Find a decent stretch of touge, a Group A-inspired R32 Nissan Skyline GT-R, and don’t forget the camera batteries. It’s a standard formula guaranteed to appease the Instagram algorithm. Just remember the batteries…
I’d probably forget my head if it wasn’t screwed on, most of the time. But this time, I was prepared. The four-hour drive from Kanagawa to Mie to meet Masayuki Kani and his family cast enough weight to ensure I triple-checked my camera bag.
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As I stopped halfway for coffee, cakes, and a quick yoga stretch to unbind my lower vertebrae, my inbox pinged with a message from Masayuki-san. “It’s snowing at our shoot location. Only a millimetre, so it should be fine.” Just a flurry, then. Nothing as troublesome as the roadworks blocking the Honda Civic specialist tuning shop I had originally booked to feature…
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However, by the time I met Masayuki-san at the service station, which had cars lined up down the street waiting to fill up, the flurry had turned into a full-blown snowstorm. It felt like this might be my last shoot before the world ended. Better make it a good one…
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Masayuki-san’s wife, Erika, had come along for the drive, as did their two young sons, five and three, their little faces pressed against the rear windows to get a better look at the strange foreigner snapping photos of their dad’s car.
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This Skyline is a family affair in more ways than one. You see, Masayuki-san was once the kid in the back seat. His father drove an R32 and R34, so to little Masayuki-san, he must have seemed like JTCC legend Masahiro Hasemi.
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From 1998 to 2003, father and son would make pilgrimages to Fuji Speedway, Suzuka, and Okayama to watch GT-Rs dominate the JGTC competition. Of course, by then, the R33 Skyline GT-R was on the grid, its predecessor having retired in ’95. But Masayuki-san’s father had witnessed the R32’s consecutive wins from ’90 to ’93, well before his son could even say ‘901 Movement.’
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If there was ever a real-life example of ‘win on Sunday, sell on Monday,’ this one for the Nismo marketing department would’ve brought a tear to Nissan’s 901 Movement project leader Yutaka Kume’s eye.
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In 1998, Masayuki-san’s father gifted him his HCR32, and soon after, a BNR32 appeared in the driveway. An R34 followed, but when a family crisis forced its sale, both father and son were heartbroken. The loss of his father’s cars was ultimately the catalyst for Masayuki-san to purchase his own R32.
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In 2020, Masayuki-san’s father sadly passed away, leaving Masayuki with a deep regret – he never got the chance to buy back the R34. In a way, it feels like Masayuki-san’s car has become a tangible connection to his late father, and the joy of driving such an iconic machine is something which can be passed down from generation to generation.
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The BNR34 may be ‘peak GT-R’ for many, but the R32 Skyline GT-R will forever be known as the Japanese monster that conquered Group A touring car racing.
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Masayuki-san’s R32 pays homage to the Group A Skylines of the late ’80s and early ’90s with an RB26DETT fully built with an N1 24U block and a REINIK RB-X GT2 engine kit featuring a forged crankshaft, connecting rods, pistons, and a metal head gasket. It’s the same 2.8L setup Nissan Koki developed for the Group A machines.
Unlike Jun-san’s Group A-inspired GT-R that I featured a while back, Masayuki-san has stayed true to the competition cars by keeping the twin-turbo setup intact, with a priceless cast aluminium REINIK intake being one of the engine bay highlights.
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The engine was built by Hitoshi Maeda at J.ing Techno Engineering. Maeda-san worked as a Group A rally mechanic and collaborated with REINIK to develop a prototype V12 engine for F1 in the mid-’90s, so Masayuki-san couldn’t have found a better person for the job outside of REINIK itself. That company, now trading as REIMAX, will still build you an engine, for the price of a small planet.
An M600 from MoTeC, a brand that has long been synonymous with Group A race cars, gives the firing orders. With 660ps and 69kg/m, the engine’s power and torque numbers are comparable with Group A GT-Rs too. That output is transferred through the stock BNR32 5-speed transmission via an ORC twin-plate clutch and through to Cusco LSDs front and rear.
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Driving through a snowstorm wasn’t exactly what I had planned for this shoot; I had hoped we could take the car on some twisty mountain passes and let the horses run wild. A gallop to pay respect to circuits like Bathurst and Suzuka, where the Skyline GT-R became a motorsport icon.
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But in a way, I’m glad the snow fell on Mie that day. It slowed time to a heartbeat, and the beautiful silence was broken only by the roar of a side-piped Group A homage.
Toby Thyer
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tobythyer.co.uk