Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

FEEL-GOOD CLASSIC

The new Nissan Z coupe borrows from past versions but adds a modern twist

- DAVID MCCOWEN

Like a radio station playing feel-good classics, the new Nissan Z coupe plays to the brand’s fan base by tapping into its greatest hits. The Zed’s appeal starts with retromoder­n styling. A front end inspired by the 1969 Datsun 240Z meets a tail treatment mimicking the 1989 Nissan 300ZX, bridged by an arcing blade of silver trim evoking Japanese swords.

There are elements pinched from all five decades of Z-badged sports cars, which means that regardless of a potential customer’s age, they will find traces of machines that were desirable in their youth.

A sophistica­ted 3.0-litre twin-turbo V6 replaces the coarse and strained 3.7-litre V6 found in the old 370Z. Power has grown from 245kw/363nm to a stout 298kw/475nm.

The price has also grown by about 20 per cent to $73,300 plus on-road costs (about $80,000 drive-away). That’s not cheap but the only car on sale with more punch per dollar is the Ford Mustang GT, which is due for imminent replacemen­t.

The interior has a 12.3-inch digital dash and an 8.0-inch central touchscree­n with smartphone mirroring and an eight-speaker Bose stereo.

Safety features include auto emergency braking, adaptive cruise control, lane departure warning, blind-spot monitoring and rear crosstraff­ic alerts. Heated leather seats with electric adjustment are part of the deal, as are LED headlights, smart keys and climate control.

A second cupholder was added to a cosy – and loud – cabin that doesn’t have satnav or wireless phone charging.

Performanc­e parts include lightweigh­t 19inch alloys housing four-pot brake callipers. Australian models are fitted as standard with a limited-slip rear differenti­al that costs thousands overseas.

The car costs the same in manual or automatic trim – the only options are premium paint ($700) and metallic paint with a black roof ($1200).

A limited-edition yellow and black “Proto” version has sold out.

Dropping into the Nissan’s cabin, you notice close links with outgoing 370Z. It has the same door handles, seat controls and low-slung seat posture of the old car and a similarly sporty placement for the steering wheel, shifter and pedals.

A prod of the starter button wakes the new engine with a disappoint­ingly muted growl – noise restrictio­ns have muzzled the motor’s bark. But it bites hard, delivering peak torque from just 1600rpm.

The motor doles out effortless shove in all conditions, along with a requiremen­t for drivers to be careful with their right foot in the rain.

Nissan doesn’t advertise a 0-100km/h time for the car, though we’re reliably informed the slick-shifting nine-speed auto will go close to four seconds dead, while the manual is a few tenths slower.

Some 70 per cent of early orders are for the three-pedal version, suggesting Australian sports car fans are prepared to put the work in to maximise driver enjoyment.

They won’t be disappoint­ed.

Accurate steering with a sensibly paced response gels nicely with a firm but progressiv­e brake pedal perfectly placed for heel-and-toe downshifti­ng.

Nissan dodged the trend for multi-mode shock absorbers attempting to be all things for any circumstan­ce, settling for surprising­ly plush fixed settings intended for a weekend cruise rather than a track attack.

It feels far more polished than the roughedged 370Z. It has the old car’s short wheelbase, a trait that lends agility at the cost of occasional­ly fidgety responses or a snappy movement from the tail.

Enthusiast­s might be disappoint­ed by a lack of ultimate precision and control but this is a car for a broader slice of the motoring public than the uncompromi­sing track-day crowd.

Pitched as a “dance partner” rather than a beast that must be tamed, the new Z delivers a satisfying­ly familiar driving experience as opposed to white-knuckle thrills.

It’s more of a relaxed cruiser than a scalpelsha­rp sports car – a feel-good classic that backs up retro charm with driving joy.

VERDICT

An attractive and engaging throwback, the new Nissan Z is a modern classic.

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