Skip to main content

Will the next Nissan GT-R be a self-driving track monster?

Nissan GT-R
For all its frightening power, the Nissan GT-R is startlingly easy to drive. In fact, it’s so manageable behind the wheel that its detractors have called it too simple and too uninvolved, a car so saturated with electronic aids that it lacks the direct, primal feel of the competition. Exaggerated as those claims may be, future “Godzillas” could be even more accessible.

According to TopGear.com, upcoming GT-Rs and 370Zs will feature a smattering of autonomous technologies, including features that let the computer take over the controls during high-performance driving. Normally, you’d have to take lessons to get your track legs under you, but future Nissans could essentially act as digital racing instructors with the ability to show the quickest way around a corner in real time.

Recommended Videos

“Even the most enthusiastic drivers make mistakes,” said Takao Asami, Nissan’s global vice president for research and advanced engineering. “Machines are more capable, reliable, and better than even the best racing drivers. So thanks to autonomous driving technology we can offer even more driving pleasure out of performance vehicles.”

Before self-driving Nissans start tearing up the track while their passengers nap, the current GT-R has some room to grow despite its age.

“The GT-R is seven years old, so people think that it’s at the end of its life,” explained Shiro Nakamura, Nissan’s Chief Creative Officer and designer of the next GT-R. “But performance-wise it’s still one of the fastest cars in the world. And design-wise, it still looks very independent. But we have some major improvements for the current car that you will see next year,” he revealed with a cheeky smile and a heavy lift of the eyebrows.

The 2016 GT-R equips a 545-horsepower, twin-turbocharged 3.8-liter V6 and starts at $101,770.

Andrew Hard
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Andrew first started writing in middle school and hasn't put the pen down since. Whether it's technology, music, sports, or…
Officers confused as they pull over an empty self-driving car
Cruise

In what appears to be the first incident of its kind, police officers recently pulled over a self-driving car with no one inside it.

The incident, which took place on a street in San Francisco earlier this month, was caught on video by a passing pedestrian. It shows several traffic cops pondering about how to handle the incident after stopping the vehicle for failing to have its front lights on while driving at night.

Read more
How a big blue van from 1986 paved the way for self-driving cars
Lineup of all 5 Navlab autonomous vehicles.

In 1986, a blue Chevy van often cruised around the streets of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania near Carnegie Mellon University. To the casual observer, nothing about it appeared out of the ordinary. Most people would pass by it without noticing the camcorder peeking out from its roof, or the fact that there were no hands on the steering wheel.

But if any passerby had stopped to inspect the van and peer into its interior, they would have realized it was no ordinary car. This was the world's first self-driving automobile: A pioneering work of computer science and engineering somehow built in a world where fax machines were still the predominant way to send documents, and most phones still had cords. But despite being stuck in an era where technology hadn't caught up to humanity's imagination quite yet, the van -- and the researchers crammed into it -- helped to lay the groundwork for all the Teslas, Waymos, and self-driving Uber prototypes cruising around our streets in 2022.

Read more
Nissan’s ‘smellmasters’ perform odor checks on new cars
A Nissan "smellmaster" checking the odor of a new car.

As anyone who’s bought a new car knows, the interior of the vehicle can give off a bit of a whiff at first. And if that odor is overpowering or unpleasant, you might quickly form a negative opinion about your new motor -- even if it does drive like a dream.

Nissan, for one, is well aware of the importance of creating a car that not only looks great and drives well but also smells nice.

Read more