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Written by TopGear.com
This is not the first time we"ve seen a convertible Nissan GT-R. A US-based company called Newport Convertible Engineering released a few renders back in 2014, ahead of a planned limited-production run that may not have actually happened.This render is the work of Hungarian master of Photoshoppery X-Tomi Design. It"s based on the 2017 GT-R, which Nissan unveiled at the New York motor show last month, complete with new interior, 20 more bhp and a new, sharp-edged face.And impressive though the render is (looks good, no?), it"s the concept of a GT-R drop-top that bothers us. Why go to such lengths to engineer something as focused and highly-strung as the GT-R, only to lop the roof off and compromise all that hard work?Beats us. If you think differently, do comment vociferously below.
Date written: 4 Apr 2016
More of this article on the Top gear website
ID: 2821
This is not the first time we"ve seen a convertible Nissan GT-R. A US-based company called Newport Convertible Engineering released a few renders back in 2014, ahead of a planned limited-production run that may not have actually happened.This render is the work of Hungarian master of Photoshoppery X-Tomi Design. It"s based on the 2017 GT-R, which Nissan unveiled at the New York motor show last month, complete with new interior, 20 more bhp and a new, sharp-edged face.And impressive though the render is (looks good, no?), it"s the concept of a GT-R drop-top that bothers us. Why go to such lengths to engineer something as focused and highly-strung as the GT-R, only to lop the roof off and compromise all that hard work?Beats us. If you think differently, do comment vociferously below.
Date written: 4 Apr 2016
More of this article on the Top gear website
ID: 2821