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After a mediocre 2000 season, with vice-titles
in the driver- and constructor- championships
behind the victorious Mugen-NSXs, Nissan came back with only
three of the previous four Skylines for the seven races of
the 2001 champ-ionship. After disappointing 11th and 15th
championship-positions in 2000, Team Hasemi had left
the Skyline-Ensemble during the winter-break to try its luck
in a GT300 Silvia for 2001.
NISMO remained with two cars in the championship.
The No.22 Xanavi Hiroto GT-R was driven by the German Michael
Krumm and Tetsuya Tanaka, who came for
Ex-Formula-One-driver Ukyo Katayama. The No. 23 Pennzoil Zexel
GT-R kept the driver-couple of former Formula-One-driver Erik
Comas from France and Tetsuya Tanaka, who were drivers champions
in 1998 and vice-champions in 2000. The duo of Kazuyoshi Hoshino
and Satoshi Motoyama, 3rd of the drivers championship in 2000,
stayed with Team Impul’s No.12 Calsonic Skyline, although
Hoshino was substi-tuted by Naoki Hattori for the first three
races of the season.
All three cars were updated versions of
the BNR34 of the 2000 JGTC Season, which is 4600mm long and
1885mm wide (100mm more than the standard GT-R).
Similar to the production R34 GT-Rs, the JGTC Race-car is
powered by the twin-turbocharged RB26DETT. Thanks to a larger
stroke and in effect a larger displacement of 2708cc, this
powerplant pumps out 460hp at 6000rpm and 700Nm of torque
at 4400rpm in race-spec. Power is delivered to the rear-wheels
only, via an XTRAC 6-speed sequential gearbox. Omitting the
all-wheel-drive of the production GT-Rs makes for a better
weight distribution and saves ballast overall. As a result,
the NISMO GT-R weights in at only 1100kg. 335/40R18 tires
front and rear make up for the loss of all-wheel traction.
The
season was opened with a race at the Circuit of Aida. Not
a good track for the Skylines, as it seemed. Best of the Nissans,
the No. 22 Xanavi Hiroto GT-R finished in 4th, behind three
dominant Mugen-NSXs. Even further back, the No. 23 Pennzoil
Zexel and No.12 Calsonic Skylines finished in embarrassing
13th and 15th positions, respectively.
The results of Round 2 at Fuji Speedway
looked much more promising, with the NISMO
Skylines finishing in places three and four. First and second
came the EssoUltraflo and au Cerumo Supras, which had dominated
the Qualifying already.
Almost disastrous were the Skylines’ results
of Round 3 at Sportsland Sugo. The track simply did not fit
the car’s layout. Best of the bunch, the No.12 Calsonic Skyline
finished in 7th position, the No. 23 Pennzoil Skyline came
in 10th and the No. 23 Xanavi Hiroto did not see the finish-line
at all.
For more Information on the JGTC, please
visit the
Official JGTC
Site.
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