Psyche!
Yeah, someone needs to put me, a GT-Rrrrrrr, a GT-2, a 430S and a ZR1 at the 'ring for a week and we'll see what's really the fastest.
Because Ferrari has never made any outrageous performance claims on the 'Ring, nor GM thus far with the 'vette either... The GTR is not a slow car but any car supplied by a manufacturer to the press can be tuned a little more than a regular car, especially a turbo. That's why Porsche apparently picked one up straight from a dealer. Out of curiousity, was the car used by Stig supplied by Nissan???
Funny. I thought that Nissan had done something to slow down the GT-R so it's record time would not embarrass Porsche so bad...
Must be a Ringer NSX with cut slick tires. Show us some videos, and make sure your car data wasn't hacked.
Excellent read, if a little long - Story by Jack Baruth Okay, class, put away your books. Time for a pop quiz. Its just one question, and its multiple-choice: Which car holds the official Nurburgring lap time record for production automobiles? a) Nissan GT-R b) Chevrolet Corvette ZR-1 c) Porsche Carrera GT d) Radical SR8 So, what did you pick? It doesnt matter. Whatever you picked, youre wrong. It was a trick question. There is no production car record at the Nurburgring. Period. It doesnt exist. You may find that shocking. After all, dont the British car rags continually natter on about the production car record? Didnt Edmunds.com recently devote several terabytes of hype to the idea of the GT-R setting a production car record? Isnt there, like, a totally official list on Wikipedia somewhere? There has to be a record! Everybody talks about it all the time! Sorry. Theres no Nurburgring lap time record for a simple reason: Real lap time records are set by real race cars, using real timing and scoring equipment, during actual competition or sanctioned practice sessions. They arent self-reported for the same reason the Worlds Strongest Man Contest isnt held by having everyone mail in their results: because people can, and do, lie and cheat. Despite the obviousness of this concept, it is not yet universally understood that one cannot simply claim a lap time on the Internet and have it be official. Case in point: I happen to be a member of a small Web forum for Midwestern racers and open-lapping drivers. A few years ago, we had a bit of a tempest in a teapot when a fellow claimed that his $5000 project car had lapped Mid-Ohio in a certain time. Hed obtained this time by taping a stopwatch to the dashboard and timing himself during a NASA HPDE session. While this fellow was a competent driver, we were rather skeptical about his reported time, not least because it would have put him on the pole of the American Iron race which had also occurred that weekend, and his old sedan was pretty far away from being an optimized AI car. Furthermore, those of us who have to race under the cold glare of an accurate-to-one-ten-thousandth-of-a-second transponder system rather objected to the idea of just banging a stopwatch somewhere around the start/finish line every lap. Its pretty easy to gain or lose a few seconds by sloppy stopwatching, you see. After much discussion, the driver in question agreed that the time probably shouldnt be considered official in any sense, and everybody calmed down. It wasnt that we didnt trust him; it was simply that recording ones own lap time is not, and will never be, the equivalent of setting an honest, independently timed lap under controlled conditions. Its just plain common sense. Or is it? After all, didnt Nissan recently manipulate the all-too-willing media into witnessing and then reporting official Nurburgring lap times for their all-conquering R35 GT-R? First, there was the pretty-hard-to-believe 7:38 time which the fine journalists at Edmunds advertised, excuse me, reported, followed by the no-really-you-have-to-be-kidding 7:34 time, and finally the dont-insult-our-collective-intelligence 7:29 shared with the world in a breathless press release a few months later. The Nissan media blitz was so successful that when Horst von Saurma obtained a 7:50 time from a real production GT-R, it went virtually unreported by the major automotive rags. Whered those twenty-one seconds between von Saurmas drive and Nissans test come from? The Internet had many answers, none of them credible, and none of them particularly persuasive to anyone who has ever driven the Nurburgring in anger. And now, Porsche - the company which has had perhaps the most storied relationship with the Ring, the company which has been testing production cars in the Black Forest since the Fifties, the company which has historically set the benchmark for excellence around the North Course has called Nissan out on their self-reported times. Without quite saying as much, Porsche has implied that Nissan cheated at the Ring. Did they? If so, how? The answer is simple: Nissan did not cheat, because its impossible to cheat when there are no rules. Theres no official lap time record, remember? What they did do was knowingly manipulate a credulous, ignorant media and general public into misunderstanding the GT-Rs capabilities. Its not the first time theyve done it, and they arent the only guilty parties. Heres how it was done. Automakers have been testing at the Green Hell for a long time. According to Karl Ludwigsen in his must-read Excellence Was Expected, Porsche was timing its production cars at the Ring as early as the Fifties. Back then, ten minutes was considered to be outrageously quick for a street car, and it took a fairly hot Porsche, such as a 550 Spyder, to make it around in that time. Rest assured that a ten-minute lap isnt exactly screwing around; I ran an automatic-transmission SLK200 at a slightly sub-ten-minute pace (approx. 9:15 bridge to gantry, which is the shorter distance) two years ago and was either at full throttle, ABS activation, or serious slip angle for the whole time, and the SLK200 had modern tires and 167 horsepower compared to a 550 Spyders 110 ponies. For the next forty years, Porsche used the Ring as a development arena for its street cars. Its important to note that Porsche rarely, if ever, publicized its lap times; from Stuttgarts perspective, that would be no more interesting to a customer than the frequency resonance data from a particular Autobahn. Why would their owners be concerned with lap times for a street car? Dont forget, this was before the World Wide Web made keyboard racers of us all. Back then, there were two kinds of Porsche owners: people who drove street Porsches on the street, and people who drove racing Porsches on the track, and they were not necessarily the same people, and the former group didnt pretend to be the latter. Porsche wasnt shooting for bragging rights with their lap times; the intent was simply that each new car be faster than its predecessor. It took an inspired act of marketing to make Ring times worthy of public consideration. Somebody at Nissan noticed that no street car had been officially timed at under eight minutes, so in 1996 they hired one Dirk Schoysman to accomplish the feat in the R33 Skyline GT-R. After some amount of fettling, fussing, and lapping, Dirk dutifully turned a 7:59, and the Nurburgring record was born. The fact that a little bit of the German mystique rubbed off on Nissan as a result was, of course, entirely not coincidental. At around the same time, journalist and erstwhile racer Horst von Saurma began posting his own Supertest results for single laps on the Ring, starting a race for Nurburgring supremacy that has persisted to this day. For no particular reason that I can understand, the self-reported Ring time has become the gold standard by which performance cars are judged. Lets take a moment to talk about lap times. Consider the following: Last year, I set the fastest Spec Focus lap at the NASA National Championships at 1:45.620. At this years Champs, the best lap was 1:48.170, despite the fact that the Spec Focus rules now allow wider tires and lower suspension. Do you really think Im two and a half seconds better than the best guy was this year, particularly considering that he was driving a better-equipped car? Of course not. Mid-Ohio was slow this year because it rained the day before and washed the rubber off the track, taking a couple of seconds off everybodys lap. Consider, if you will, that on a track the length of the Ring the equivalent rain-washing time gap would be nine and a half seconds. Lap times set on different days, under different conditions, simply arent comparable. Its that simple. Some days are hot, some days are cool, some days theres rubber on the track, some days theres oil. The same competent driver, in the same car, might have a fifteen-second variation from one Ring session to the next. Think about that. Now consider the fact that the published Porsche times and the von Saurma supertests are usually the product of a single days session. They take a completely production car out on the track and run it. Simple as that. And since we already know that the same driver can produce vastly different lap times, its obvious that these Ring laps are only useful as a very general guideline. Nissans stroke of marketing genius in 1996 was to realize that they could attack those official times using a completely different methodology. By taking the track for as long as they needed, with a full support crew, an endless supply of tires and tuning equipment, and a motivated racing driver, they were able to simply obliterate those existing records. Its commonly understood that a weekend of development and effort can knock five or six seconds a lap off the times of a Showroom Stock racer on a two-minute track. That equates to twenty seconds or more at the Ring, and thats a big gap. Porsches response to this was to, well, pretty much ignore it. It took Porsche a long time to concede that the Japanese might even be capable of building a decent car, much less one that would hustle on a racetrack, so they put the 7:59 GT-R lap down to a publicity stunt and continued to set their times by sending Herr Walter Rohrl out on the track for an afternoon. Meanwhile, von Saurma continued to build a database of lap times by Supertesting production cars. At about the same time, the British motoring enthusiast public, enraged by speed cameras, limited track time on their island, and the general F-the-motorist stance of their own Government, began to make regular, organized pilgrimages to the Ring, and consequently the British motor rags started obsessing over Ring times in a big way. The trackday special companies Radical, Ultima, Westfield, et al started attacking the production car record with cars that redefined what barely legal meant. (Oh, come on! Not that kind of barely legal! Shame on you!) To no ones particular surprise, it turned out that 1500-pound sports prototypes with full downforce and motorcycle engines are considerably faster than real street cars, which is why various companies are claiming production car ring records all the way down to an estimated 6:55, courtesy of the Ultima GTR720. Its absolutely possible to buy a street-legal car in the UK that will turn a 7:20 Ring lap; you have several choices that will turn that time or better, actually. You had just better hope there are no speedbumps on the roads between your home and Germany, because two-inch ground clearance and massive carbon-fiber splitters tend to be incompatible with sleeping policemen. Nissan knew that Ring times would be a critical component of their marketing push for the R35 GT-R. Their potential buyers, weaned on Gran Turismo games and generally rather enamored of meaningless driving statistics, would accept no less. Never mind that the average GT-R owner would find himself being lapped by Showroom Stock Chevy Cobalts during a trackday; theyre a numbers crowd, theyre addicted to numbers, they repeat the numbers endlessly on the Internet, they love the numbers. The GT-R would have to develop the numbers. What happened next was almost surreal. The impressionable people at Edmunds were invited to witness production car testing at the Ring, where touring-car hotshoe/F1 washout Toshio Suzuki proceeded to set some very interesting lap times with a production car. These times were duly reported as a new official record and picked up by the world in general. Never mind that the lap times of a turbocharged car in factory hands require an entire shaker of salt to be taken seriously; never mind that the car could have been in any state of tune from the dampers up without Edmunds being any the wiser; never mind the fact that the cars performance was very far away from what one might reasonably expect given the stated power and weight. Edmunds reported it anyway, and the new production car record flew around the Internet. Mission accomplished. Numbers delivered. Thanks, Edmunds! A little journalistic integrity would have gone a long way here; it also would have helped to have someone on the staff who had, oh, I dont know, raced something at some point in the past. It hardly mattered for long, as Nissan then cheerfully reset its own record to 7:29 in private testing. Again, this was accepted as gospel by the motoring press. A car with approximately the power-to-weight ratio of a Porsche 993 Turbo runs thirty-four seconds faster around the Ring than said Turbo? Sure, why not? Must be the magic electronics and, er, downforce. Journalistic stupidity is like blood in the water; it draws sharks who are eager to profit as a result. The next Mako to strike was General Motors, which proceeded to set a couple of production car times in caged cars! Heres a hint, friends: Rollcages make cars faster. Simply replacing the Autopower cage in our 94 Neon ACR with a stiffer custom cage took 1.5 seconds off our lap time around Mid-O equivalent to seven seconds on the Ring. Why? The car twisted less and planted its tires better. Caged cars go faster. Its as simple as that. But GM claimed it was for safety, and the Press As A Whole swallowed the explanation without comment. The final blow was the Viper ACRs outrageous 7:22 laptime, which is, ironically, probably the most legitimate time of the bunch despite being the lowest. The problem is that the Viper ACR is only nominally a street car; its Americas answer to a street-legal Radical SR8. Its now possible, therefore, for pimply seventeen-year-olds whose driving experience is limited to piloting Moms Camry around the local Fashion Bugs parking lot to authoritatively draw a comparison between, say, the 8:28 laptime set eight years ago by von Saurma in a naturally aspirated 993 and the 7:24 of a Corvette ZR-1 - but its a house built on sand. The conditions are simply too dissimilar to really understand anything about the way the cars actually perform. For that, youd need to have your own test drivers, your own private time at the Ring, and standardized conditions under which to test. Porsche happens to have all of the above, so its not really a surprise that they have, at long last, decided to enter the Nurburgring publicity game with a bang. Their new test times for the 997 Turbo and GT2 are more aggressive than what they have previously reported, and their GT-R test time appears to line up pretty well with von Saurmas independent test of a production car. Theyve taken a relatively bold step in publicizing their times; its really the first time that one manufacturer has offered a direct public commentary on another cars Nordschleife capabilities. Apparently, the gloves are off, which is probably bad news for competitors who rely on Ring times to give their cars a little bit of that much-desired Green Hell mystique. At this point, even the most unrepentant PS2-player has to admit that Nissans test was more of a stunt. Keep in mind, theres nothing unethical about that; there are no official rules of testing at the Ring. Its manipulative, its scheming, its too clever by half, but it isnt cheating. The amusing thing about all of this planning, posturing, and boost-twiddling is that, in the end, it amounts to nothing. A better Ring time doesnt make for a better car, particularly for Americans who rarely find themselves doing triple-digit speeds along one-way, Armco-lined rural roads. It doesnt even necessarily make for a better track car; any car which has been optimized for the bumpy, transition-heavy Nordschleife will feel like a rolling boat on a flat Alan Wilson course. The best thing that could happen to Nurburgring testing would be for all the stopwatches to disappear, because at that point the manufacturers could get back to Porsches original rationale for testing there: simply improving the vehicle beyond its predecessor. No trickery, no stupidity. It wont happen, at least not until one of these fresh-faced engineers is decapitated by a barrier in the course of setting some hilariously deceptive sub-seven-minute lap. At that point, somebody at Nissan, Porsche, Chevrolet, or Chrysler might realize the fundamental ridiculousness of fighting for imaginary bragging rights. In the meantime, the rest of us can enjoy the show, while understanding that it means absolutely nothing. Go have a good time in your car but if you want me to believe in your good time, youd better put a transponder behind the bumper, okay? From - http://www.speedsportlife.com/2008/10/01/avoidable-contact-17-cheating-nissan-bitter-porsche/
^ Funny stuff, now the whole Nurburgring timing thing is considered BS? Great job Nissan, you guys sure know how to wreck a party. Reminds me the first time Shaq did a 369- dribble spin dunk routine he picked up from Kobe. Sheer disbelief~ you know what, I'll bet you they lowered the basket for Shaq.
There was a friendly competition; rules.... 2002 NSX-R with allowed changes: Oil change, Medium Race tires. 6:56 was my NS lap time... and room for about 2-3 more seconds.
i'm actually in the middle of the 24 hours race, God knows for the 5th time i guess...i'm using the Takata Dome NSX, the lead car is 14 laps ahead of me, the Audi TT. for the fun of it, i let the game start, and parked the car, let them get a headstart, and see if i can win the race in 24 hours. right now, i'm still in 6th, 7 hours gone. thanks for ur friendly competition too. i'll make it a point to see if i can match ur time.
http://jalopnik.com/5060960/nissan-officially-responds-to-porsche-skepticism-recommends-driving-lessons "The war of words between Nissan and Porsche over Nurburgring lap times continues. Today Nissan officially responded to Porsche's statement last month that they were unable to get within 25 seconds of the Nissan GT-R's claimed fastest 'Ring time, leading Porsche to claim Nissan had used a ringer with race tires. Seems that Nissan still has the tires they used, however, and they're inviting Porsche to check them out along with video of the run shot by a Japanese magazine. To top it off, Nissan states the GT-R used, rather than being a ringer, was actually hampered by 110 pounds of extra telemetrics. So what gives? Nissan has inferred Porsche must have neither properly run-in the Nissan nor learned out to extract the most from the Japanese supercar's AWD system. Choice Nissan quotes after the jump. We are aware that several auto makers have purchased the GT-R for their own testing and evaluation. Like all GT-R customers, we recommend that any auto maker buying a GT-R should follow the recommended run-in procedures, service schedules and maintenance to ensure the maximum performance from their car. In addition, we offer performance driving courses for prospective and current GT-R owners to help them get the best performance from their car. We would welcome the opportunity to help any auto manufacturer with understanding the full capabilities of the GT-R. We anxiously await the no-doubt terse and pointed release that'll be forthcoming from Stuttgart. In the meantime, we just want to remind both companies that your mother countries have a long history of working together, so let's not let this go too far. "
IMO As a result of several auto makers whom have purchased the GT-R have come to the conclusion that each engine is built according to customer spec, hence more power on some cars. In my personal opinion now that Porsche has Nissans attention they will want to dyno the car used to see if it has more power than stated. Tires is once factor, if the car is using more boast or chipped, then its obvious why its going fast in Nburg. The laws of pysics is clear 3950lbs going faster than a 600hp CGT with less weight is nearly impossible and we all know how advanced the CGT is.
Improper break-in? Don't know how to drive AWD? You have to be kidding me. Those are the lamest excuses ever.