RE: Nissan Skyline GTR (R33) | Spotted
RE: Nissan Skyline GTR (R33) | Spotted
Today

Nissan Skyline GTR (R33) | Spotted

Standard, UK-supplied and with very few miles - those after the ultimate R33 need look no further


What Nissan wouldn’t do right now for a car with the reach and recognition of the GT-R? The R35 hasn’t actually been out of production all that long, yet already feels like it’s from a bygone era. Over 30 years and across four generations, the design cues, the performance and the giant-killing reputation made for an unrivalled GT-R legacy. Nissan has hinted at a return - and with its electrification expertise it’d surely be perfectly placed to have another go - but there are bigger priorities for the company right now. 

And we’ve had big gaps between generations before, with five years between R34 and R35. So, for now, fans must wait, during which time interest in the classics will surely only increase. Or at least not diminish. For many the mid-'90s R33 sits as the awkward middle child of the Skyline GT-Rs, without the shock value of the original or the movie star prestige of the R34. But it shouldn’t be forgotten that this was the Skyline that went to Le Mans, the one that lapped the Nurburgring in less than eight minutes, and which was the foundation for epic thousand-horsepower builds. These days it feels more and more like the R33 is recognised as an equal among peers. 

It has additional significance for GT-R fans, of course, as it was the first one officially sold in the UK. There were 100 R33s brought over from Japan, readied for our roads by Middlehurst Motorsport, and sold through dealerships alongside Micras, Almeras and Primeras. What a sight one of these in the window must have made. 

Understandably, and alongside the 80 R34s that followed, the UK-supplied Skylines have become the most collectable. This is one of them, and not just any UK R33 either: it’s a one-owner, unmodified, 26,000-mile machine. It’s hard to imagine many others, if any, exist like this. 

Because that’s not ‘unmodified’ in a Japanese car sense, where it ‘just’ has an exhaust or an air filter or bit more boost. This is as it was sold (for £50,000) back in 1998, down to the Kenwood CD changer and Middlehurst mats. As such, it presents as something of a GT-R memorial, evidence of where the story began before they were taken to a wilder world entirely. And quite a handsome one these days, too. 

Given the flawlessness of the outside, it’d have to be assumed that this Skyline has been mechanically cherished also. But you’d obviously want to see proof of that. Low mileage doesn’t mean low maintenance, after all, especially with an engine as special as the RB26. And especially when the cars are now worth so much: this one is for sale at £90k, about twice what a similar machine was up for in 2022. But with the GT-R story currently dormant, and demand greater for standard Skylines than 10-second cars, it’ll surely won’t be long until it finds a new home. Won’t be long before a 30th birthday celebration is in order…


SPECIFICATION | NISSAN SKYLINE GT-R (R33)

Engine: 2,568cc, twin-turbo straight six
Transmission: 5-speed manual, all-wheel drive
Power(hp): 280@6,800rpm
Torque(lb ft): 271@4,400rpm
MPG: N/A
CO2: N/A
First registered: 1998
Recorded mileage: 26,333
Price new: £50,000
Yours for: £89,995

See the original advert

Author
Discussion

Bluehorseshoe

Original Poster:

16 posts

1 month

This does not seem a crazy price for the car i always loved this era. Just wish it was midnight purple

Antipodes

73 posts

134 months

Rare to see one that hasn’t been fettled. I’d be curious to have a drive if this, not that I’ll have that chance! I recall a brief ride in a purple car with 500hp at the wheels; the propulsion on boost and the soundscape was utterly splendid. As such I don’t think I could keep one standard, but chapeau to this seller

Noe

100 posts

309 months

Ugly before. Ugly now

ChrisCh86

1,099 posts

70 months

Leather seats? Different front bumper?

Looks like a few changes from the JDM version of the time.


This has always been my favourite version of the Skyline GT-R, even if everyone else thinks it's a boat. I'll have mine in Midnight Purple please!

Augustus Windsock

3,748 posts

181 months

Personally I’d rather have a mint R32 GTR V-Spec or an R34, this really looks like the runt of the litter to me.
I’m sure this example is lovely, and try finding another but for me it’s a resounding ‘no’…

TheJimi

27,383 posts

269 months

I also, will have my R33 in Midnight purple, with NISMO LMGT4s or VOLK TE37s.


Robertb

3,631 posts

264 months

With some criticism being levelled at older German cars, what is factory/OE parts support like for Japanese "modern classic" cars?

IdiotRace

161 posts

212 months

I think Nissan have been pretty good with heritage parts for the GT-R although from what I found they do cost an arm and a leg.

nismo48

6,553 posts

233 months

Great old Japanese saloon from a time when spotting one of these was a rare thing.

WPA

14,170 posts

140 months

Lovely car but struggling with £90k

J4CKO

46,282 posts

226 months

Augustus Windsock said:
Personally I d rather have a mint R32 GTR V-Spec or an R34, this really looks like the runt of the litter to me.
I m sure this example is lovely, and try finding another but for me it s a resounding no
Yeah, R32 is my favourite, these were always a bit meh compared to that and the R34, lady at works other half got one in Midnight Purple, was impressive but didnt lust after it.

Wonder where R35 values will go, might just be natural inflation but there arent really any under 40k any more, doesnt seem that long ago they dipped to 30k, even into the high twenties for leggy ones.

foxhounduk

686 posts

206 months

The original bad boy. Just needs to be in Midnight Purple. No EV can ever match the theatre.

cerb4.5lee

42,567 posts

206 months

It has the same steering wheel as the S14a 200SX I had. biggrin

Not my personal favourite shape wise, and I'd have both an R32 or R34 over the R33, but lovely to see nonetheless. cool

Cactussed

5,358 posts

239 months

Owned 2 of these.
Engines are actually a bit wheezy in standard trim (Jap regs a/agreement on power limits). A set of cams makes a huge difference.

Loved both of mine, one of which was midnight purple.

TheJimi

27,383 posts

269 months

Generally, when people say xyz car is "the runt of the litter" I can look at the car and appreciate where they're coming from, even if I don't necessarily agree with the point.

When I look at the R33 GTR and hear people say it's the runt of the litter, I'm always left wondering what I'm missing :hehe



CH80

387 posts

23 months

Interesting, but not £90k interesting...

Its Just Adz

18,242 posts

235 months

R33 is my favourite of the trio.
It was the car that featured on video games and Clarkson videos of that era, so the one that stuck in my mind.
I still think it's got the best styling, although that's subjective.

I would love to have a play in a proper tuned one.

Dombilano

1,403 posts

81 months

Never knew the R33 came with a nose lift option

Jonny1984

308 posts

188 months

Drive past Middlehurst most days and always slow down to have a look in the window smile

I remember when I was a kid and Firsway Nissan in Leigh had an R33 on a rotating plinth! It looked stunning back then. R33 is my favourite shape, but sadly I'm priced out of ever owning one now.

cerb4.5lee

42,567 posts

206 months

Jonny1984 said:
Drive past Middlehurst most days and always slow down to have a look in the window smile

I remember when I was a kid and Firsway Nissan in Leigh had an R33 on a rotating plinth! It looked stunning back then. R33 is my favourite shape, but sadly I'm priced out of ever owning one now.
I remember being about £9k short for an R34 GTR years back(I had a tight and strict budget of £20k), with hindsight now, I really wished that I could've stretched to one though for sure. I do have the original sales brochure for one in my garage at least though! hehe