'Godzilla' has never been a dainty creature, but the newly angular nose and tail and fresh Y-spoke 20in Rays alloys bring yet more aggression to its brutish form. Slip inside, though, and you'll see a new layer of luxury has smothered the functional but ordinary, button-heavy cabin of the outgoing model. There's lots of decent-quality Nappa leather, and with the help of a new rotary dial behind the gear shifter, the infotainment button count has been slashed from 27 to 11. The dial usefully supplements the new touchscreen (an inch larger at 8.0in), although navigating the menus can be slow and unintuitive, while the sat-nav graphics are a bit basic and hesitant.
Our top-spec 'Prestige' test car is differentiated from the cheaper Pure (£79,995) and Recaro (£81,995) trims by upholstery alone. Its reprofiled front seats are soft-surfaced, comfy, supportive and electrically adjustable to your heart's content, while the steering wheel’s manual reach and rake manipulation is effective, if fiddly. The shift paddles are now helpfully attached to the steering wheel, instead of to the column.
A new neighbourly function claims to hush start-up exhaust clamour by 10dB, although we struggled to notice. Hard to miss, however, are the GT-R's newly improved and very welcome low-speed manners. There's still a little gear-gnashing and differential fizz when manoeuvring, but less than there once was, and throttle modulation and upshift smoothness among the bottom two of the dual-clutch automatic transmission's six ratios are no longer sore points. The steering is usefully lighter in town, too, albeit subject to a little stiction.
Likewise, motorway miles are now very bearable – you might even say comfortable. Improved sound deadening complements the noise-cancelling speaker tech introduced on the 2014 model, with road noise only an issue on coarse surfaces, and the drone that remains at about 2500rpm in sixth at 70mph is negligible.
But all this sophistication is for nought if the GT-R doesn't still distort your grasp of time and space, and when allowed to stretch its legs on the road, this 2017 model delivers such mania in spades. We've never decried the GT-R's power band, but the introduction of more boost pressure and the GT-R Nismo's ignition timing system have increased both the magnitude and spread of grunt. The 2017 model offers a relentless surge that fills the space between 2500rpm and the 7000rpm limiter like poured concrete in a mobster's boots. In kickdown, momentary lag is swiftly and smoothly assimilated, and full-bore upshifts are too quick for the powertrain to flinch. Despite 'good' engine and exhaust noise now being amplified through the speakers, the soundtrack doesn't quite match the acceleration, but it's at once silky and forceful.
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GT-R
Jaybond wrote:
I think there is still a skyline in Japan, I have seen grey imports of what appears to be a four seat 350/370z/re-badged infinity with skyline written on the back.
Horrible looking thing. I'd
It just shows how thoroughly