GT-R lap times exposed?
I wonder how the air and track conditions varied between the day Nissan made their 7:29 run and the day Porsche made theirs. Maybe Porsche did it on a relatively warm but cloudy day (warm air, cool track), and Nissan did theirs on a cold but sunny day (cold air, warm track)?
I've read a lot of your posts, and I don't think that at all.
Do I tend to defend the GT-R - yes but I don't do so blindly.
If you've read the thread then you already know what I've said about Nissan if they've lied or cheated on their 'ring testing.
Yet there are posters on this board who have made it very clear that they hate Nissan and/or anything Asian and wouldn't believe Nissan's claimed time if God himself (or herself) had been in charge of the testing and authenticated the results.
I suspect I'm probably the only one on this board (or at least in this thread) who has had an opportunity to know at least a little of what the GT-R is capable of on the track...I also suspect that there probably aren't more than a hand full on CZ28.com who will ever own either a new GT-R or ZR1 or 911 Turbo or any other vehicle of similar price range/performance capabilities but hundreds who will post with undying certainty about how much better this or that vehicel is than the GT-R.
I've never claimed to be unbiased but I do at least try to be even-handed.
If you've read the thread then you already know what I've said about Nissan if they've lied or cheated on their 'ring testing.
Yet there are posters on this board who have made it very clear that they hate Nissan and/or anything Asian and wouldn't believe Nissan's claimed time if God himself (or herself) had been in charge of the testing and authenticated the results.
I suspect I'm probably the only one on this board (or at least in this thread) who has had an opportunity to know at least a little of what the GT-R is capable of on the track...I also suspect that there probably aren't more than a hand full on CZ28.com who will ever own either a new GT-R or ZR1 or 911 Turbo or any other vehicle of similar price range/performance capabilities but hundreds who will post with undying certainty about how much better this or that vehicel is than the GT-R.
I've never claimed to be unbiased but I do at least try to be even-handed.
I suppose this is the reason why they run racing "seasons" rather than deciding everything on just one race...how many times have you or I taken our vehicle to a Solo2 event and even with everything set up the "same" and on the same course, had vastly better or worse days than "normal"?
Now, a 5% difference in times for professional drivers in what is nominally the same car points to a large difference in experience at that given track (the 'ring isn't one of these "go-kart" tracks that gives up all its secrets in a couple hundred laps), or pretty big set-up differences between the cars, or outright "cheating" by one of the participants.
I suspect all of the above elements are involved in this little squabble.
I think the only way to solve this issue would be for the OEMs to provide a driver, and have an independant source provide a truly showroom-stock example of each vehicle. Suspension adjustments within the factory limits will be allowed, just so long as the specifications for those adjustments are made public. No one touches the ECU.
Will this change anyone's mind...almost certainly not...anyone who wants to bash the GT-R (for whatever their reason) is not going to believe or care what Nissan has to say about the issue; a closed mind will always be closed.
That said, if somebody accused me of doing something “wrong”, I’d be hiding from the public if I actually did it and screaming my innocence from the rooftops if I hadn’t.
So, I seriously doubt Nissan would make such a public declaration to the press that they achieved their claimed lap times with a production vehicle on production/street tires as are sold on the car if it were not true – it would be far, far better to simply “shut up” as the potential devastation to Nissan in general and the GT-R in particular, were they ever proven to be lying, would be tremendous (one only need remember a semen-stained blue dress and a wagging finger about not having had sex to understand the “down-side”).
That said, if somebody accused me of doing something “wrong”, I’d be hiding from the public if I actually did it and screaming my innocence from the rooftops if I hadn’t.
So, I seriously doubt Nissan would make such a public declaration to the press that they achieved their claimed lap times with a production vehicle on production/street tires as are sold on the car if it were not true – it would be far, far better to simply “shut up” as the potential devastation to Nissan in general and the GT-R in particular, were they ever proven to be lying, would be tremendous (one only need remember a semen-stained blue dress and a wagging finger about not having had sex to understand the “down-side”).
Yes, I think that, on a 14-mile track, that could absolutely make up 25 seconds. As I said before, it's only 0.34 seconds per corner. Driving the car in a manner other than the optimal one could make that difference.
I wonder how the air and track conditions varied between the day Nissan made their 7:29 run and the day Porsche made theirs. Maybe Porsche did it on a relatively warm but cloudy day (warm air, cool track), and Nissan did theirs on a cold but sunny day (cold air, warm track)?
I wonder how the air and track conditions varied between the day Nissan made their 7:29 run and the day Porsche made theirs. Maybe Porsche did it on a relatively warm but cloudy day (warm air, cool track), and Nissan did theirs on a cold but sunny day (cold air, warm track)?
Additionally, I highly doubt Porsche would make such a public and pointed claim if they weren't COMPLETELY CONVINCED the car could not go 25 seconds faster with just better driving because that could backfire on them miserably, tarnishing their reputation and leaving them with egg on their face.
Now, a 5% difference in times for professional drivers in what is nominally the same car points to a large difference in experience at that given track (the 'ring isn't one of these "go-kart" tracks that gives up all its secrets in a couple hundred laps), or pretty big set-up differences between the cars, or outright "cheating" by one of the participants.
I suspect all of the above elements are involved in this little squabble.
I suspect all of the above elements are involved in this little squabble.
Thus, we are left with nothing but car setup, tires, power, etc. Hence, Nissan's at it again.
Hey Robert, go read up on the R33.....
Exactly, and the edge in experience/knowledge of the Ring has to go to the senior Porsche chassis engineer. For the sake of argument, we will say that the edge in pure driving ability/talent goes to the Nissan F1 driver and we will say the two balance each other out.
Thus, we are left with nothing but car setup, tires, power, etc. Hence, Nissan's at it again.
Hey Robert, go read up on the R33.....
Thus, we are left with nothing but car setup, tires, power, etc. Hence, Nissan's at it again.
Hey Robert, go read up on the R33.....

As I said, if God himself certified Nissan's results it wouldn't make any difference to many people here.
You all have a nice day!
I thought the GTR had a pseudo-automatic with fancy-schmancy launch control...
How does one grenade a tranny like that with a car that has that many electronic babysitters?
I can see how you could grenade a clutch in a Z06 or ZR1... beat up some syncros maybe... but what we were looking at there in that Nissan tranny was gear failure, not clutch/syncro failure.
How does one grenade a tranny like that with a car that has that many electronic babysitters?
I can see how you could grenade a clutch in a Z06 or ZR1... beat up some syncros maybe... but what we were looking at there in that Nissan tranny was gear failure, not clutch/syncro failure.
I thought the GTR had a pseudo-automatic with fancy-schmancy launch control...
How does one grenade a tranny like that with a car that has that many electronic babysitters?
I can see how you could grenade a clutch in a Z06 or ZR1... beat up some syncros maybe... but what we were looking at there in that Nissan tranny was gear failure, not clutch/syncro failure.
How does one grenade a tranny like that with a car that has that many electronic babysitters?
I can see how you could grenade a clutch in a Z06 or ZR1... beat up some syncros maybe... but what we were looking at there in that Nissan tranny was gear failure, not clutch/syncro failure.
While there is no proof, but how many people on this board have stock, as they came off the showroom floor, cars? There could have been tweaks to the ECU, removing the "limiters", and then you are jolting the transmission with a full power start. Again, I said there is no proof of the car being modified, but you never know. 

Took a couple of years to crack the LS1 if I remember correctly.
How long did it take to crack the iPhone? You get the right person in front of the issue, and it will look easy. I also don't rembember if it is in the post, or not, but who owned the car with the grenaded transmission? Was it a customer's car, or was this a test mule from Nissan? It could be one of those magazine test cars, like you would find a camaro with only 2K miles, but that probably equated to 8K quarter mile passes 



