I got to know some very influential people at Nissan and Nismo and knew the honorary president of the GT-R club at the time well. I was familiar with the GT1 racing category, which was the homologation specials. As time went on, they introduced LMP at Le Mans and GT racing so GT1 became its own FIA-approved world series. To meet the regulations a car had to have sold a minimum of 20 units. Nismo decided to enter the series in 2009. As Nissan already had the GT-R, had sold 1000 units, and it shared a chassis with the race car, Nismo were able to build four race cars. The GT1 regulations at that time were up to 600hp, and some people say it was one of the best periods of racing because of the lack of driver aids and silencers.
Nismo entered the GT1 world series and competed in it in 2010 and 2011, winning the driver’s championship that year. The cars were run by the guy who setup the Time Attack series and a tuning company called Sumo Power. But then the FIA killed it off in 2012 and Nismo asked for all the cars back.
I knew a lot of the people involved and asked if I could buy one and was told in no uncertain terms that wouldn’t be possible. But because of some contacts I had, I received a call sometime later to go to the Spa 24 Hours so Nismo could vet me as a suitable potential owner. I ended up buying a completely original factory GT1 race car. I even got the build certificate from the president of Nismo, and all its race history. The only thing not original about that car is its colour. It was wrapped. I’ve owned it since 2012.
