Nissan 370Z Forum

Nissan 370Z Forum (http://www.the370z.com/)
-   Nissan 370Z General Discussions (http://www.the370z.com/nissan-370z-general-discussions/)
-   -   Motor Trend: Arthur St. Antoine's 2nd take on the Z34 (http://www.the370z.com/nissan-370z-general-discussions/442-motor-trend-arthur-st-antoines-2nd-take-z34.html)

cstr_Cali 11-26-2008 06:04 PM

Motor Trend: Arthur St. Antoine's 2nd take on the Z34
 
http://image.motortrend.com/f/editor...issan-370z.jpg
Quote:

My Take On the 2009 Nissan 370Z
Posted Today 02:45 PM by Arthur St. Antoine



Drove the new Z home the other night, then took a morning spin across Mulholland Drive. My take? I like it. The car rubs me the right way. It’s not perfect, but Nissan has nicely sharpened-up its famous sports two-door -- and greatly enhanced its flight deck.


By now most of you have undoubtedly read fellow MT’er Ron Kiino’s first test. At the track, the new Nissan blazed through our performance trials: 0 to 60 mph in 4.7 seconds, the quarter in 13.3 at 105.7 mph, maximum lateral grip a face-distorting 0.99 g. So, yes, the numbers are there.

What the stats don’t reveal, though, is how the Z has moved upscale. The new cockpit is gorgeous, with rich-looking soft-touch materials and mostly astute ergonomics. Nissan’s navigation system (optional) is one of the best on the market, both intuitive to set up and easy to interpret. The seats are terrific, proffering deep bolsters and trimmed in a grippy, good-looking cloth (leather is available). Big thumbs-up to Nissan’s designers for getting the seat controls right, too: fore-aft and seatback recline are power-controlled, while seat-cushion angles are manually configurable via two large, well-placed rotary knobs. As before, the primary gauges move up or down with the steering wheel (though the wheel doesn’t telescope), ensuring that the dials are always easily visible.
2009 Nissan 370Z cockpit

I noted only a couple of minor interior quibbles. The temp and fuel-quantity displays on the left of the dash are a row of orange LEDs that wash out in bright sunlight (you have to use the shadow of your hand to read them). And as far as I can tell, if you want to connect the available iPod interface cord in the center console, you can’t re-insert the plastic cupholder tray that normally fits there. Nor is there any convenient place to stow the tray when it’s removed. Apparently, you cannot enjoy your iPod and a chai soy latte, too (actually, is that ever possible?).

My dash across Mulholland confirmed the Z’s massive grip levels and revealed its excellent steering feel. I also got to play with the car’s innovative "SynchroRev Match" feature, which blips the throttle automatically whenever you move the gear lever for a downshift. If you’re accustomed to doing your own heel-and-toe downshifting, as I am, it takes a moment or two to break yourself of the habit of moving your right foot while braking for a manual throttle blip. Instead, just keep your foot firmly on the brakes and let SynchroRev Match make you look like Lewis Hamilton. The system works remarkably well, though if you insist on being a shifting purist you can simply turn it off.
2009 Nissan 370Z

The updated VQ six pulls really hard to its 7500-rpm redline, though there’s enough torque on tap (270 pound-feet) to keep the boil on even at lower revs. Yet Nissan still has some work to do on engine refinement; at higher revs, the exhaust gets coarse and you will feel some tingles through the pedals and wheel. Colleague Angus MacKenzie describes the Z’s NVH as “just awful,” but I wouldn’t go that far. True, this is no syrupy BMW six under the hood, but I didn’t mind the engine rasp when gunning hard. Adds a little raw flavor to the driving experience. And at cruise the Z is fine.

I’m impressed by the Z’s solidity. The structure hangs tough in hard corners and remains composed over rough roads. And while the rear tires were clearly fighting to stay planted in every corner -- I could see the traction/stability dash warning firing away -- the electronics didn’t intrude. And I was driving the Touring model. With Sport Package, the Z undoubtedly feels even edgier.


At a base sticker of $30,625 and an as-tested price of about $34K, the Z returns a whole lot of curvaceousness and kick for the dollar. It’ll be a strong player in a class including the new Camaro, Mustang, and Solstice Coupe -- can you say “comparo test?”

Stay tuned. And have a great Thanksgiving.
http://image.motortrend.com/f/editor...issan-370z.jpg

ctzn 11-26-2008 06:45 PM

Nice read, a comparison should be interesting between the mentioned cars.

Sounds like all the rawness of the Z that we all love is still there but with a splash of civility.

cstr_Cali 11-26-2008 06:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ctzn (Post 3501)
Nice read, a comparison should be interesting between the mentioned cars.

Yeh, and we can shut those overly political Camaro guys up!:ughdance:

Joker57676 11-27-2008 06:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cstr_Cali (Post 3502)
Yeh, and we can shut those overly political Camaro guys up!:ughdance:

As good of an idea as that sounds, it would never happen. I think some of the die hard Camaro people hate the Z more than the Mustang simply because it's built in Japan.

Mark

tyghtt05 11-27-2008 04:06 PM

What's up guys I'm new here. Im up in the air right now when it comes to the Z and the 'Maro. I love the new Z cuz it's just gorgeous all the way around in my opinion but I just don't like the orange/red illumination. I feel the same about the 'Maro but I kno the Z gonna handle better. I love the Z cuz you get the best of both worlds IMO. You get the power and the handling.

cstr_Cali 11-27-2008 04:09 PM

Go for the Z. You get to keep your manhood and get great fuel economy at the same time. The Camaro? Not so much; you're stuck with either the sure-to-be gas hog SS or the girly/girly-mans V6 (even if it has 300hp it looks chick and it weighs a ton). The 370Z is the quintessential 21st century affordable but ultra sexy high performance sports-car.

o0javi0o 11-27-2008 07:05 PM

cant wait to do a test drive.

molamann 09-06-2009 03:02 PM

Î÷åíü óâàæàþ åãî ìàìó, ïîýòîìó íè î êàêîé ìèëèöèè ðå÷ü íå èä¸ò indeed!

JoeD 09-06-2009 03:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cstr_Cali (Post 3634)
Go for the Z. You get to keep your manhood and get great fuel economy at the same time. The Camaro? Not so much; you're stuck with either the sure-to-be gas hog SS or the girly/girly-mans V6 (even if it has 300hp it looks chick and it weighs a ton). The 370Z is the quintessential 21st century affordable but ultra sexy high performance sports-car.

The SS gets about 25 MPG on the highway...certainly not bad and just shy of the Z by a tick.

I'm indifferent on the Camaro...it's a neat car, but that's about it. Performance-wise, it has the 370Z beat hands down in straight-line acceleration or on a road-course. However, it's not a sports-car, which the Z is in the purest sense. It's a 3900 lb. cruiser with a great engine and not much else in terms of dynamics.

370Z_Fan 09-06-2009 05:11 PM

Actually the SS gets 24 MPG on the highway as per EPA ratings. That's not "just shy of the Z by a tick."

spearfish25 09-06-2009 05:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JoeD (Post 187864)
The SS gets about 25 MPG on the highway...certainly not bad and just shy of the Z by a tick.

I'm indifferent on the Camaro...it's a neat car, but that's about it. Performance-wise, it has the 370Z beat hands down in straight-line acceleration or on a road-course. However, it's not a sports-car, which the Z is in the purest sense. It's a 3900 lb. cruiser with a great engine and not much else in terms of dynamics.

The camaro will barely take the Z in a straight line. It certainly wouldn't beat the Z in any road course/track situation.

JoeD 09-07-2009 06:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 370Z_Fan (Post 187904)
Actually the SS gets 24 MPG on the highway as per EPA ratings. That's not "just shy of the Z by a tick."

Wow, please excuse me...I missed the rating by a whole 1 MPG. :rolleyes:

In fact, after a quick check, it appears as the SS equipped with the auto gets an EPA-estimated 25 MPG highway. Compared to the 370Z's 26, I'd say it's close enough not to warrant a comment.

Quote:

Originally Posted by spearfish25 (Post 187912)
The camaro will barely take the Z in a straight line. It certainly wouldn't beat the Z in any road course/track situation.

High-12s @ 110+ MPH is barely faster than a Z? SSs have at least 4 MPH advantage over the Z and are 4.5-seconds quicker from 0-140 MPH. That's significant. Also, as per a recent Motor Trend test on Laguna Seca, the SS circled the track a whole 0.8-seconds quicker than the Nismo 370Z with a professional driver behind the wheel. Mind you, Laguna is not even considered a high-speed track, so the Camaro's straight-line advantage hardly comes into play.

Hate to magazine-race, but please don't be in denial.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:14 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2