Rare Nissan Skyline GT-R R34 Nismo Z-Tune Briefcase Costs $10,000
A necessary accessory to complete the package. But was it worth the money?
Before the modern Nissan GT-R has gained its current notoriety, the Japanese marque had the Skyline GT-R R34, which also had the shortest production run from 1999 to 2002. This makes this generation of the GT-R one of the rarest and the last to use the legendary RB-Series inline-six engine.
A chosen few of those Skyline GT-R R34s was more special, though. Through Nismo, Nissan's motorsport arm, less than 20 samples of those Skyline GT-R R34 units were given special attention known as the Z-Tune. All of these were in Z-Tune Silver finish, except for one in Midnight Purple, which was the world's most expensive GT-R – that's before the Nissan GT-R50 by Italdesign was born, of course.
Gallery: Nissan Skyline GT-R R34 Nismo Z-Tune Carbon Fiber Briefcase
However, all samples of the Skyline GT-R R34 Nismo Z-Tune came with a unique carbon fiber briefcase – so unique that the chassis number on the car matches the plaque on its accompanying accessory.
The briefcase wasn't just a novelty, though. It's made with high-quality materials, of course, plus it contains an original Nismo software CD, a diagnostic cable, and a special edition Z-Tune hardcover catalog that contains never-before-seen road test and beauty images of the rare GT-R.
Now, the R34 Nismo Z-Tune in the video on top of this story was missing its briefcase twin, until it was found under the ownership of a Nismo collector. Fortunately, the collector was willing to let go of the briefcase but at a hefty price: $10,000.
The owner of the Nismo Z-Tune here complied, of course, otherwise, we won't have a story to write about. What do you think? Was the briefcase worth the money? Let us know in the comments section below.
Source: Contempo Concept
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
The Stick Shift Isn't Dead Yet: Every Manual Car You Can Still Buy In 2026
GM Still Leads The US In Sales. But EV Demand Is Slipping
Nissan's Boss Admits Chasing 'Volume, Volume, Volume' Was Wrong
Man Takes His Car To Speedway And Puts In $22 Worth Of Gas. Then He Tries To Turn On The Engine: ‘Don’t use E-15’
Honda CEO Teases Imminent Nissan Deal
Tennessee Man Reaches For Item At Lowe's. Then He Runs Into A Surprising New Touchscreen: ‘No Need To Wait’
Nissan Gives The Frontier A Star Spangled Makeover