The Last Prince R380 .....

ZHead

Well-Known Forum User
For anyone who doubts the ability of Prince and subsequently Nissan / Prince to build a glorius engine in the mid sixties, just look at this and listen to the engine (2.0 straight six). Absolutely glorius sound.... I also love the look of pride on Sakurai san's face..... maybe a little old man now but this old man played a major part in the car's build and is credited on the video notes as being "coach builder, father of Nissan Skyline series).

Alan, can you shed any more light please ?????



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XwfjAXNQNC8

Found this video on you tube, according to the notes associated with it :

doorman : Yasuo AOJI (PRINCE/NISMO team managing director)
driver : Shinichiro SAKURAI (coach builder,father of NISSAN SKYLINE series)

PRINCE R380 RACING-CAR is powered by GR8 engine, to beat the porsche 904 & 906 at the Third Grand Prix of Japan.

GR8 engine was a straight-6 DOHC engine produced by PRINCE MOTOR COMPANY in 1965.
in 1968, NISSAN detuned it for novice drivers, and built S20 engine.
S20 was essentially the same as the GR8.

# S20 powered NISSAN Skyline GT-R (KPGC10 and KPGC110) and Fairlady Z432 models



This got my interest so I did some research and found this on Wikipedia :

The Prince R380 was a racing car built in 1965 by Prince Motor Company to compete in the Japanese Grand Prix. Following the merger of Prince Motor Company and Nissan Motors in 1966, the R380 was modified by into the Nissan R380-II (also known as R380 Mk.II).

In 1964, Prince had entered their new S54 Skyline 2000GTs in the second Japanese Grand Prix, hoping to prove the performance potential of the car's new G-7 Straight-6. Although the cars performed well, they were defeated by a privately entered Porsche 904 GTS, leaving the Skylines to take second through sixth positions.
Realizing the superiority of the mid-engine layout used on the Porsche 904, Prince decided that a custom-built sports car would be needed to win the Japanese Grand Prix. The car was built from scratch, with an all new chassis being developed to house the engine in the middle. Aerodynamic bodywork was also used, with exposed buttresses over the rear engine cover.
For an engine, Prince would use the same G engine that the Skylines had used, but adapted it specifically for racing. The new unit, known as GR8, would be a 1996 cc Straight-6 that produced 200 hp (150 kW). A Hewland 5-speed racing gearbox would be used in the transmission.
When Nissan took over the project, the bodywork of the R380 was completely redesigned. The rear buttresses were replaced with a flowing cockpit and engine cover, while the vents and ductwork of the car was further refined. Nissan was able to increase power in the GR8 engine to 220 hp (164 kW).
[edit] Racing history

Due to the cancellation of the Japanese Grand Prix in 1965, the R380 would be used by Prince to test high speed aerodynamics. This led to the car being used to break five E-class land speed records in late 1965.
For the 1966 Japanese Grand Prix at Fuji Speedway, Prince would enter four R380s, while a trio of newer Porsche 906s would also be entered. In the end, the R380s would take the overall victory, with Giichi Sunako's R380 ahead of Hideo Oishi's second place R380.
Following the rebuilding of the R380s by Nissan, four cars were once again entered in the Japanese Grand Prix. However, the 906s would be able to overcome the previous year's loss, leaving the R380-IIs to settle for second, third, fourth, and sixth. The margin of victory was nearly two minutes. Nissan would later use an R380-II to set new land speed records, breaking seven records in October of that year.
Following Nissan's development of the newer R381 in 1968, the R380s were sold to privateers. Three were once again entered in the Japanese Grand Prix, where they took third, fourth, and fifth places. Another R380 went on to win the 12 Hours of Surfer's Paradise in Australia. 1969 saw one R380 taking second place in the 1000km of Fuji race, and yet another second place in 1970 at a 200 mile (320 km) event at Fuji.
In 2005, Nismo would restore an R380-II and use it for exhibition events, running alongside other cars in the R380 series.
 

Russ

Club Member
Nice find thank you, engine sounds nice ;)

Must say this has sparked my interest. I always dream of my ultimate car collection, and as the years go by it becomes satisfied more and more by Nissans. The only one I'm missing at the moment is a Nissan muscle car (has to be a Charger then followed by a Stang). Now my GT40 lust can be replaced by a Nissan R380-II

Check out how pretty it is!

http://www.supercars.net/Pics?v=y&s=c&id=3653&p=1967_Nissan_R380II1.jpg
 

ZHead

Well-Known Forum User
Glad you liked the video.....

I honestly think we are missing a huge trick not looking at the heritage of our S30s ... I know the Prince R380 was nothing to do with an S30 but it's GR8 engine spawned the S20 engine .... so there is a link

The more you look into it, the more you realise that there is a huge cosmos of history behind these cars.

Dull to some but it is starting to fascinate me :unsure:
 
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