RE: Nissan Skyline GT-R (R34) V-Spec II Nur | Spotted

RE: Nissan Skyline GT-R (R34) V-Spec II Nur | Spotted

Thursday 26th September

Nissan Skyline GT-R (R34) V-Spec II Nur | Spotted

A bone-stock, 18k-mile R34 in the best colour? And they say unicorns don't exist...


It’s finally happened. The R34 Nissan Skyline GT-R has turned 25 years old, meaning it’s now eligible for import in the United States. It’s a moment that many wannabe R34 owners have been dreading, because once the 25-year comes into effect on a car that wasn’t originally sold in the States, it typically sends values skyrocketing in the markets where they’re more readily available. And considering just how revered the R34 is among millennials, the supply of the hottest Skyline of all was expected to dry up in a matter of minutes. 

Luckily, that hasn’t happened yet. Perhaps because values had already risen in anticipation of their acceptance into the US import market, and because we’ve got own fair share of Fast and Furious fans here to drum up demand, which means there’s still a fair share of cars to choose from providing you’ve got the cash to burn (think north of £150k these days). And if you don’t mind a few modifications, you could even bag an R34 at a fair old discount. This V Spec with a few Nimso bits can be yours for £135k, and if you can look past the bodykit there’s always this 2000 example for £115k. But what about the creme de la creme? A low-mile, bone-stock R34 in full fat V-Spec II Nur grade. A unicorn, you say? Well look what we’ve found.

It really doesn’t get any better than this: a 18,495-mile Nur devoid of any mods, not even the top-drawer stuff from Nissan or HKS. Not that the NUR needed any work to set your trousers on fire. As the final iteration of the R34 Skyline GT-R, Nissan dialled up Godzilla to its ultimate form by chucking in the motorsport-grade RB26 engine from its N1 homologation special. That included a reinforced cylinder block and pistons, upgraded conrods and a new exhaust manifold, as well as larger turbochargers with ceramic blades that upped boost and reliability. 

Guess how much power it produced with its snazzy new engine? Yep, 280hp. Exactly the same as the standard R34 GT-R. Obviously, Nissan only said that so as to not fall foul of the gentleman’s agreement between Japanese carmakers to limited power - it’s believed Nurs were actually putting out around 330hp, which sounds much more credible. Meanwhile, the firmer suspension setup from the standard V-Spec was carried over, as was the trick E-TS Pro all-wheel drive system and active limited-slip differential. Nissan never got round to setting a lap time around the Nurburgring, despite the car being named after circuit, but there’s a good chance it’d slash several seconds off the seven-minute-54-second time one of its test drivers set in a standard GT-R - if not more.

Visual changes were far more subtle, as was the case with all bar the Nismo-tuned R34s. There are no special sports seats or door-sill branding, and you don’t even get a commemorative plaque to remind you of how special of a GT-R you own. All you get is a gold-coloured VIN plate, a gold engine cover and a V-Spec II Nur badge at the back. That’s it. However, Nurs were offered in an exclusive colour, Millennium Jade, which is what this example here is finished in. Looks marvellous, doesn’t it? And of the 1,003 Nurs built, only 300 were painted in Millennium Jade and just 156 of those were in V-Spec II grade.

What you’re looking at, then, is a proper unicorn, and one that’ll likely have teenage American tech billionaires clambering for it if you don’t act quick. The price hasn’t been disclosed, but it’ll likely be more than the £250k being asking for this modified Nur. Serious money for a car famed for its (relative) affordable performance back in the day, but Nick Mason paid £35k for this 250 GTO in 1977 and it’s now worth more than a small country. Here’s hoping the R34 doesn’t follow suit. 


SPECIFICATION | NISSAN SKYLINE GT-R (R34) V-SPEC II NUR 

Engine: 2,568cc inline-six, twin-turbocharged
Transmission: six-speed manual, all-wheel drive
Power (hp): 280@6,800rpm (wink wink)
Torque (lb ft): 289@4,400rpm
MPG: N/A
CO2: N/A
Year registered: 2002
Recorded mileage: 18,495
Price new: N/A (Japanese import)
Yours for: POA

See the original advert here

Author
Discussion

wistec1

Original Poster:

401 posts

46 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Potentially 250K + Nah.... it can go to America and stay there for that. I also doubt it will emulate the Ferrari in value terms despite how rare it evidently is.

cerb4.5lee

32,642 posts

185 months

Thursday
quotequote all
I'm not a fan of the colour of this one that is for sure, but I've lusted after one of these in blue(the standard model) for as long as I can remember though. cloud9

I still have an original brochure from back in the day of these as well. cool

pacdes

547 posts

166 months

Thursday
quotequote all
...and all they want for it is a "Piece Of Ass"

Repent

359 posts

178 months

Thursday
quotequote all
I’m no JDM buff, but whilst I can see this being the unicorn as the top spec OEM R34, in terms of best colour it has to be Midnight Purple II:

https://www.carscoops.com/2021/06/this-midnight-pu...

Dombilano

1,238 posts

60 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Nur thanks

S100HP

12,926 posts

172 months

Thursday
quotequote all
That'll be 200k plus. Utter madness.

Bathroom_Security

3,425 posts

122 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Are they even that good? I bet they are heavy to drive.

Reggie20

3 posts

13 months

Thursday
quotequote all
£550k according to their website - madness!

halo34

2,818 posts

204 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Bathroom_Security said:
Are they even that good? I bet they are heavy to drive.
I had a dabble with R33 GTST ownership - and some friends who had GTRs from R32s onwards.

My abiding memory was discovering the myth of RB engine/Japanese reliability alongside an ability to empty your wallet in an exemplary fashion on a regular basis.

In my millionaire garage - I think a nicely set up original would do me pre R32 vintage.


cerb4.5lee

32,642 posts

185 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Bathroom_Security said:
Are they even that good? I bet they are heavy to drive.
I haven't driven one, but they reviewed well at the time(the standard car anyway). I think they were described with the world famous motoring saying of "they hide their weight well". That seems to have worked for EVs(and cars in general) nowadays as well. They weigh roughly the same as my F82 M4 I believe(around 1600kg).

chrisironside

742 posts

167 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Reggie20 said:
£550k according to their website - madness!
eek

That is ridiculous. That's 997 GT3 RS 4.0/NSX Type-R money!
Absolutely no danger.

Gibbler290

630 posts

100 months

Thursday
quotequote all
An outstanding collectors item. Despite that you could do a lot with that kind of money but anyone who buys this will likely have more than a few other cars.

smilo996

2,950 posts

175 months

Thursday
quotequote all
"Here’s hoping the R34 doesn’t follow suit" - and yet journos constantly fetishise the cost, investment opportunity and value of cars opposed to writing about the car.
Muricans poised to suck the life about of something else as usual.
Green is a very odd colour. Was driven around Kawasaki in one, blue of course, an experience not to be forgotten.

GreatScott2016

1,387 posts

93 months

Thursday
quotequote all
chrisironside said:
Reggie20 said:
£550k according to their website - madness!
eek

That is ridiculous. That's 997 GT3 RS 4.0/NSX Type-R money!
Absolutely no danger.
I saw that price. They have some very expensive GTRs etc., but that price is bonkers. Lovely thing nonetheless smile

Quickmoose

4,645 posts

128 months

Thursday
quotequote all
I'd be doing a few seasons in an MX5, save up some money, then add racing suspension, racing clutch and flywheel, body stage 3, racing gearbox, soft tyres all round, maybe engine re-build.
Then I'd take it to the car wash and change the oil.

Before tracking it, I'd park up in a Japanese Blossom garden and take a few screen saver photos. wink

LotusOmega375D

7,930 posts

158 months

Thursday
quotequote all
What’s the bonnet made out of? There’s a very mottled reflection from the studio lights.

Every day a journey

1,845 posts

43 months

Thursday
quotequote all
halo34 said:
I had a dabble with R33 GTST ownership - and some friends who had GTRs from R32s onwards.

My abiding memory was discovering the myth of RB engine/Japanese reliability alongside an ability to empty your wallet in an exemplary fashion on a regular basis.

In my millionaire garage - I think a nicely set up original would do me pre R32 vintage.
My R33 GTR was super reliable and it had been modestly fettled by its previous owner.

richinlondon

647 posts

127 months

Thursday
quotequote all
I think it's the '2000 example for £115k' that shocks me - looks like it should be on bricks in a sink estate somewhere

BUG4LIFE

2,101 posts

223 months

Thursday
quotequote all
£500k is obviously mega money for a Skyline, even a NUR. If I was a multi-millionaire I'd probably buy it, but even though that example is probably near perfect condition with such small miles, I'd be tempted to go this route with my hard earned - https://youtu.be/2E7Lsa7IQyk?feature=shared [if you're a Skyline fan I suggest you watch this vid].

Edited by BUG4LIFE on Thursday 26th September 09:15

James Junior

839 posts

162 months

Thursday
quotequote all
I love JDM stuff more than most, but R34 GTRs have to be the most overvalued, overhyped cars on the entire used car market right now.