Labels

ABOUT CARS (1) ACURA (4) Alfa Romeo (1) ASTON MARTIN (9) AUDI (10) BENTLEY (4) BMW (12) BUGATTI (4) CHEVROLET (7) CHRYSLER (7) CITROEN (2) DODGE (11) FERRARI (10) FORD (10) HONDA (11) HUMMER (4) HYUNDAI (6) INFINITI (6) JAGUAR (10) KOENIGSEGG (7) LAMBORGHINI (10) LEXUS (9) LOTUS (12) MASERATI (14) MAZDA (8) McLAREN (5) MERCEDES (11) MITSUBISHI (8) NISSAN (13) PAGANI (4) PORSCHE (9) ROLLS ROYCE (2) SAAB (6) SALEEN (11) SCION (5) VAUXHALL (8) VOLKSWAGEN (12)

Tuesday, 25 October 2011

NISSAN 350Z


All you need to know about this new Nissan 350Z is that when it comes to its price-and-performance quotient, it is a re-creation of the segment-busting Datsun 240Z that set the sports-car world on its ear in 1970.


When that original Z-car appeared, sports-car aficionados basically had two choices. On the one hand, they could spend less than $4000 and choose from an assortment of Fiats, MGs, Opels, Triumphs, and the Porsche 914/4, all of which had about 100 horsepower and not enough performance to keep up with a Chevy Impala that didn't know it was racing. On the other hand, if they wanted serious speed, they had to spend well over $5000 for a Corvette, Jaguar E-type, or Porsche 911. The 240Z, which came with a 150-hp, 2.4-liter in-line six and a price of $3601, neatly split the difference and established a new category all its own.



Fast forward to today. For $21,800 you can get a 142-hp Mazda Miata. For a couple more grand, there's the similarly powerful Toyota MR2. But if you want serious grunt — over 250 horsepower these days — in a true sports car, you have to step up to the $42,420 Corvette.


The new Nissan 350Z completely fractures this horsepower hierarchy. With a base price of $26,809, the resurrected Z-car costs barely 10 percent more than a Mister Two, yet it has more than double that little Toyota's power. In fact, the 350Z's total of 287 horsepower is only a few ponies shy of what is offered in a Porsche 911 that costs two and half times as much as the Nissan.


Even the top-of-the-line Track model tested here — with its front and rear spoilers (eliminating front and rear lift and cutting the drag coefficient from 0.30 to 0.29), Rays Engineering forged-aluminum 18-inch wheels (saving a total of almost 18 pounds of unsprung weight), Brembo brakes, viscous limited-slip differential, aluminum pedals, and raft of nonperformance upgrades — goes for only $34,619, $7810 more than a base Z.


This remarkable bargain is possible because the Z employs mass-produced components from Nissan's parts bins. The Z's V-6, for example, is the ubiquitous 3.5-liter, 24-valve, quad-cam unit that sees duty in everything from the Altima to the Infiniti QX4 sport-utility. For use in the Z-car, Nissan engineers have retuned this engine with slightly hotter camshafts and freer-flowing intake and exhaust systems. The resulting 287 horsepower at 6200 rpm is about 10 percent more than the Infiniti G35 engine musters.


This engine resides in the nose of a version of Nissan's FM platform that was recently introduced in the G35. The designation "FM" stands for "front mid-engine" and means that the engine sits fully behind the center line of the front wheels, providing decent weight distribution. For use with the Z-car, this platform has had about eight inches chopped out of its wheelbase, which at 104.3 inches is still on the long side, about the same as a Corvette's.


As you'd expect from a brand-new design, the FM chassis employs a sophisticated independent suspension with multilink geometry front and rear. Except for the rear diagonal links, all the suspension components, including the rubber-isolated rear subframe, are made of forged aluminum. The FM platform also includes rack-and-pinion steering, anti-lock brakes, and on this Track model, electronic stability control incorporating a welcome "off" switch. Compared with the G35 application of this chassis, the ride height is set lower for the Z, with more negative camber all around.

No comments:

Post a Comment