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Nissan 350Z: a poor man?s Porsche

  • By Bruce McMahon
  • The Courier-Mail
image At $73,990 for the six-speed manual, this 350Z is a sports machine of some substance and value.

Bruce McMahon discovers it is possible to have champagne driving in a beer priced car.

Nissan's 350Z roadster is the Porsche for those who can't afford a Porsche.

The Japanese two-seater may not match a Boxster at the top end of driving dynamics.

Any Porsche has a certain amount of breeding, a continuous sports car heritage hard to ignore. A Porsche, belted hard, retains an amazing amount of mechanical finesse from engine response to road balance.

And, as with most German road machines, a Porsche has a certain amount of polished fit and finish. The Nissan Roadster, a little more raw in essence, is a very decent and desirable substitute for quite a few dollars less.

At $73,990 for the six-speed manual, this is a sports machine of some substance and value.

From the start, Nissan's 350Z Roadster looks the part, a rare soft-top machine that manages to look mean, menacing even, with roof in place. Both 21st century coupe and roadster Zeds have grace and muscle to body style, the soft-top's lower roofline adds further character to the low-slung stance.

Yet snug down in a decent driver's seat this low roof and narrow rear window do not hamper good visibility in most directions. (Anyway, with the agility and performance of this Nissan Roadster there is little need to keep too much of a weather eye on rear view mirrors.)

The cabin is comfortable, just enough room for two adults with electric adjustments on both seats, a couple of cubby holes and the usual array of comfort and convenience features.

These include the push-to-drop button for the roof, decent stereo system that pounds the bass notes into your back and a neat set of three binnacle dials for oil, battery and digital read-out for road speed. This last is of some use for the 350Z's tachometer dominates the instruments ahead of the driver, there's a smaller speedometer off to the right, a little hard to read quickly. Speeds do need to be monitored around here.

From the get-go the 350Z does not feel super, super fast, there is the hint of muscle but 1.5 tonne of car to get away. Maximum torque doesn't arrive until 4800rpm and maximum power until 6800rpm, which may help explain the Roadster's road speed becoming more linear as it rises.

But as road speeds rise, as the driver flicks up though those six manual ratios and that V6 spins into its stride, things began to pass by at a fair clip. It is a grand machine to hustle along.

The 350Z Roadster may not run through its paces with quite the finesse of the aforementioned Boxster, there is a little gruffness to the mechanicals at the high end of the revs, but it does the job with joy and accomplishment. (The coupe is a shade lighter which may help start-line jumps.)

These 2007 model Zeds score a reworked V6 with almost 80 per cent new bits, from dual intake system to a wider range for the variable valve timing, bigger crank journals plus a little more compression.

The VQ35HR weighs in the same as before but the centre of gravity is down a bit and the Nissan's bonnets now have a power bulge to better fit the powerplant. Power is up from 221kW to 230kW, torque lifts from 353Nm to 358Nm and maximum engine speed has increased by 500rpm to 7500rpm.

So there is plenty to work with here as the Roadster crouches, sprints and bellows down the bitumen.

The car feels rock solid, rides better than the first generation of this latest line of Zeds, turns in with feeling and hunkers down.

Here and there on this Track version the stability control system (yes, it's switchable) kicked in to correct some over exuberance but (on a dry road at least) it takes a bit for the Roadster to lose its manners.

Track versions also score four-piston calliper Brembo brakes for extra confidence.

It is a car for belting down the bitumen, top up or down, with sweet responses to steering wheel and throttle inputs. It remains eager and involves a driver, rewards driver input with excellent point-to-point times across the back country.

Conversely, this Roadster can be an easy shopping trolley (although two cartons of XXXX will fill the boot) and, apart from scraping low over some obnoxious speed humps, is easy to potter and park.

And, whether out for a tour or out for a shop, the Nissan 350Z Roadster always looks right; those 18-inch wheels filling those flared guards, that simple crouch and that uncomplicated rear style. It always looks right, it always looks like it's ready to do the business.

But a week with this car is long enough. It began to cost too many Lotto tickets, looking for those extra elusive dollars to add a 350Z to the garage.


Snapshot

Nissan 350Z Roadster Track

Price: $73,990

Body: Two-seat convertible

Engine: 3 litre V6

Power: 230KW @ 6800rpm

Torque: 358NM @ 4800rpm

Transmission: Six-speed manual

Dimensions (MM): 4315 (l), 1815 (w) 1323 (h)

 

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 8 comments

  • Enjoyed the article…just got my 2008 Fair Lady Roadster and man this car comes with some serious horns…still getting used to her and am tempted to look at the 370z,but that could result in a divorce which would be way to expensive lol

    Crazy c of South Africa Posted on 19 July 2010 7:07pm
  • Excellent write up. I’ve been a 300ZX TT owner for 2 years and recently put down a deposit on the MY07 350Z Track Roadster. Simply can’t wait to take possession. Being compared to more expensive cars is NOT new to the Zed line though. The 300ZX was called the poor mans Ferrari/Lambo. 20 years on, it still is.

    Chris of Perth Posted on 07 April 2010 6:52pm
  • The 350Z Track is an amazing car. Once I have the $$, I’ll be out looking for one… Interesting note, though: The predecessor to the 350Z (Z33) is the 300ZX (Z32)... The old (1989 - 1998) 300ZX is actually quicker than the 350Z (assuming you have the factory Twin Turbo model).

    Tristan of Victoria Posted on 31 March 2010 12:54pm
  • I have a 2008 Track, black on black and love it, I’m not really digging this label of being the poor man’s Porsche, for 63-73k (in this day and age is still a lot for most) sure it’s cheaper than a Boxter but the label is like saying a 911 is a poor man’s Lambo… or a Lambo is a poor man’s Veyron.

    Jerry D of Brisbane Posted on 23 September 2008 3:19pm
  • A poor man’s Porsche? As usual, critics are just good at that. They could not do (or find) another job. The biggest force in the Universe is ignorance. So I ignore that stupid sentence. What is in a Porsche? You think driving a Porsche feels you above the world? For your info, in many European countries, driving a Porsche is not a sign of wealth but a sign of greedy person, worse, someone who screws the system. The Boxter? Yes, that is a poor’s man Porsche. Not the Nissan. The Nissan is a sport car for a category of person who wants not to be affiliated with the Porsche, Ferrari and other “flashy-tax evaders” owners… Leave the Porsches for the racecourse. Not the streets. I will buy a 350Z for all these reasons and japanese cars are now more reliable than german cars. The german era of reliable cars are gone. I had Audis, VW and BMWs, I am switching to japanese cars.

    Charles Martel of Sydney Posted on 03 June 2008 12:49pm
  • poor man’s porsche. i like that. from the rear 1/4 view it resembles a porsche (911) too.
    i got a 2003 touring, manual with 66 thousand k’s on the clock for 40 grand give or take. having some probs tho. had the driver’s side window winder mechanism replaced (under warranty) as it dropped halfway down occasionally. brakes though, tend to grip all of a sudden rather than progressively slow to a stop. irritating and the service manager at camberwell nissan said he doesnt know what it is or how to fix it. any ideas? also my windscreen fogs up in the rain. i have to put the aircom on!
    any other owners out there know of an owner’s club or online forum?
    many thanks
      dave

    david presta of melbourne Posted on 21 February 2008 5:14pm
  • Ahem….its a 3.5 litre V6, not a 3 litre. i think i get a carton of hoegaarden for that.

    Pelican of Perth Posted on 16 January 2008 11:24pm
  • Poor man’s Porsche? I beg to differ.
    Late last year, I test drove the boxter (standard) and the 350Z roadster manual track on a sunny Sydney day. I do agree the porsche feels more ‘polished fit and finish’, if not faster, only just, than the 350Z, in the city traffic on Cleveland Street. However, once i drove both cars on the highway, that’s when the 350Z comes alive, fast, focused and very comfortable. The Z also feels stronger and better build than the boxter from the outside. The interior of the boxer do look more retro than the 350Z, as I discover later in the show room, the contemporary interior look was due to an optional $9K DVD sat nav system installed in the demo car. I am not a big fan of the Z’s interior, it’s a dark place with silver surrounds, but it’s functional, and very driver focused. I was shocked to discover a tape cassette player (that’s right, a tape) BOSE sound system inside the Z, as a member of Generation Y, the only tape cassette I could found is MC Hammer’s Feel My Power, and a mix tape I made back in high school, Although the BOSE stereo system sounds great (CD only, since the MC hammer tape was damaged by my dog, a little house training related issue), and the 6 CD player works fine.
    Another interesting incident during my half-hour test drive in the boxter, as I have received a dirty look (not in the nice way) from a lady drive besides me at the red light, and another Light skin young man in a commodore referred me a ‘wanker’ when he spoke to his mate sitting next to him. I guess that’s what you might get this days when a young person (25) driving a Porsche. oh, a tip for the fellow corporate guys… Porsche is not a good career move, as it might suggest you got paid too much.
    Anyway, I purchased the 350Z roadster manual track on that sunny afternoon, and loving it ever since. I have replaced the stereo with an in-dash, single din slide out DVD unit with Ipod and OEM steering control unit (so you can still use the steering control which cost me $1200 inc. Installation. Oh ye, potential buyer and test drivers please be prepare to be shocked when the sales person hand over the Nissan keys, as its design and functionality are completely opposite to the sexy retro image of the Z car.

    Jonno_au of Sydney Posted on 07 January 2008 10:44pm
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