Not to have another stab at the best “production, street-legal” Nordschleife lap time. That’s not why they are trading the chilly Eifel for balmy Yokohama. Allegedly, Nissan does not want to work on the 7:24:22 lap time.
Instead, says GT-R program director Kazutaka Mizuno:
“We want to try something new this year. Just as important as performance improvement is, we must be confident about the reliability and durability of the car. This is the reason we chose to enter the 24 Hours Nürburgring: to perform harsher endurance tests for future performance improvements.”
That’s not the really new part. The truly new part is that the GT-R won’t be piloted by professional Nismo racers, but exclusively by members of the GT-R engineering team. Let’s see how that works out.
Here is some intentional (or not) intrigue: The GT-R’s best Nordschleife time stands at 7:24:22. However, Mizuno-san says in the video:
“From the 2007 model’s lap time of 7 minutes 38 seconds, this car achieves one lap of the Nordschleife in around 7 minutes 20 seconds.”
Something better than 7:20 would bring the GT-R back into the game. I’m sure the new Viper will be back. Possibly, Lexus could want to celebrate the 500th and last LF-A with something better than 7:14. And while everybody is at the Ring anyway …

Overhyped sales failure. Kill it with fire!
By that logic, the Camry and the F150 are the best vehicles sold in the US.
You see a lot of these sitting on dealers lots, do you?
Well, this was an insightful bit criticism…
touchy touchy. Hey they sold about 150 in the US last month. What do you call that.
Google, with all its young, male stockoptioneers; and a corporate obsession with unmanned vehicles; needs to build a Ring Robot that beats even the fastest humans around that darned track.
Then, open source the code, and let the automakers really have at it.
While probably not an easy task, at least the ‘Ring is an environment lot more predictable than public roads.
Just thought I’d say that.
This is the best idea yet. If BMW can have their cars drive Laguna Seca, imagine putting the GTR around the ‘Ring. Huzzah!
Brilliant idea! I recall chess champion Kasparov vs IBM’s Deep Blue, and humans vs IBM’s Watson on Jeopardy. How about Schumacher — or name your favorite driver — versus the Google Ring Robot?
Ring times are getting absurdly fast that it’s becoming hard to relate to. But a Google Ring Robot will generate a lot of human interest.