is there already a Nissan R35 Skyline GT-R?

  • Thread starter Thread starter takumi64
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15-R35GTR.jpg

is there already a Nissan R35 Skyline GT-R?
 
Thats a photoshoped R34.. its not the real concept for GT-R. It will be AWD around 400 +hp just to let you know will come out in 2007
 
R35 skyline = Infinity G35 sport coupe

GTR= not made and wont be out untill 2007 and will be completley redesigned with nissan stating that it will be 400 HP.
 
Originally posted by takumi64
is it an FR or an FF?

Neither. It's one wheel drive and the engine is placed on the roof.

LFR (Left Front wheel drive, Roof engined)

Actually, it's definitely not FF. All the Skylines have had either rear- or all-wheel drive in the past I believe. So front-wheel drive is out of the question.
 
Originally posted by skylineGTR_guy
R35 skyline = Infinity G35 sport coupe

GTR= not made and wont be out untill 2007 and will be completley redesigned with nissan stating that it will be 400 HP.

Correction: [V35] Nissan Skyline 350GT = [V35] Infiniti G35
 
Originally posted by skylineGTR_guy
skylines are 100% RWD untill wheels start slipping then it can go up to a 50-50 split

i thought it was rwd until rear wheels slip, then it's a 65-35..cause since the rear wheels are slippin, they can't get much traction, and so then the front wheels have to take over to gain back the loss of traction..50-50 would be too little for the front and too much for the rear..makin it just keep on slipping
 
Originally posted by slvr2000fdvspec
i thought it was rwd until rear wheels slip, then it's a 65-35..cause since the rear wheels are slippin, they can't get much traction, and so then the front wheels have to take over to gain back the loss of traction..50-50 would be too little for the front and too much for the rear..makin it just keep on slipping

nope I have the manual right here, it says any combination up to a 50-50 split.

Since the rear wheels are receiving less power and the front ones are engaged, the combination of both events is enough to regain traction. Since those things happend in less than a second the wheels never really slip unless your running huge amounts of HP or crapy tires. the ATESSA monitors each wheel 100 times a second meaning that the wheel only loses traction for the couple of hundreths of a second it takes to engage the front wheels.
 
Originally posted by skylineGTR_guy
nope I have the manual right here, it says any combination up to a 50-50 split.

Since the rear wheels are receiving less power and the front ones are engaged, the combination of both events is enough to regain traction. Since those things happend in less than a second the wheels never really slip unless your running huge amounts of HP or crapy tires. the ATESSA monitors each wheel 100 times a second meaning that the wheel only loses traction for the couple of hundreths of a second it takes to engage the front wheels.

hrm..really? oh well..50-50 sounds pretty decent to me..and yeah, i knew that the computer monitors traction control a lot of times in a second.
 
From what ive heard about the ATESSA AWD system, it actively checks tire traciton around 100 times a second, and it adjusts it accordingly, think ill read up on it some more....
 
you guys realize that expecting a car 4 years from not isn't promising. But hey I'm sure Nissan will make some form of the car.
 
Attesa:

A 16-bit microprocessor monitors wheel rotation as well as lateral and longitudinal acceleration 100 times a second. On detecting rear wheelspin and taking into account current driving conditions, it instantly instructs a wet multiplate clutch to direct more torque to the front wheels, regaining traction in a fraction of a second and letting the driver maintain control. The system comes into its own during hard cornering or in slippery conditions, when the front/rear torque split is adjusted to anything between 0:100 to 50:50. An active LSD on the rear axle further aids traction by calculating the optimum torque split between the left and right rear wheels, altering it to anything between diff. locked and free state.
 
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