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370Zsteve 01-03-2010 07:06 AM

GT-R Hybrid
 
http://blogs.insideline.com/straight...mb-717x477.jpg

Nissan Archives - Straightline

There has been no end to the rumors of what the Nissan GT-R will become next, but the most credible rumor circulating in Japan right now is that a Nissan GT-R Hybrid is in development. The hybrid Godzilla would be part of the R36 generation of the GT-R. Sources close to the project tell us would likely debut in 2012 as a 2013 model with a pricetag around $100K.
The drivetrain for the 2013 Nissan GT-R Hybrid is expected to be a version of the hybrid system in the upcoming Nissan M35 Hybrid, but with a dramatic power increase and an all-wheel-drive layout. However, instead of a normally aspirated V6, the GT-R Hybrid would use a twin-turbocharged V6 just as the R35-derived Infiniti Essence concept did. It would be the same twin-turbo 3.8-liter V6 (VR38DETT) the GT-R uses today.
The target would be 440 horsepower for the hybrid application (versus 485 on today's GT-R), with an additional 160 hp coming from the electric motor -- the same one used on the Essence.
With 600 hp to go around, the hybrid GT-R would be just as quick as today's production GT-R, sources tell us. We also hear, though, that serious weight will need to be cut out of the car to offset the addition of the battery pack. And even with that dieting, the GT-R Hybrid is still expected to be heavier than today's car (3,800 pounds).
Fuel economy, though, is expected to be 25-30 mpg, which of course is the very point of building a Nissan GT-R Hybrid. If achievable in the real world, Nissan would have a convenient rebuttal to pundits who argue that supercars (and more generally, fun cars) will lose their relevance in the coming green era. -- Mak Tokuyama, reporting from Japan

JB-370z 01-03-2010 02:22 PM

Nice. But 100k for a nissan, dont think I would spend my 100k on a nissan if I have choice.

kannibul 01-03-2010 03:37 PM

Do not want.

In addition, I think (predict) the hybrid performance car concept will die before that hits the market.

Either they'll go all electric or a diesel-electric hybrid like trains.

1slow370 01-03-2010 06:06 PM

i have always thought a mid-rear gas engine with twin electronically differentiated and variable electric motors up front would be neat so long as they would have computer systems that would allow the rear engine to be easily modified without having to wait for integrated aftermarket controls and hash cracking. ability to go full electric, full rear wheel, or hybrid with precise front grip control isn't a bad thought. B?ut if it is a caryover of the m-hybrid the hell is the point?


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