We asked enthusiasts, employees and journalists
about the best times behind the wheel of the R35
The introduction of the R35 GT-R stunned the world with its
staggering performance, cutting-edge design and value in the
supercar class. And while production of the current-generation GT-R
(also known as R35) will soon end for the U.S. market, it will
continue to generate thrilling stories.
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The introduction of the R35 GT-R stunned
the world with its staggering performance, cutting-edge design and
value in the supercar class. And while production of the
current-generation GT-R (also known as R35) will soon end for the
U.S. market, it will continue to generate thrilling stories. The
nameplate earned countless new fans as it was sold in North America
for the first time. After making its debut at the 2007 Tokyo Motor
Show, U.S. sales began in 2008 for the 2009 model year. (Photo:
Business Wire)
The nameplate earned countless new fans as it was sold in North
America for the first time. After making its debut at the 2007
Tokyo Motor Show, U.S. sales began in 2008 for the 2009 model
year.
The R35 has received consistent praise for its performance on
and off the track, and the has been a benchmark for testing other
high-performance vehicles.
“The Nissan's bite is every bit as angry as its visual bark,”
Autoblog noted in its initial review. The R35 continued to receive
accolades over the years, with Hagerty writing in February 2024:
“Then and now, the GT-R is a guided missile, a point-and-shoot car
that works very hard to make you look good.”
Nissan asked the people who know the car best – enthusiasts,
automotive journalists and Nissan employees – to share their
favorite memories of the R35. Read on for their stories:
Michael Harley, former automotive journalist,
Autoblog
Flashback to the summer of 2008, when Nissan drops a brand-new
“Solid Red” 2009 GT-R in my driveway for a long weekend. I was a
contributing editor for Autoblog back then, tasked to cover the new
Nissan, and the R35 was the hottest supercar on the market — it
turned heads everywhere I drove. “We've never piloted another car,
not even a bright-red Ferrari, that mesmerized as many sets of
eyes. Scores of adults and teenagers waved and gave us thumbs-up
while the smallest of children pointed in awe. Far from sleek and
sexy, the angular GT-R evokes a Transformer-like aura that
transcends ages,” I wrote. It made me an instant celebrity.
In an era when most sports cars struggled to break the
five-second sprint to 60 mph, the performance was equally
mind-boggling. I recall my canyon drive, mesmerized by the grip
from the ATTESA ET-S all-wheel-drive system and the rawness of the
innovative dual-clutch gearbox. The R35 was brutally powerful and a
beast when flogged hard in the canyons. “Nissan engineers have
successfully delivered a nauseatingly fast vehicle that devours
acceleration and track records. Its handling belies its weight, and
its cabin is deceptively comfortable… the incessant feedback the
GT-R offered to us was robot-like mechanized perfection.” When it
arrived, the R35 set a new benchmark for supercars.
John Davis, journalist, MotorWeek
The first time I ever drove the R35 GT-R at speed was at
Roebling Road Raceway in Savannah, Georgia. It was a beast that
made you smile from ear to ear. It was not an overly homogenized
piece of engineering. It was a vehicle that was designed to go very
fast and hold the track for a very long time at very high speeds,
and bring you to a stop just as securely. And the R35 made all of
these wonderful mechanical noises while it did it. And if you ask
anybody that’s ever driven the car – or any high-performance cars
at speed – GT-R has to stand out as one of the most
all-encompassing experiences of driving that you could possibly
have and not be in a pure racecar. Indeed, at the time, it was the
closest thing that I’d ever experienced in a production street
machine to what you feel in a racecar.
Jonathan Buhler, manager, Nissan Corporate Planning
Jonathan Buhler is a Nissan employee and GT-R enthusiast. He
previously led external communications for the brand’s sports cars
and sedans. Buhler owns an R34 GT-R.
My favorite memory behind the wheel of an R35 GT-R was taking
our pre-production right-hand-drive (Japan spec) model from the
Nissan Heritage Collection in Nashville, Tennessee, to Fontana
Village, North Carolina to support the ZDayZ enthusiast event in
2016. To get to the event, you have to drive on the legendary “Tail
of the Dragon,” which is Highway 129 in between Tennessee and North
Carolina. It has 318 turns in 11 miles and is regarded as one of
the best driving roads in the U.S. Experiencing the turns and
following other GT-R vehicles was amazing yet stressful, but will
go down as the best driving memory in an R35.
Sean Lee, GT-R owner Sean Lee is the founder of the
Purist Group, an organization for automotive enthusiasts. He has
owned several GT-Rs and Skylines, including an R31 wagon, R32, R34
and R35.
Three simple letters – GT-R – have enormous meaning in the
automotive world.
Throughout my life, I have owned several variations of the GT-R
and Skyline, from the R31 and R32 all the way up to my 2010 R35.
Every time I buy a car, I want to see how the automaker honors its
heritage, so I am very glad to know that Nissan continues to do so
through racing.
The R35’s engine is one of the most robust powertrains to ever
come out of Japan. I often see tuned variations boasting more than
2,000 horsepower.
I currently have about 35,000 miles on my R35, which are mostly
canyon and track miles. I have had the honor to meet a few
extraordinary people within the GT-R development team. They have
taught me many things about my R35 that I will treasure for the
rest of my life.
The R35 isn’t just a car – it’s an icon that will live on the
road forever. I have owned nearly every brand of car out there, but
nothing makes me more proud than calling myself a Nissan GT-R
owner.
Frank Markus, journalist, MotorTrend
I vividly remember the awe and incredulity my fellow judges
experienced while evaluating the R35 GT-R before crowning it
MotorTrend’s 2009 Car of the Year. The fact that its performance
shamed supercars costing three times as much prompted the test team
to put our investigative-reporter hats on and determine exactly how
this two-ton V6 four-seater was generating such incredible
numbers.
We strapped it to a dyno and even did an on-road fourth-gear
“dyno pull,” all of which suggested the power and torque
specifications were largely accurate. The magic was a combination
of savvy launch control plus all-wheel traction, assisted by
extra-short gearing, and twin-clutch transmission shifts that never
interrupted the torque delivery. These tricks allow the R35 to
crush the supercars down at the speeds mere mortals drive every
day.
Matt Hardigree, journalist, The Autopian
I debuted in the automotive world in 2007, right around the same
time as the Nissan GT-R, though the R35 did it to far more fanfare
and acclaim. It's almost impossible to convey in words how much the
R35 dominated the attention of car fans back in the early blog era.
It wasn’t a car, it was the car. If we were having a slow news day,
we always knew that publishing anything with a GT-R in it was a
guaranteed hit.
How could it not be? The GT-R had concept car looks, stats to
rival the best supercars of the day and was initially offered at a
surprisingly achievable price. In spite of writing about it from
the beginning, I didn’t get a chance to put real miles on one until
years later. Somehow, after years of hype, the R35 Nissan GT-R
managed to exceed my impossibly lofty expectations.
Brian Moody, journalist, Cox Automotive, Autotrader, Kelly
Blue Book
One of my fondest memories of the R35 was from a few years ago.
I was driving a white one on an interchange near the 710 freeway in
Los Angeles. It was a Saturday morning, and I was stuck in
bumper-to-bumper traffic. However, the freeway transitioned into
another highway, and I could tell the direction I was headed was
clear. So, I waited patiently.
As I crawled along in the GT-R, a carload of kids -- barely
driving age -- pulled up next to me and were yelling and pumping
their fist. I put my window down. “Light ‘em up,” one kid said.
“Rev it!!” several others were chanting. This was a borrowed car,
so I was trying to baby it a little. “I can’t, it’s not mine,” I
replied. Several kids booed. One guy gave me the thumbs down. Then,
one kid yells, “C’mon mister, this might be our only chance to see
and hear car like this in action. You owe it to us!” They were
joking but also really wanted to hear the GT-R’s angry exhaust. I
remember being impressed by the level of enthusiasm these kids had
for this car. Just then, I could see that all the other cars were
exiting to the right while I was going straight – all that traffic
was headed in the same direction, but not me.
As soon as the car ahead of me slowly veered to the right, I
stomped the accelerator. Both windows were down now, I could hear
the hand-built, twin-turbo V6 revving wildly, massive rear tires
griping the hard interstate surface. By the time I clicked into
third gear, I glanced in the rearview mirror and all I could see
was that old ‘90s Cavalier full of kids cheering and waving and
pumping their fists in the air. What else could I do? I owed it to
them.
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Media Contact Eric Ruble Sr. Specialist, Technology &
Safety Communications Eric.Ruble@nissan-usa.com