Skip to content
Refpropos.

Refpropos.

  • Home
  • Automobile
  • HVAC
  • Supercar
  • Volvo
  • Entrepreneur
  • Toggle search form
R35 Nissan GT-R: Mission accomplished

R35 Nissan GT-R: Mission accomplished

Posted on August 31, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on R35 Nissan GT-R: Mission accomplished

Nissan was taking a massive risk.

The Skyline GT-R had earned its place in performance car legend with its giant-killing tech after the arrival of the 1989 R32 which, for many Australians, was their first taste of the devastating capability of the almighty GT-R – so much so that our media coined the term ‘Godzilla’ – a moniker that still sticks decades later. 

But the fifth-generation R35 GT-R was different.

The 2001 Tokyo motor show concept revealed it was to be purpose-built coupe – not a two-door based on a four-door sedan, but a sports car built from the ground up, even if skeptics thought it would have more in common with the 350Z of the time, whose lineage goes back to the Datsun brand’s successful attempt to crack the US sports car market with the S30-series 240Z (called the Fairlady Z in Japan) in 1969.

It would be unlike the legendary Skyline GT-R which had its roots in the original PCG10 2000 GT-R of 1969; ahead of its 2007 unveiling, fans knew it would have a four-wheel drive system amid a web of electric and mechanical wizardry comprising not one but two driveshafts and a rear transaxle, making it a quite portly 1800kg – 200kg more than the heaviest V-Spec R34 GT-R. 

CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal.

As well as being heavier, the R35’s dimensions of 4655/1985/1370mm meant it was wider, longer, taller and sat on a longer wheelbase (2780mm) than any GT-R before it. 

There wasn’t going to be a turbocharged straight-six either, but a new twin-turbo V6 under the bonnet. Nor would there be a manual gearbox, and it wasn’t even going to be called a Skyline.

Had Nissan simply gone too far? Did Nissan have the right – nay, the stupidity – to put those famous three letters, which to that point had been feared by both street and track rivals, on something completely different?

Yes, the R35 was going to be something else altogether. And it truly was something else.