With over a decade of market presence for the Nissan GT-R, those seeking tuner thrills have had plenty of time to play with the R35. However, it seems that not every owner understood the destination of the supercar, despite Godzilla being a multi-purpose machine.
And the freshest example of a Nissan GT-R whose owner got things wrong comes from the piece of footage at the bottom of the page.
The clip showcases a modded GT-R scraping all over the place as it drives down the road. Now, lowered machines scratching while attempting to tackle driveways are nothing new. And yet this supercar is being treated as if it were a junkyard machine.
The one behind the wheel doesn't seem to mind the sparks that fly everywhere, as the machine is being driven at a constant speed while being filmed.
And this is the kind of behavior that obviously drawn unwanted attention, risking to affect the reputation of the stance community altogether.
Speaking of R35 Nissan GT-R modding, we'll remind you that the dyno world record for the machine recently fell. To be more precise, an example of the beast managed to climb past 3,500 horses, with the dyno video looking just as brutal as you'd expect.
As you can imagine, the trick is putting all that power down. And the Nissan halo car also has plenty of action to deliver when it comes to this.
For instance, the R35 has become a six-second car (think: quarter-mile shenanigans). And, as far as half-mile stunts are concerned, the Japanese toy can climb to around 250 mph.
Of course, the race to make Godzilla even quicker won't stop here and we can't wait to see where the aftermarket realm takes the velocity tool by the time the Japanese automaker stops production of the supercar.
The clip showcases a modded GT-R scraping all over the place as it drives down the road. Now, lowered machines scratching while attempting to tackle driveways are nothing new. And yet this supercar is being treated as if it were a junkyard machine.
The one behind the wheel doesn't seem to mind the sparks that fly everywhere, as the machine is being driven at a constant speed while being filmed.
And this is the kind of behavior that obviously drawn unwanted attention, risking to affect the reputation of the stance community altogether.
Speaking of R35 Nissan GT-R modding, we'll remind you that the dyno world record for the machine recently fell. To be more precise, an example of the beast managed to climb past 3,500 horses, with the dyno video looking just as brutal as you'd expect.
As you can imagine, the trick is putting all that power down. And the Nissan halo car also has plenty of action to deliver when it comes to this.
For instance, the R35 has become a six-second car (think: quarter-mile shenanigans). And, as far as half-mile stunts are concerned, the Japanese toy can climb to around 250 mph.
Of course, the race to make Godzilla even quicker won't stop here and we can't wait to see where the aftermarket realm takes the velocity tool by the time the Japanese automaker stops production of the supercar.