Grand Am Since its introduction in 2002, it did not take long for drivers and teams to enter a 350Z for competition when B.J. Zacharias and Michiel Schuitemaker of Schuitemaker Motorsports helped the car to make its début in the
Grand-Am Cup Series at the start of the 2003 season. They have taken a few podium finishes with Unitech Racing who is also the other team to field a Z33, but effort was proved to be successful under the name of
Geddings Racing scoring wins along with the other current Grand-Am entrant East Competition Promotorsport. The Grand-Am Cup car has also been used in the new
FIA GT4 European Cup. Schuitemaker Motorsports with drivers Michiel Schuitemaker and BJ Zacharias won 3rd place in the '03
Grand-Am Cup season. The following year, they improved and finished in 2nd place. After winning 3rd overall in the '03 season, Nissan had Wright Tuning build a new 350Z race car for the '04 season. This car differed from the '03 car in that it was completely stripped and seam welded. The cage was lighter and stiffer by using different diameter tubing where possible. The car used a Menard's built engine with a Pectel engine management system. Overall racing weight was which was the minimum allowable weight for its class. The '04 chassis proved to be the most successful chassis to run in Grand-Am to date. The '03 chassis was sold to a French team with Edouardo Atkatlan as the driver. It still competes in the European "Fun Races" today, winning 2nd place in the inaugural '07 race in Madrid, Spain.
JGTC/Super GT The 350Z replaced the
Skyline GT-R as the car for Nissan's factory and customer teams in the
Super GT's GT 500 class. The cars used are heavily modified and had a longer nose and tail (requiring the production of the Type-E homologation special), carbon fiber bodywork, and a tube chassis. In 2004, Nismo won the GT500 championship. Until the 2007 season, the car was powered by a
VQ30DETT V6, then a new 4.5L
V8 powerplant was developed. The 350Z, with slightly more pedestrian modifications also competed in the GT300 class, having started there even before the
Skyline GT-Rs were replaced, by teams such as Endless Sports and Mola. In 2003 Hasemi Sports won the GT300 championship with the 350Z. In the 2008 season, the 350Zs were all replaced by
Nissan GT-Rs in the GT500 class, but they continued to be used in the GT300 class as the
GT-Rs exceed the class's horsepower limits. Two 350Zs competed in the series and MOLA won both the Drivers' and Teams' championships in the GT300 class.
Super Taikyu The Z33 also appears in Japan's
Super Taikyu series, entered by C-West Labs.
British GT Championship The
British GT Championship also fielded a
privateer 350Z which competed in the series until 2006.
SCCA GT-2 prepped Nissan 350Z.The 350Z is a popular choice for amateurs and professionals competing in
SCCA events. T.C Kline achieved third place in the 2003 Touring 2 category in one of three Z33s that qualified to the SCCA T-2 runoffs that year. In the SCCA GT2 class, Jim Goughary took the title in the car's debut season. The car has also seen success in
SCCA solo events. In 2006, Carter Thompson's 350Z lost the SCCA National Championship by 0.1 second over two days of competition. The 350Z has achieved a high level of success at the National Solo Championships since 2006. Although production of the 350Z was discontinued in 2009, the car continues to compete in local and national SCCA events. As recently as 2015, 350Z solo drivers Jeff Stuart and Bryan Heitkotter were rated as the top two SCCA drivers competing in national autocross.
NASA In 2012, NASA (
National Auto Sport Association), created a class of racing specifically for the 350Z. The "Spec Z" class includes all trim levels of the popular 2003-2008 Nissan 350Z in a single class focused on close competition, parity and cost containment that will showcase driving ability and car setup skills. The road racing series is backed by
Nissan Motorsports and BFG Tires. The [https://web.archive.org/web/20120227054557/http://www.nasaproracing.com/rules/spec_z/NASA_SZrules_2012.pdf 2012 class rules were in their infant stage, but solidified by mid-2012.
Drifting in 2012 The 350Z is a popular platform for
import events and
drifting, where in the latter, drivers including
Ryuji Miki,
Youichi Imamura, Tyler McQuarrie and
Tanner Foust have used them with success in the
D1 Grand Prix and
Formula D series. During the 2006 D1 Grand Prix exhibition event at the
Las Vegas Motor Speedway,
Tanner Foust, driving a 350Z, became the first competitor to achieve a perfect score of 100. Two Z33s competed in the non-Japanese domestic D1 Grand Prix spin-off series, D1 Great Britain. In the 2007 season, both SVA Imports and Sumo Power competed using 350Zs in the European Drift Championship. In
Formula D, Foust was awarded the runner-up spot in Round 1. In Round 2,
Chris Forsberg scored a maiden victory Forsberg's win for the 350Z was followed-up by
Youichi Imamura's win during the Las Vegas round of the US$1 Grand Prix series in his
RB26DETT-engined car. Foust would eventually take his 350Z to the
Formula D title.
Open road racing Option magazine founder Daijiro Inada used an extensively modified 350Z, dubbed
Option Stream Z, to compete in the
Silver State Classic Challenge. The car was equipped with a
GReddy/Trust T88
turbo-charger and was stroked to 3.8 L to produce over . The
Option Stream Z appeared in the games
Gran Turismo 4,
Gran Turismo 5, and
Gran Turismo (PSP).
Speed trials In 2004, the tuner Dandy and magazine
Option entered a Z33 known as the "Option Dandy 380Z" with a donor engine from a salvaged Stream Z with a deleted turbo, producing , to compete in the F/GT class for naturally aspirated grand touring sport cars at the
Bonneville Speed Week. The car reached a speed of , measured over a fixed distance. ==Advertising and promotions==