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Spending Time With The New 2023 Nissan Z!

Filed under: 240z,Nissan Z,Z Proto,z32
by Alvin G @ 2:40 pm on June 24, 2022

 

Z Car Garage spent a few days with the new 2023 Nissan Z at our shop in San Jose, CA. We enjoyed driving the Z on our favorite Bay Area backroads and sharing the experience with our clients. First impressions were unanimous: the new Z is fantastic right out of the box.

 

Our journey with the new Z began last year in May when Nissan invited us to their Headquarters in Tennessee to get up close and personal with the Z Proto:

 

Later in August we were guests at the 2023 Nissan Global Reveal event in New York:

 

In October we hosted a 2023 Nissan Viewing Event at Z Car Garage for the public to enjoy:

 

Just a few weeks ago Nissan kindly offered to lend us a 2023 Nissan Z for five days. We happily obliged and once again thank Jonathan Buhler (Sr. Specialist Corporate Communications at Nissan) and industry veteran Dan Passe (Director, Nissan Corporate Communications) for including Z Car Garage as the new Z makes its glorious return. Enjoy our recap of the week with photos and video of the Z in action.

The New Z at Z Car Garage

 

Our time with the Z began at the ZONC 50th Birthday Celebration in Danville, Ca. I had the opportunity to drive it from the show back to our shop with a group of die-hard Nissan fans.

 

Once at ZCG we admired the new Z’s styling and Passion Red paint. We couldn’t resist parking next to a 300ZX Twin-Turbo to see how Nissan drew inspiration from the Z32 generation’s rear tail light section. The new Z also has a blacked-out strip stretching the width with quad-horizontal (now 3-D LED) tail lights. See that “Z” badge? It reminds us of the S130 era:

 
 

Up front the large rectangular grille opening and headlights are evocative of the 240Z. That large front grille opening is also there for function, providing air to several heat exchangers including an intercooler, oil and transmission coolers. This makes sense visually in person and when you catch a glimpse from your rearview mirror-it’s undeniably a “Z” view:

 

We put the Z on a lift and examined the chassis. The Z was also placed on scales for weight distribution and results will be shared soon. We are really excited to see the aftermarket’s offerings for this platform.

 

Interior

 

This was our first time seeing the red interior and we spent a few hundred miles behind the wheel. The dash features a large TFT gauge display, designed with input from Nissan Super GT500 driver Tsugio Matsuda. Familiar analog gauge pods are mounted atop a central touchscreen reminiscent of the S30 Z car’s center stack. The steering wheel (tilt/telescope) feels great and actually draws its dimensions from an R32 Skyline.

 

The interior is a comfortable place to be, devoid of gimmicks or over-styling. Nissan really spent time in this area and it shows. We liked the little details like leather stitching on the dash and real rotary knobs for radio volume and tuning. Lighted “Z” logo on door sills- something absent from the Ikazuchi-Yellow Proto-Spec Z we saw at Nissan HQ. The two-tone red theme is not as “loud” as the all-blue seats in the Seiran Blue Z that spent a few days with us last year.

 

Interior room is similar to the 370Z but seating position and outward view is greatly improved with a lower dash height. You can even see the Z’s broad hips in the rear through side mirrors, again another nice thought from the designers. Below, Rob (5’10”) and Tyler (6’5″) demonstrate headroom in the Z. Rob still has headroom with a helmet on and Tyler has a few inches of headroom as well:

 

 

On the road

 

We were impressed with the Z’s driving experience straight from the factory. Our 400-mile test drive included a mix of city/highway and canyon driving. Starting in San Jose we headed North to San Francisco via our favorite Bay Area backroad, Skyline (HWY 35).

 
 

Sit back and enjoy the sights and sounds of our time with the new Z. In this video: in-car acceleration, drive-bys, walk-arounds and road testing action from our shop and road trip to San Francisco:

 

Enjoy The Ride

 

One of our favorite parts of spending time with the new Z was sharing it with our clients. They were all ecstatic after riding along with Rob:

“Hey this is Rick, just giving my feedback on the experience of riding in the new Z car. I have to say it exceeded my expectations in every way. From the interior to the feeling of the power, to the way it commands attention. Absolutely flawless. But probably the most shocking thing was the braking and the grip it seemed to have in the corners. Just astonishing performance! Home run Nissan! Long live the Z!”

“Nissan did an outstanding job and really hit a home run. The design pays homage to the original Z while elegantly embodying modern styling cues. The interior is upscale and I really like the digital display, retro gauge cluster, and bucket seats. The performance was absolutely incredible and the way it handled made me the suspension was aftermarket. Overall Nissan did a great job with the car. I am very impressed and I cannot wait to get mine. The hardest decision for me is if I want a red one with two tone interior or white with all blue interior. Manny”

“Hello, my name is Lou Strickland and I recently had the pleasure of visiting Z Car Garage and riding in the new Nissan Z with Rob Fuller. I have owned or currently own a 1971 240Z, 1973 Fairlady Z, 1990 300ZX TT, 1993 300ZX TT and a 2003 350Z. Without hesitation I can say the 2023 Nissan Z is the best stock Z car I have experienced. The 2023 Nissan Z checks all of the sports car boxes.  It looks great, it accelerates, turns and brakes very well.  It is also comfortable, feels solid and does a great job minimizing road noise.  Nissan did a great job reimagining the Z for the next generation of driving enthusiasts.”

“Thank you for giving me a ride in the new Z! It does look better than in the photos and videos. Once inside, the quality of the interior, clever digital displays and, important for me, headroom impressed me. Then there was the drive! The power comes on so smooth and linear that it really doesn’t feel like a turbo car. I felt no turbo lag at all. I agree with you that in many ways it feels like my 300ZX Twin Turbo—it can be both a GT car and a sports car depending on how you want to drive it. I would definitely consider purchasing one of these. So glad the Z is back! Mark”

 

IconZ

 

The drive to San Francisco was thrilling. We had to snap some photos of this iconic Z car with another icon, the Golden Gate Bridge:

 

The Passion Red paint is stunning and hard to capture on camera. Direct light brings out a retina-searing metallic red while in shade it looks almost burgundy. Check out the photo gallery below:

 

Leaving San Francisco we drove the Z down the famous Lombard St. People stopped us to check it out:

 

Thank You Nissan!

We thank Nissan, Dan Passe and Jonathan Buhler for the opportunity to enjoy the new Z.  As our clients and friends mentioned after going for a test drive…the Z is a winner. Great job Nissan we are so excited to see it on the road and in the hands of Z-car enthusiasts. Z Car Garage can’t wait to get our Z and share it with the community. LONG LIVE THE Z!

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Everything we know. Everything we love. Everything we live for. In one letter.

The New Z Car. By now many of you have seen Nissan’s Z Proto in the media or even in person as it tours the car show circuit. On May 2, Nissan invited us to their headquarters in Tennessee to get up close and personal with the Z Proto, still very much in pre-production form. After seeing, hearing and feeling this car in person we are thoroughly stoked for the new Nissan Z. Enjoy this report from our trip, complete with photos and video.

 

Nissan is Back

Z car enthusiasts worldwide have been awaiting a successor to the current Z and many were satisfied when Nissan officially unveiled the Z Proto on September 16, 2020. The live-streamed event featured Alfonso Albaisa (senior vice president of global design) and Hiroshi Tamura (chief product specialist of the Z Proto) both very enthusiastic and assuring that while the Z Proto is only a development model, we will get a new Nissan Z.

Fast forward almost six months after the unveiling…Nissan debuted this commercial that gave me chills. I immediately texted Rob that Nissan is back. This brilliantly-executed advertisement was exactly what we needed and shows a direction that we are totally on board with:

 

With our New Z car anticipation growing stronger we just had to see it for ourselves, in the metal. You can imagine how happy we were when Nissan Corporate reached out to Z Car Garage and invited us to their headquarters in Franklin to spend some quality time with the Z Proto. Rob and I hopped on a plane to Tennessee…

 
 

Arriving at Nissan HQ, our hosts were Jonathan Buhler (Sr. Specialist Corporate Communications at Nissan) and industry veteran Dan Passe (Director, Corporate Communications). Both gentlemen are hardcore automotive enthusiasts (see Jonathan’s personal Datsun 240Z) that proudly wave the flag for Nissan. The kind of minds you want at a car company, and very gracious. Rob and I were in for a treat, and and we were blown away. First order of business: see the Z Proto inside Nissan HQ…

The Nissan Z Proto:


We were given the opportunity to get up close and personal with the Z Proto. To be concise, this car has a presence that simply isn’t captured in photos. A small disclaimer: the details we admired and discovered on this car may not transfer to the production car, but based on leaked photos, and as mentioned in the unveiling by Alfonso the Z Proto’s design is extremely close to what consumers will be offered. After sitting in the car and taking in its design, both Rob and I were enthralled and eager for the new Nissan Z. Let’s take a closer look…

Exterior

 

The familiar silhouette of the Z Proto instantly caught our eyes when we first saw it inside Nissan’s light-box room. By design, nearly every element seems to have been inspired by previous generation Z cars. Front features help take you back to Japan-only models like the 240ZG of the 1970s with “sugar-scoop” style headlights. The LED lights cast a “Z” halo:

 

That front grille/bumper treatment everyone seems to be split on?  The square-shaped grille comes off looking awkward in pictures, but it looks totally appropriate to the car in person. Eagle eyes will note that the  grille’s rectangular details carry to the interior and rear end. It works really well.

 

While the front end is both familiar and striking, the rear end is even more intriguing. We can’t get over the fact that Nissan put their contemporary twist on the 300ZX (Z32) taillights! Their sharp, rectangular LED elements are perfectly executed.

 

Nissan incredibly managed to retain the iconic Z profile while updating the body surfaces to give a much needed styling refresh. Gone are the bulbous, over-flared and over-designed features of previous generation Z cars. No chunky door handles. No weirdly-shaped headlight/taillight treatments. The Z Proto manages to be understated, with elements familiar and welcomed by Z enthusiasts. Look at that mid-body character line that evokes the S30…only here it follows an almost Coke-bottle shape with strong shoulders over the rear wheel wells. We snapped a few outdoor shots to capture the surface details. It was hard to detect the hood lines, another S30-styling throwback!

 

We doubt the Fairlady Z badge on the hatch will see production (it never did for US-Market Z Cars!), but we sure hope the pillar Z emblems stay, along with the “Katana” silver rails. It will be interesting to see what the aftermarket holds styling-wise with front/rear fascia’s, side skirts and general aero. We give Nissan a huge Bravo! for the design of the Z Proto. More pictures in the gallery below!

Performance

 

Yes, that is Rob Fuller taking a peek under the Z Proto. No, we can’t tell you what the chassis looks like or what is even under the hood. Nissan has confirmed that the new Z will use a twin-turbocharged V6 engine.  That alone makes us sing Hallelujah, for boost is always better! Internet sleuths hint that the VR30DDTT engine found in the Infiniti Q50 and Q60 would be the simple choice for Nissan. Rated at 300 or 400hp in those cars, we have dyno-tuned many with simple bolt-ons yielding 100hp+ over stock quite easily.

 

Rob and I were given permission to row through the gears. Yes the Z Proto has a real 6-speed manual transmission and the New Z will also offer one.  No word on those sexy brakes and tire letters, but with Twin-turbos and a manual transmission sign us up!

 

Interior

 

Both Rob and I were impressed and satisfied with the exterior of the Z Proto, and the interior also did not disappoint. Remember, this is a no-frills sportscar, and it shows in the material choices, switchgear and overall design theme.

 

That being said, there is a great mix of digital and analog elements on the dash. We loved the large digital instrument cluster, central touchscreen and nostalgic triple gauge pods. Thanks to Jonathan for powering up the car so we could see all the digital features, a real treat not given to most journalists! He was eager to point out a few Nissan-placed Easter Eggs too…

 

Easter Eggs

 

Jonathan drew our attention to a few not-so-easy to catch details like the “Z” logo on headlights and “since 1969” text on hatch window. Dan Passe chimed in with the “Z” cut lines at the union of the A pillar, hood and leading edge of door (more of an intentional design detail). Then there’s the fairly gratuitous nods to the 370z, and 1969 240z on the dash display and center stack. Note radio station with song title and time 🙂

 

The Z Proto is a home run. This is a sports car Nissan should be proud of. Well done! We can’t wait to get the New Z at the shop. For an automaker to build something this special is risky but also speaks volumes as to how they value our input. Enthusiast’s input! It’s a bold move especially in this climate where sport cars are relying on electric powerplants and automatic transmissions. “The Z Proto represents a commitment to our fans, to our heritage, and staying true to Nissan’s DNA.” We couldn’t agree more after seeing it in person. Long Live The Z!

We couldn’t leave you with just pictures so here is an extended video of our personal visit to Nissan HQ to see the Z Proto. We were fortunate to not only see it, but take it for a spin around the campus and really absorb all of the design details…enjoy!

 

Our visit with Nissan only begun with the Z Proto. Before heading to our next destination we stopped by legendary Z shop Crawford Z Car Service in downtown Nashville. Owner Doug Stewart is an accomplished  Z-car racer and you night remember the creator of the Crawford intake plenum for Nissan’s 350z VQ engine.

 

Nissan Heritage Collection

 

A visit to the Nissan Heritage collection was next on our tour. Nissan’s production plants in Smyrna and Dechard and HQ in Franklin, TN are pretty well-known but the Heritage Collection is hidden inside the Lane Motor Museum in Nashville. The museum itself is open to the general public and it’s a must see:

 

Undeground and beyond closed doors, we entered paradise. Both Jonathan and Dan have dedicated their time-on a volunteer basis to preserve, maintain and promote this vintage Nissan/Datsun collection. Without them it wouldn’t survive, and in part they rely on enthusiasts (like Randy Jaffe) to help carry the torch. These are cars that would have been scrapped by Nissan or left outside to rust. Rob and I were literally in heaven. So much history in one place with wicked metal at every turn. (Below) The actual Black Gold TV commercial 280ZX and 2021 TV commercial Z31 that actress Brie Larson was in:

 

Everywhere we looked there were”JOB #1″ vehicles, race cars, movie/commercial cars and even concept cars…we could have spent the night with the collection. What sets this collection apart from others is that all cars are accessible and drivable (or meant to be driven). No roped-off cars or locked doors. I even got to sit in the race car!

 

Forgotten concept cars. Some were old. Some were shockingly recent(See that Q50 Eau Rouge?!)

 

 

This 1200 truck needed some attention and this was recently shipped from the Heritage Collection to ZCG for some love!

 

There were way too many cool cars to mention so please check out the photo gallery and video below!

 

Here is a video of our visit to the Nissan Heritage Collection, enjoy!

 

Datsun Roadsters

 

The Datsun Sports (310/311) or affectionately known as “Datsun Roadsters” are some of our favorite models. We were both surprised and happy to find that Jonathan and Dan had recently rescued a few from a barn. All of the cars they recovered were interestingly “2000” models from 1968 to 1980. Thanks to their efforts these gems will be restored and driven!

 

 

Thank You

We thank Nissan, Dan Passe and Jonathan Buhler for the opportunity to visit. The Z Proto is a winner and we were throughly impressed with the Heritage Collection and your efforts to keep it alive. Looking forward to working with you in the future, LONG LIVE THE Z!

 

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