Wheels

EDGED WEAPONS

FOR A TIME, this comparison test looked impossible: a new, modern Nissan Z facing down a reborn Toyota Supra. But here I am, standing in front of both cars, resplendent in their respective yellow hues, turbocharged six-cylinder engines humming at idle, having just demolished a challenging mountain road. What was once thought impossible wasn’t due to logistics or a world-altering health crisis, but rather because neither model seemed fated to even exist. Until relatively recently, the tea leaves of future product planning appeared to tell us that both legendary nameplates – Fairlady Z and Supra – would be confined to the history books, mortal coils sufficiently shuffled. Life without the Supra had begun to feel normal, the fourth-generation cult hero A80 having ceased production before the start of the new millennium. Meanwhile, Our Fairlady of Fun’s sixth Z34 generation became one of the oldest models you could buy, staying on sale fore more than a decade. Its survival beyond the 370Z was tenuous though, and by the mid-2010s it looked like the end of the line was approaching for the fabled Z car, with five decades of royal sports car lineage seeming without an heir.

It was generally accepted that a replacement for the 370Z just wouldn’t happen. Tightening fuel efficiency standards, Nissan’s well documented fiduciary issues and a seeming lack of market demand for two-door sports

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Wheels

Wheels5 min read
Supervan blitzes Bathurst
IT’S THE IMPROBABILITY of it all that grabs you. When you’re told Ford is gunning to break the lap record at Australia’s most fearsome racetrack, the rather hilly and unforgiving Mount Panorama, your mind fills with images of a sleek, GT3-style racin
Wheels8 min read
Ferrari 575m
HISTORY IS REPLETE with disappointing sequels. Look at Fleetwood Mac. How do you follow Rumours, one of the greatest albums of all time? Hindsight tells us you follow it with the over-indulgent Tusk, at the time the most expensive album ever made, an
Wheels3 min read
Mini Countryman
WITH AN OVERALL length of 4.44m, some might say the car that the Mini Countryman has evolved into in its third generation can’t truthfully wear a moniker like ‘mini’ anymore. But, say Mini executives, “people asked for a Mini with more room” and that

Related Books & Audiobooks