Nissan Z 2023 News
The Nissan Z Nismo is sold out!
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By Andrew Chesterton · 10 Aug 2023
If you were biding your time to put an order in for a Nissan Z NISMO, you're already too late, with the brand's halo performance car selling out online in less than an hour.
Nissan Z Nismo pricing confirmed
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By Chris Thompson · 07 Aug 2023
Nissan has confirmed its Nissan Z Nismo will be available to order in Australia later this week, with pricing skyrocketing above the standard version by almost $20,000.
Nissan reveals new Z Nismo
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By Tung Nguyen · 01 Aug 2023
Nissan’s hardcore Nismo-tuned Z will hit Australian showrooms next year with more power, torque, handling prowess and aggressive styling, but will be paired exclusively to a nine-speed automatic transmission.
List of the last manuals!
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By Laura Berry · 26 Mar 2023
Manual gearboxes are being killed off by the soulless, unromantic savages who want a car with an automatic transmission. Which is nearly everybody. So, the car manufacturers are making hardly any manual cars now. But for the few beacons of hope trying to save this rare animal from extinction we’ve made a list of new cars still with manuals that are for sale in Australia. But for how much longer?
Nissan: why it will be a powerhouse once more
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By Byron Mathioudakis · 18 Feb 2023
Here are two facts. For over 60 years Nissan has been on a rollercoaster. And for the remaining six years of this decade, Nissan is set to be on a roll. Not that you’d know it with the Japanese brand’s long-term shrinking market share and – until late last year – a worthy but dull and dated core model range.
Why Nissan will have an SUV comeback
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By Stephen Ottley · 29 Jan 2023
There’s no nice way to say it - 2022 was a bad year for Nissan. The once-popular brand took a slide in the sales race, dropping more than 35 per cent of its total volume and plummeting from seventh in overall sales in 2021 to just 12th in ‘22. But there is good reason for Nissan executives to hope for a turnaround in ‘23, thanks to an almost entirely re-freshed line-up filling its showrooms.
New split-grille design for Nissan Z lovers!
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By James Cleary · 20 Jan 2023
Some love it, some not so much. Either way, the Nissan Z’s simple, rectangular grille opening is a clear tip-of-the-hat to the original 240Z that continues to influence this now iconic sports car line more than half a century after its ground-breaking 1969 launch.
Nissan Z Nismo coming in 2023
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By Chris Thompson · 27 Sep 2022
The 2022 Nissan Z has only just touched down in Australia but reports from Japan say we can expect to see the hotter Nismo version as early as next year.According to Japanese outlet Best Car, the Nissan Z Nismo will take its design cues from the Z Customi
Sports cars keeping the manual gearbox alive
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By Stephen Ottley · 10 Sep 2022
Hiroshi Tamura took an unconventional approach to ensuring the manual transmission remained a part of the new Nissan Z - tricking his bosses. When Mr Tamura, the product planning tsar behind Z and GT-R, was presenting the sales split details for the automatic compared to manual across the 370Z range, he had a slide featuring a very large ‘40/60’ in the centre of the screen. This shocked Nissan’s senior management and they realised that they couldn’t risk alienating 40 per cent of their customers.The thing was, Tamura had included a very small disclaimer in the bottom right-hand corner of the slide that indicated this sales split was specific to the 370Z Nismo high-performance model.It wasn’t that he lied, he simply presented the facts in a manner that suited his needs - and the needs of those who still love manual sports cars.In an era when dual-clutch transmissions and improved torque-converter automatics have become the only choice for so many performance cars (neither Ferrari or Lamborghini offer a manual vehicle anymore), the three-pedal layout is an endangered species.But it’s a species that’s in demand in the right circles, such as Nissan Z buyers. Pre-orders for the car are running at approximately 70 per cent in favour of the manual - with no tiny disclaimer either. Even though Nissan admits over the life of the vehicle it’s likely to drop to 40 per cent, Mr Tamura is a passionate advocate for the manual gearbox and the role it plays in making driving more exciting for purists.It’s a view shared by Travis Maher, Nissan Australia Senior Product Manager, who told CarsGuide: “The new Z had to have a manual option to live up to its heritage and to provide our customers with a transmission option that matches their driving style.”But here are some of the other sports cars fighting the good fight for fans of the three-pedal transmission.The German brand is a big believer that its dual-clutch ‘PDK’ is a superior transmission and is the more popular choice for its customers. However, it continues to offer the manual transmission, albeit in limited variants in its iconic sports car, with only the 911 GTS and GT3 currently available in Australia. Despite this limited use each car uses a separate manual gearbox, the 911 GTS has a seven-speed unit, while the 911 GT3 runs through a six-speed version.The Japanese brand learnt the hard way that there is still a passion and sizeable audience for the manual transmission. The revived Supra was originally only available with an eight-speed automatic (like its twin-under-the-skin BMW Z4) but with buyers - particularly those in the US - wanting a manual Toyota has developed and will shortly introduce a new six-speed ‘box to meet “the demand of driving purists”.While Toyota may have hesitated with its more expensive sports car, it never had a second-thought about keeping the manual in the second-generation 86. Along with its Subaru twin, the BRZ, the GR86 is offered with a six-speed manual to ensure it’s both more affordable and has the appeal driving enthusiasts demand from it.The Blue Oval hasn’t revealed any official technical details of the upcoming new-generation Mustang, but it’s a 99.9 per cent certainty that it will continue to offer a three-pedal transmission.The American audience loves the manual (there’s still an element of derision about automatic sports cars in the US), so Australian enthusiasts get to benefit.The outgoing Mustang is available with a six-speed manual alongside a very nice 10-speed automatic.Mazda may have dropped the 1.5-litre engine, but it has kept the six-speed manual. In fact, it added a new entry-level 2.0-litre manual model for $37,790 (plus on-road costs) to keep the MX-5 under $40k.This combination means the MX-5 stays true to its roots, as a driver focused roadster that harks back to 1960s British convertibles which always put driving enjoyment first.
Toyota’s manual Supra priced
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By Tung Nguyen · 08 Sep 2022
Toyota has finally let loose pricing for the much-anticipated manual Supra, but buyers hoping to save a few dollars on the three-pedal sports car will be disappointed.And that's because the manual Supra isn't any cheaper than its automatic counterpart.Ava