and twin-clutch gearbox of the GT-R coupe. Rather than focusing on performance, the car will emphasis comfort and luxury with a longer wheelbase. And instead of the 3.8L V6 twin-turbo from the GT-R we’ll see a 5.0L V8 from the Infiniti FX50 SUV making some 420-hp. 0 to 60 mph is expected in under 5 seconds with a top speed of 170 mph. The Infiniti sedan is expected to arrive in 2011 but we’ll believe it when we see it http://www.egmcartech.com/2008/10/24/infiniti-to-take-on-porsches-panamera-with-- 4-door-gt-r/ |
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...all of this "which is faster, who's lying, who's not" is a nice exercise in doesn't really matter. I'm back from visiting my brother this past weekend and we both had the opportunity to drive a fully broken in "stock" GT-R at the track he has privaledges at. The car is fast. Very fast even. But the difference in how the car drove the 15 miles to and from the track, and even the subjective "feel" of the car around the tarack at 85% or less, along with other factors, meant that I wouldn't pay $50k for one - any sooner than I would have paid $50k for a Corvette ZR1 or Viper. Short of my own brother, I'm not sure I know of anyone that, regardless of the academic debate, could drive either a GTR, 911TT or GT2 at their respective limits and live to tell about it. And, for the record, that includes me - in spite of several high performance driving courses and several track day competition wins to my credit. So, unless you fall into that top 1% of the top 1% of the top 1% of drivers, you would be wasting your money to buy one car over the other on the basis of a couple of seconds at Nurburgring. As we were heading back home, we got behind a Ferrari 612 for several miles of winding roads. $300k. Slower on a track than either a GTR or GT2/3. Yet, chances are at least 50/50 that 10 Ferraris in your garage woould be worth more than all of Nissan Corporation will be worth in 5-10 years if they don't merge or partner with another company. The GTR is to Ferrari/Porsche today what the Pontiac GTO was to Ferrari/Porsche 40 years ago. That's not being critical - the GT-R was damn impressive to drive. But it's not competition for 99% of the wallets out there.
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