Nissan GT-R: Front-Side View

Per­haps one of the most inter­est­ing rumors of the year has been MT’s rev­e­la­tions that high level Nis­san honcho’s are con­sid­er­ing pro­duc­ing a four door ver­sion of the Nis­san R35 GT-R.The car would appar­ently carry the orig­i­nal equip­ment on the stan­dard GT-​​R, the 480-​​HP V6 VR38DETT, FSG-​​style 6-​​speed auto clutch gear­box, and AWD. How­ever, con­sid­er­able revi­sions to the car body struc­ture in order to fit any decent seats in the rear would mean the car would be con­sid­er­ably more expen­sive, and of course, heav­ier than it’s already heavy brother.

What does this do to the GT-​​R name­sake? Does it dilute the sports coupe into another high pow­ered fam­ily car? It all depends on how much of a purist you are, and how good your knowl­edge of the GT-​​R is. The first GT-​​R — the 1969 PGC10 (later the KPGC10 coupe) Sky­line GT-​​R (known as the “Hako­suka”) — was orig­i­nally a four door car, not to men­tion the Autech and Nismo lim­ited edi­tion 4 door R33 Sky­line GT-R’s of the 90’s.

That said, the GT-​​R is so named to dis­tance itself from the old Sky­line moniker. As Nissan’s pre­mier flag­ship model, per­haps the 4door is bet­ter suited to Nissan’s pre­mium Infiniti brand.

Bring on the Infiniti M38TT. Yeah, we just made that up.

[Source: Motortrend]