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Originally Posted by m4a1mustang
The GT-R is one of those cars that makes you ask, "how?" Yes they are big, yes they are heavy, but hot damn somehow they figured out how to bend the laws of physics. It's an impressive car, and it's VERY beastly when modded. AAM has a street driven GT-R that's going to make a run at a 9 second quarter mile in the next couple of weeks.
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I fail to see how that is somehow special? Most supercars run 10's stock, or have at least 1 recorded 10-second pass somewhere on the books. Sounds like any number of local imports around here.
Anyway, the reason I would never own a GT-R is the sluggish auto, the weight, and the fact that I want to drive the car--even if the computer can do it better.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cmike2780
So basically you want the 458 Italia performace with a Nissan badge for $30k? Sign me up!
If you compare the performance of the 370 against exotics from say a few decades ago, they do match or exceed them. You will have to wait a while before the Z catches up to 458 levels however. It the end, drive what makes you happy. If you only plan on going real fast in a straight line, going with American muscle is probably better suited.
On a separate note, I can't believe people still downplay how well the GT-R performs. To get the 370Z to GT-R levels will push your budget beyond what it cost to purchase a GT-R.
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So you are saying the 370Z is equal to a 458 in all but engine? I think we have gone too far now...