Sunday, May 27, 2007
















































Skyline Supremacy - Nissan Skyline GT-R


709 Wheel HP--Daily Driven, As Only The GT-R Can
Spawned from years of video game exposure, swapped underground videos and a handful of imported specimens, the legacy of the Nissan Skyline GT-R is stronger than ever. With the last whispers of the R34 barely passing from our lips and the 2008 GT-R looming on the horizon, this is the age of the Skyline. This is especially interesting when you consider that the car has never been mass-produced in the United States and has ceased production overseas. To put it simply, an entire legion of American youth bows down to a car that they have never touched, driven, sat in, spat on, keyed or raced against. This begs the question to be asked--is the Nissan Skyline GT-R stronger as a car, or stronger as a legend?



Spurred by an immense catalog of aftermarket turbocharger upgrades, suspension parts, exhausts, body kits, brake upgrades, intercoolers and engine hard parts, the tunability of a GT-R means you could build yourself a supercar limited only by your imagination. Want a 1,000hp drag car, a torque-laden road racer or one of the most aggressive street cars ever? The Skyline GT-R can deliver. It's this penchant for upgrades that makes the Skyline so appealing to today's customized youth market.



When Wen Lai began searching for a fun car to build a few years ago, he kind of already knew that a GT-R would live in his garage. As the former Sales Manager for A'PEXi, Lai knew the potent capability of the GT-R and it's RB26DETT twin-turbo engine. During the late 1990s, A'PEXi built and campaigned a 1,100hp drag car known as the V-MAX GTR, which was a rear-wheel-drive, tire smoking, fire-breathing beast. Driven by the now-ubiquitous Eiji "Tarzan" Yamada, the V-MAX would go on to break numerous records in the quarter mile at Palmdale, Calif., circa 1999. Fitted with a flurry of A'PEXi parts, designed and fabricated in-house, the V-MAX was a lesson for all A'PEXi employees in the brutal nature of Nissan's "R" badge.



Just around the same time, the-now-defunct MotoRex Inc. began the long, arduous process of Skyline certification for importation purposes. In swaying the NHTSA and DOT's favor and approval, MotoRex had to crash a few GT-R's as well as sift through a mountainside of paperwork. Believe us, if you think it sounds bad, you'd be crying if you saw the aftermath photos of a couple crash-tested Skylines. But the end result was sweeter than some could imagine--fully street-legal Skyline GT-R's. Once the Skylines began pouring off the U.S. docks, everything began to fall into place for Lai. The skies parted, the heavens aligned, and Lai found himself the owner of a U.S.-legal R33 Nissan Skyline GT-R.



Produced from 1995-1998, the R33 chassis-coded Nissan Skyline GT-R was a technological marvel. Packed with a twin-turbocharged inline-six engine capable of pushing quad-digit horsepower numbers, the R33 also brought the ATTESA-ETS all-wheel-drive system and Super HICAS four-wheel steering. Unfortunately, for serious performance drivers, those options meant extra weight. A beefy cast-iron engine block, all-wheel drivetrain, and snaking turbocharger actuator system means that the R33 GT-R weighs more than the short bus to fat kid camp. Nothing that a little bit of 21st century technology can't fix though.




NISSAN SKYLINE




ALL WHEEL DRIVE AND STEERING ENGINE; 2.6 LITRE TWIN TURBO HORSEPOWER; 505@6000 RPM TORQUE; 444 FT LBS@ 5500 RPM TRANSMISSION; 6 SPEED MANUAL 0 TO 60 IN 4.1SECONDS ¼ MILE IN 12.1 SECONDS TOP SPEED 180 MPH COLOR; HOUSE OF KOLOR, PLATINUM PEARL BODY KIT; C-WEST TIRES & WHEELS; 19” TOYO TIRES & HRE 446 POLISHED WHEELS AUDIO & VIDEO; CLARION RADIO AND TV JBL AMP INFINITY SPEAKERSPROPRIETARIO: BrianANNO: 2002

1 comment:

rrjexpert said...

I've had mine for 4500 miles now with no problems. Love the car and the performance. The mileage is lower than that stated on the EPA window sticker. But I am getting around 33 MPG with mostly highway driving. Wish it was a bit better Nissan turn signal. One thing I've learned is that using the cruise control gives poorer mileage, so I have stopped using ti to squeeze more miles from a gallon. Not at all sorry for buying it.