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Sorry but a stock GTR can't have 460 whp ....me its stock ( exhaust and Apexi power intake ) with a tuning on the dyno at 12 psi and I got 340 Whp ! ( and its very good ) 460 WHP its the power I will have with my new turbo and new injector at 18-20 psi of boost ...
Sorry but a stock GTR can't have 460 whp ....me its stock ( exhaust and Apexi power intake ) with a tuning on the dyno at 12 psi and I got 340 Whp ! ( and its very good ) 460 WHP its the power I will have with my new turbo and new injector at 18-20 psi of boost ...
Ummm, this would be the new GTR, as the forum topic would indicate ^^^.
but on topic, thats cool, its nice to see them under-rating their cars. Its funny when so many manufacturers like to fudge numbers, Nissan still has class.
In Japan and many other countries, cars with over 500 hp automatically go into a much higher tax bracket, and have significantly higher insurance in any country. 500hp seems to be where the current line is for "a wicked excess of power", whereas given the weight of vehicles today, anything under that number could still be considered "reasonable".
Is that the 550hp 2012+ R35 GTR or earlier model with less hp???
The turbo's, intercooler size were slightly bigger on each model (R32, R32, R34).
From memory they were (stock) -
R32 GTR 310hp at engine
R33 GTR 320hp at engine
R34 GTR 330hp at engine (there's a dynochart floating around the internet somewhere showing this difference).
R34 GTR stock turbo's were closer to N1 spec turbo's and noticed some big hp gains with correct size exhaust, breathing mods to suit (magazine article). One I know of produced around 460hp at engine with stock turbo's, boost up mods. With boost up mods, R32 GTR stock RB26 is capable of 430ps at engine (can get more hp with drop in cams, adjustable camgears, N1 turbo's, etc, which is what I noticed some tuners do in Japan).
They found a 13hp difference (magazine test in Japan) from highest to lowest (usually due to internal wastegates being at slightly different psi, etc) when 10 or so cars were tested back to back on same dyno.
Also N1 GTR was the same (seen some dyno charts of R33 N1, R34 N1 engines, showing the hp differences with basic breathing mods, ECU tune, etc).
R33 N1 engine 440ps
R34 N1 engine 455ps
R32 N1 GTR was around 400ps, which like said above, is easily achievable with stock turbo's, boost up mods. As far as I know, it was the only GTR to win the Nurburgring 24 hour race in it's class.
Also had the Group-A turbo's, but only fitted to Nismo spec R32 GTR (rare), Group-A models.
Some of these old threads are priceless.....so many names that had only a few posts........
Turbo cars are VERY hard to keep consistant from area to area and car to car. So many things can throw the readings off.....some high, some low.
Although.....I totally think that the cars are being sandbagged from the factory (I think alot of "high performance" cars nowadays are). I have a feeling this all stems from the rediculously embarrasing situation that Ford was in back in the late '90s with the 4 cam Cobra Mustangs that were, lets just say, underwhelmingly powerfull for the $20k premium over a stock Mustang.....to the tune of a good 25hp LESS than advertized (tested at a whopping 15hp more than a stock 2 cam). They wore ALOT of egg on their face over that and EVERY other manufacturer (here and overseas) saw that.
Jon.
Why don't you come over to MySpace and Twitter my Yahoo untill I Google all over your Facebook.
1990 GTR Drag Special T88H34D 11.24 @ 127.55mph at only 1.2bar...... officially. SOLD
I'm not sure where you found this info, but it is completely untrue. Japan has no HP limit for tax or insurance whatsoever.
The agreement in Japan to not produce cars developing over 280hp however is true.
In terms of taxation, shaken (vehicle inspection) costs and annual vehicle tax are based on engine size. A 2.6L GT-R would have cheaper taxation than, for example, a 3.5L Murano.
In Japan and many other countries, cars with over 500 hp automatically go into a much higher tax bracket, and have significantly higher insurance in any country. 500hp seems to be where the current line is for "a wicked excess of power", whereas given the weighti of vehicles today, anything under that number could still be considered "reasonable".
The agreement in Japan to not produce cars developing over 280hp however is true.
It was abandonned in 2005 (originally from 1989). The point was to avoid an horsepower war amongs Japanese manufacturers in a country where the speed limit is 100km/h.
Ha!! Priceless indeed. Most speed limits on the freeways are 80km/h in japan. A few are 90km/h in really open rural areas but that is not the norm. Not to say that anyone actually goes that slow, on the Tomei FRWY if you dont do 140km/h in the fast lane ...your ass is gonna get plowed into. The limit is more of a guideline....
Jon.
Why don't you come over to MySpace and Twitter my Yahoo untill I Google all over your Facebook.
1990 GTR Drag Special T88H34D 11.24 @ 127.55mph at only 1.2bar...... officially. SOLD
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