Mr. Mac
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
I'm confused. Ever since Nissan introduced the NISMO version of new Z I've repeatedly read/heard numerous times that the two reasons they didn't offer it in a manual are....
1) Nissan didn't want their most state-of-the-art flagship Z to have slower numbers than what it's capable of, particularly in comparison to Sport/Performance variants, and it's competition (Supra, etc.). >>> OK, I somewhat understand that, especially from a marketing perspective, even though I personally think that decision is a bit foolish given they're forfeiting sales of the NISMO to those who would only buy it as an MT.
and...
2) Nissan's current manual transmission in the Zs can't safely handle the increased torque/power of the NISMO. >>> This I'm not understanding since I've seen plenty of non-NISMO Zs built with aftermarket performance mods that are certainly producing way more torque/power (presumably reliably) than that of a stock NISMO, which are only modest increases from factory over Sport/Performance Zs to begin with (350tq/400hp vs 384tq/420hp).
What am I missing here? Are all the people stating reason #2 confused as well, misled, or straight-up lying? I'm not wanting this to turn into another raging AT vs MT opinion debate thread (I personally dig them both equally for different reasons), rather just hoping those who are more knowledgable about this particular subject can help shed some objective light on what's not making any apparent sense for the reasons mentioned.
PS: Here's just few examples of numerous I've heard/read that are causing the confusion.
"the Zās nine-speed automatic transmission has been beefed up for NISMO duty" ā Hiroshi Tamura, chief product specialist of the Nissan Z and GT-R
"Sure, it may not have a manual gearbox, but let's not forget that the decision was made to ensure the car could handle the increased power and torque while meeting quality and reliability standards." ā Wheel Circuit
Video starting at 3:49 mark...
1) Nissan didn't want their most state-of-the-art flagship Z to have slower numbers than what it's capable of, particularly in comparison to Sport/Performance variants, and it's competition (Supra, etc.). >>> OK, I somewhat understand that, especially from a marketing perspective, even though I personally think that decision is a bit foolish given they're forfeiting sales of the NISMO to those who would only buy it as an MT.
and...
2) Nissan's current manual transmission in the Zs can't safely handle the increased torque/power of the NISMO. >>> This I'm not understanding since I've seen plenty of non-NISMO Zs built with aftermarket performance mods that are certainly producing way more torque/power (presumably reliably) than that of a stock NISMO, which are only modest increases from factory over Sport/Performance Zs to begin with (350tq/400hp vs 384tq/420hp).
What am I missing here? Are all the people stating reason #2 confused as well, misled, or straight-up lying? I'm not wanting this to turn into another raging AT vs MT opinion debate thread (I personally dig them both equally for different reasons), rather just hoping those who are more knowledgable about this particular subject can help shed some objective light on what's not making any apparent sense for the reasons mentioned.
PS: Here's just few examples of numerous I've heard/read that are causing the confusion.
"the Zās nine-speed automatic transmission has been beefed up for NISMO duty" ā Hiroshi Tamura, chief product specialist of the Nissan Z and GT-R
"Sure, it may not have a manual gearbox, but let's not forget that the decision was made to ensure the car could handle the increased power and torque while meeting quality and reliability standards." ā Wheel Circuit
Video starting at 3:49 mark...
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