What do you get when you
cross a Nissan Juke with a Nissan GT-R? Nissan is now creating the Juke-R, the first
ever super crossover.
Currently under development
the bold design of the
Juke is clear to see. However, with the addition of flared wheel arches,
revised front and rear bumpers plus a unique split rear wing, this is no
standard crossover – it's a
Juke that thinks it's a GT-R – and
with good reason. However, the car is not for production and is a one-off, road legal
concept car, developed
by Nissan and built by
leading motorsports outfit RML with input from Nissan Technology Centre for Europe (NTC-E).
Under the bonnet is a
3.8-litre twin-turbo V6 engine adopted directly from Nissan's flagship
supercar. Under the boot floor hides the GT-R's six-speed transaxle, with the
front and rear ends joined by a modified GT-R 4WD driveline and prop shaft,
while chunky 20-inch RAYS forged alloy rims fill each wheel arch.
The interior merges
crossover and supercar with finesse, as the Juke's dashboard has been
transformed to accommodate the gauges, dials and 7-inch customisable LCD display from the GT-R.
The Juke's iconic centre console, inspired by the fuel tank of a motorcycle, remains while the
rest of the interior has the look of a machine bred for the track. Twin race-seats with five-point
harnesses sit inside a visible roll cage that gives FIA safety standards as well as enhanced rigidity to provide
the ultimate performance.
"Juke lends
itself perfectly to a sports derivative and Juke-R explores that territory.
Equally at home on road and track, Juke-R showcases two of the most exciting
cars in our range and highlights the technical innovation that drives Nissan.
This car will more than live up to the dynamic driving experience we engineer into all our cars,” said Paul Willcox, Senior Vice President, Sales
and Marketing for Nissan in Europe.
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