What's happening at Nissan and News and Rumours!


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What's happening at Nissan and News and Rumours!
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"Electric GT-R, is that you? Meet the 1,341bhp Nissan ‘Hyper Force Concept’

If it looks like a GT-R and terrifies like a GT-R, is it... well, it's actually called the Nissan Hyper Force, a radical high performance electric supercar that caps off Nissan’s run of concepts for the Japan Mobility Show.

Concept, yes, but all the hallmarks of a future electrified Godzilla are present and correct, including a bombastic power output and bleeding-edge tech. The HF Concept features a solid-state battery – they’re finally here! (ish) – producing up to 1,000kW of power, which equates to 1,341bhp in old money.

Nothing old about the way it's delivered, of course. That herculean output is harnessed by ‘e-4ORCE’ all-wheel-drive tech, packaged up inside a lightweight, angular body that not only pays homage to the current GT-R - boxy silhouette, quad tail-lights, anger - but features high-strength carbon and a lot of aerodynamic performance, the latter developed in collaboration with Nismo.

As such, there’s a “two-tiered” structure under the bonnet, and a rear diffuser optimised for airflow. There’s active aero around the car - the front winglets and both ends of the rear wing move - while an excellently named ‘plasma actuator’ is said to “suppress air detachment”. Hate it when that happens.

Lightweight forged carbon wheels are said to bolster the aero performance as well as cool the brakes. Of course the current GT-R’s ability has always been to mask the sheer level of tech unfolding beneath you to provide a raw ability of blasting around a track, and this HF Concept promises no less. Nissan said it allows for “precise and rapid acceleration” - somewhat underselling it a tad, what with 1,341bhp - along with “enhanced cornering and exceptional handling on circuits and winding roads”.

Heck, even the drive modes spell out GT-R. ‘GT’ – grand touring – gives the car a more ‘comfortable’ drive and combines the steering wheel screens into one for a simpler interface, illuminating the cabin in a soothing blue. ‘R’ mode – racing, of course – bathes the cabin in a red light, and along with amping everything up, provides much more driver information that's “invaluable for racing”. Things like tyre pressures, brake temps, power distribution and so on. Seats are lightweight carbon fibre items with four-point harnesses, naturally.

There’s advanced self-driving on board via a suite of sensors and ‘hyper LIDAR’, and because it’s a concept from the future, you can play racing games (cough, Gran Turismo, cough) when stopped via augmented reality and a VR headset. Oh, all the screen graphics – as per old GT-Rs – were done by Polyphony.

“With its eco-friendliness, electrifying performance and cutting-edge safety equipment, this concept is Nissan’s vision for a next-generation all-electric high-performance supercar,” said Nissan. Welcome back, Godzilla, how you’ve changed."
 
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Nissan GT-R reborn as 1341bhp EV with solid-state battery
Shock Tokyo show concept previews mega-power 4WD supercar that offers "the ultimate in driving pleasure"

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Nissan has offered the first look at the next-generation Nissan GT-R with the launch of the new Hyper Force Concept at the Tokyo motor show.

The dramatic concept car is billed by Nissan as its “vision for a next-generation all-electric high-performance supercar”, and is one of five launched by the brand under the ‘Hyper’ banner at the returning motor show in Tokyo as it looks to preview its next-generation of electric cars.


Tantalisingly, the Hyper Force confirms Nissan’s intentions that the GT-R will have a place in its line-up in the future; Nissan plans to offer a full range of models from small EVs to performance cars, in a bid to give customers the same choice as in the combustion era - and Autocar understands it could go on sale by the end of the decade.

“We want to provide choice for customers,” said Nissan CEO Makoto Uchida when asked by Autocar why Nissan was showing so many new concepts at once.

“We’re an EV pioneer and this is what we want to do. People’s expectations change and they don’t look at vehicles as before and in their needs and lives. We’ll hear from customers what they think about them [the concepts]. This is giving a look at our future plans. All concepts, we’d like to deliver. We need the customers to agree.”

The Hyper Force is four-wheel drive and has a power output of 1000kw - a remarkable 1341bhp. The all-wheel drive system is badged E-Force, as with Nissan’s other four-wheel drive EVs, yet whereas they are twin-motor systems it is not known whether the Hyper Force uses two or four motors.

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“We’re an EV pioneer and this is what we want to do. People’s expectations change and they don’t look at vehicles as before and in their needs and lives. We’ll hear from customers what they think about them [the concepts]. This is giving a look at our future plans. All concepts, we’d like to deliver. We need the customers to agree.”

The Hyper Force is four-wheel drive and has a power output of 1000kw - a remarkable 1341bhp. The all-wheel drive system is badged E-Force, as with Nissan’s other four-wheel drive EVs, yet whereas they are twin-motor systems it is not known whether the Hyper Force uses two or four motors.

One key technical detail confirmed about the concept car is its use of solid-state battery technology, long considered to be a potential game-changer for EVs in being able to offer smaller, lighter and more power dense batteries that are quicker to charge.

The Japanese firm plans to have its pilot plant for solid-state battery production up and running in 2024, and the batteries in mass-production by 2028. The next GT-R is earmarked for the technology and is tipped to enter production in 2028 or 2029 as a trailblazer for what solid state batteries can do and the models they allow.

The Hyper Force concept features a lightweight body with carbon fibre used in its construction. Nissan says that this body, combined with “powerful downforce” and the advanced control of the E-Force all-wheel drive system allows for “enhanced cornering and exceptional handling on circuits and winding roads”.

No dimensions have been released by Nissan but the concept is large, most likely in excess of five metres long and two metres wide. The aerodynamics of the car were developed and designed in conjunction with Nissan’s performance arm Nismo. As well as providing “high” aerodynamic and downforce performance, the body design also substantially contributes to cooling performance to allow the concept to be driven harder for longer.

Some of the features of the body include a dual-level diffuser at the rear, active front winglets, fender slips and rear wing ends, and a plasma actuator that is said to suppress air detachment to maximise grip and minimise inner-wheel lift while the car is cornering.

The design has little in common with the current GT-R, which by the time this next-generation model enters production will be two decades old, but there are nods to the legendary Skyline lineage with the design of the front and rear headlights. The wheels are made from lightweight carbonfibre, in a design which improves aerodynamic efficiency while providing better cooling for the brakes.

There are two driving modes offered on the concept car: R and GT, standing for racing and grand touring respectively. The interior lighting and displays change colour based on what mode is selected (red for R and blue for GT) and different information is displayed to the driver. The graphics inside have been developed with Polyphony Digital Inc, the maker of the Gran Turismo video game franchise - which designed the graphics for the infotainment in today's GT-R.

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The interior layout, which features carbonfibre seats, also changes in the different driving modes. In R mode, the interior panels move closer to the driver to give the feel of a racing cockpit and four screens give different driving information such as pressures and temperatures. The GT mode gives more traditional infotainment displays.

A full suite of automated driving functions are offered on the concept car, with Nissan saying they have been “tuned for sports driving” and will even provide extra safety functions on a circuit."

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"That’s clearly not the only electricity being put to use. The Hyper Force gets a (theoretical) solid-state battery making 1341 horsepower, which will hit the ground via a beefed-up version of Nissan’s e-4ORCE all-wheel drive."
 
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Nissan

Nissan Motor Co. Ltd. is a Japanese multinational automobile manufacturer headquartered in Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan. Founded in 1933, the company sells its vehicles under the Nissan and Infiniti brands, and formerly the Datsun brand, with in-house performance tuning products (including cars) under the Nismo and Autech brands. Infiniti, its luxury vehicle division, officially started selling vehicles on November 8, 1989, in North America.
Official websites: Nissan, Infiniti

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