RE: Nissan 370Z | Spotted

RE: Nissan 370Z | Spotted

Wednesday 28th May

Nissan 370Z | Spotted

After gold wheels, a big six and an old school attitude? You don't need an M2 CS for that


Sometimes the old ways are the best. While the new BMW M2 CS can boast Carbon Fibre Reinforced Plastic in its construction and 10-stage variable traction control, it is at heart a small(ish) rear-drive BMW with a great big straight six up front boasting loads of power. It’ll insist on having a great time while driving it, like so many cars of this ilk. 

Because from M car to Mustang, there’s little beating the uncomplicated appeal of a front-engined, rear-drive two-door. There ought to be predictability to the handling, some useful space inside, and a nice big boot if you’re lucky as well. Which is why it remains so popular as a sports car layout. Or rather, why it used to be so popular; the CS arrives as the M2 is about to celebrate its 10th anniversary, back when alternatives included the Jaguar F-Type Coupe, Mercedes SLK/C and the Toyobaru twins at a lower price point. A V6-powered Lotus, with the engine in the middle, was significantly more attainable than it is now. An all-wheel-drive Audi TT S was a smart steer, too. It’s not been a great decade for sports car lovers. 

Which, inevitably, makes those we used to have look all the more interesting. The Nissan 370Z arrived in 2009, promising more of what the roguish 350Z had offered up so stylishly half a dozen years earlier. This meant it lacked some of the impact of its predecessor, not helped by launching at the same sort of time as the Lotus Evora and second generation of 987 Cayman. The NISMO a few years later certainly renewed interest, though it always felt like the 370 sold in smaller numbers than the 350. Despite probably being kept on sale a little too long. 

But with the Z replacement not coming here and new sports cars extremely hard to come by, good Zs look all the more appealing. It was never the sharpest knife in the drawer to drive, but offered up a big engine and a big charm offensive. The looks, the sound, the sheer rear-driveness of the Zed ensured a very likeable old-school experience. 

This one looks brilliant, in the fastest colour with a set of natty bronze wheels. There’s even a cloth interior, for full sports-car-like-you-used-to-have vibes. The advert uses a lot of words to say not much at all, but picture 73 of 74 in the gallery (don't say we never do anything for you) shows five Nissan main dealer stamps in the service book. There are also just two owners to the Nissan’s name, a flawless MOT past and 36,000 miles to its name. Or just 6k a year now, because 2019 really is longer ago than we’d like to think.

It’s possible to pay a four-figure sum for a 370Z, if you’re willing to accept a six-figure mileage. And the auto, which you don’t really want to. Decent manual coupes still command more than £10,000, and those on PH start at £14,995. The Vibrant Red Zed is £18,940, or a little over half the £34,285 it would have cost when new. They’ve garnered quite a following, the NISMOs in particular, as a final swansong for Zs in the UK. And with Nissan’s current travails, that situation doesn’t look like changing any time soon. Those who can bear the running costs will surely find the tried and tested methods very attractive indeed. 


SPECIFICATION | NISSAN 370Z

Engine: 3,696cc V6
Transmission: 6-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 328@7,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 269@5,200rpm
MPG: 26.6
CO2: 248g/km
Year registered: 2019
Recorded mileage: 36,522
Price new: £34,285 (before options)
Yours for: £18,940  

See the full advert

Author
Discussion

MrGeoff

Original Poster:

723 posts

187 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
Still have a soft spot for these but dynamically they're just not there, it's very much a 20th century car that probably should have moved on from the 350z but didn't. It's a shame we don't get the current Z offering in the UK as I feel that's what the 370z should have been all along.

ex-devonpaul

1,456 posts

152 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
Interesting - knocking on Z4M Coupe money, but probably without the service costs. And in the real world probably as much fun or more than the new M2.

Gecko1978

11,422 posts

172 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
It's the tax for me that kills these 700+ a year for a second car that's just not as good a Cayman, M2 (even M240), TT-S etc.

I loved the 350 i test drove nearly 20 years ago but opted for an Impreza with a boot an seats in the back. Still like these but the tax made me hate the scooby and this would be the same.


funbobby

1,665 posts

273 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
I'm after one but would prefer post 2017 as i believe the VED drops then but hard to come by in manual.

Puddenchucker

4,936 posts

233 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
Gecko1978 said:
It's the tax for me that kills these 700+ a year...
As this was registered after 2017 and is now over 5 years old the tax will have dropped to <£200 per year.

StoutBench

1,179 posts

43 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
Great cars, a vast improvement on the 350 in terms of weight,handling and speed. Interior not quite so.

cerb4.5lee

37,383 posts

195 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
I've had my Roadster for over 6 years now and I'm a big fan of the old school charm of these for sure(manual/RWD/LSD/bigish V6). As mentioned this one won't cost £760 a year to tax either. Although personally I prefer the GT pack on these for the few extra goodies(nav etc, although the nav is ancient now to be fair), whereas I don't think this has the GT pack on it? These are very playful, and I love them for that. driving




dunnoreally

1,290 posts

123 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
I fairly recently bought a 2014 Infiniti Q60, which shares a great deal with these.

The engine is very much the centre of attention. It really is rather lovely, the VQ37. The rest of the car sort of fades into the background around it, but I think the fact the Infiniti version isn't even trying to be a sports car probably does it some favours. I've done a few long journeys in it and it's a very easy companion. The fact the rear seats can actually can fit people (albeit small ones) is a big part of why I went for it, too.

I still crave a manual, though...

The Pistonsdead

5,304 posts

222 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
Gecko1978 said:
It's the tax for me that kills these 700+ a year for a second car that's just not as good a Cayman, M2 (even M240), TT-S etc.

I loved the 350 i test drove nearly 20 years ago but opted for an Impreza with a boot an seats in the back. Still like these but the tax made me hate the scooby and this would be the same.
Agreed amongst other things too. I bought one with my heart and not my head smile It soon racked up costs and the Road Tax was more than double the insurance for me.
Nevertheless it was OK but never really felt as planted or fun as my previous Clio RS200 Clio .
Was hard to sell on too, lost a few bob but hindsight hey ho.

Alias218

1,520 posts

177 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
The thing with Z cars is that for their price point you struggle to find something comparable: 6 NA pots up front, 2 driven wheels behind, a manual box in the middle. They are rough and ready, and expensive to tax if you land in the wrong year but I’ve always struggled to find anything to replace my 350 (11 years and counting!) on the basis that it’s hard to find anything that’s quite like it. The closest I’ve come to getting rid of it is when a tasty looking Z06 Corvette came up for sale a couple of years ago. I find the heavyset nature of them a good antidote to todays over-assisted cars. You have to drive a Z. I found some new suspension bits and chunkier wheels gave it a new eagerness in the corners it was perhaps lacking before. I don’t intend to sell it for a good while (unless another Corvette turns my head).


the-norseman

14,327 posts

186 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
I started looking for a 370Z years ago and ended up buying a 981 Cayman S instead.


Mabbs9

1,406 posts

233 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all


Mine's a manual. Low tax bracket and less than 20K miles. I still enjoy it.

Wab1974uk

1,155 posts

42 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
I had an early GT when they came out.

Entertainment was annoying. Made more so by the fact not long after Nissan upgraded it. Damn.

Great engine, if a little gruff, but pulled hard. Gearbox was great.

At slow speeds the diffs clunked about.

The only real negative for me was the driving position. Fixed reach steering wheel meant if my arms were right, my legs were crunched up. Legs right, steering wheel too far away. Such an easy fix which would have made the car so much nicer to drive.

CABC

5,981 posts

116 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
always wanted to like these but several road dives in a 350 and 370 left me cold. they feel heavy.
that said, I had a long session at Driftworks in an MX5 and then a 350....then the chassis came alive. I think a few well judged mods might be needed to make the best of these, not that that's a bad thing.

pre-2017 tax issue is going to kill many cars. PH is quite aware of it but suspect the wider public are often shocked at the cost for their prospective weekend car and so the impact will get a lot worse. That'll pump up the prices of these 2017 cars though!

MustangGT

13,199 posts

295 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
CABC said:
always wanted to like these but several road dives in a 350 and 370 left me cold. they feel heavy.
that said, I had a long session at Driftworks in an MX5 and then a 350....then the chassis came alive. I think a few well judged mods might be needed to make the best of these, not that that's a bad thing.

pre-2017 tax issue is going to kill many cars. PH is quite aware of it but suspect the wider public are often shocked at the cost for their prospective weekend car and so the impact will get a lot worse. That'll pump up the prices of these 2017 cars though!
If the quoted RRP is correct it would be easy to keep it below the magic £40k, therefore these models are at an advantage compared with similar cars costing over £40k. Being 2019 registered would mean it is likely there is a t least 12 months left of the over £40k penalty for similar aged competitors cars.

MissChief

7,544 posts

183 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
cerb4.5lee said:
I've had my Roadster for over 6 years now and I'm a big fan of the old school charm of these for sure(manual/RWD/LSD/bigish V6). As mentioned this one won't cost £760 a year to tax either. Although personally I prefer the GT pack on these for the few extra goodies(nav etc, although the nav is ancient now to be fair), whereas I don't think this has the GT pack on it? These are very playful, and I love them for that. driving



That's boss that. cloud9

bobj42

89 posts

26 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
Tried one on a drift day.
My head spent more time sideways than the car, 'cos I couldn't really fit in with a helmet on.
Like most Japanese sports cars, it doesn't really accommodate people over 6 foot.

cerb4.5lee

37,383 posts

195 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
MissChief said:
cerb4.5lee said:
I've had my Roadster for over 6 years now and I'm a big fan of the old school charm of these for sure(manual/RWD/LSD/bigish V6). As mentioned this one won't cost £760 a year to tax either. Although personally I prefer the GT pack on these for the few extra goodies(nav etc, although the nav is ancient now to be fair), whereas I don't think this has the GT pack on it? These are very playful, and I love them for that. driving



That's boss that. cloud9
Thanks very much! beer

They're very marmite cars for sure(especially the drop top), but I've always been a massive fan of both the 350 and 370 in either guise for definite though. smilethumbup

Hairymonster

1,627 posts

120 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
How does the tax work then?

At 248g/km surely it stays in the top £700 bracket forever.

soad

33,948 posts

191 months

Wednesday 28th May
quotequote all
Prefer a cheaper 350Z myself, although Nismo versions appeal more.