2022 vs 2023 Supra

The manual transmission has finally returned to the Toyota Supra and recently, we had the chance to drive the new Toyota GR Supra MT in Utah. We had time behind the wheel both on the track at Utah Motorsports Campus and on quiet streets around the track.

During that time, we asked you what you wanted to know about it. We covered a lot of the details in our full review but some of the more minute details were answers to your specific questions. Here they are.

Is anything else different other than the gearbox?

2022 vs 2023 Supra

Absolutely. Both the manual and the automatic versions of the 2023 Supra get updated suspension tuning but the MT also gets new ABS and traction control programming. Additionally, there’s a cool new feature called Hairpin+ which will actually allow for more wheel slip, and potentially some drifty moments, while going uphill. There’s also an exclusive A91-MT trim which is only available with three pedals.

Does the rev-match work?

2022 vs 2023 Supra

Again, yes. During our testing of the GR Supra MT, the GR Corolla was also available and far more popular. We took that extra time to really put the Supra through its paces and can confirm that auto rev-matching does a good job of emulating what a highly-skilled heel-toe downshift does.

Read More: We’re Out Driving The 2023 Toyota GR Corolla And This Is What It Sounds Like

Of course, for those who want to do it themselves, the iMT function which controls rev-match can be switched off. We have a much more detailed explanation of the new tech in the Supra MT in our full review.

How badly does it put the Nissan Z to shame?

2022 vs 2023 Supra

This is a question of taste and experience. We haven’t had the chance to drive the Z yet but we plan to in the near future. For now, what we can tell you is that the Z looks faster on paper and is considerably less expensive. Beyond that, the Supra will almost certainly be the more luxurious car to own and drive. Clearly though, BMW has quite a bit to do with that.

How bad is the rev hang?

2022 vs 2023 Supra

In two words, not bad. In fact, it’s almost unnoticeable in everyday driving scenarios. The use of direct injection and what we suspect is a lot of clever programming surely assists in reducing rev hang.

Can I now get a BMW Z4 with a stick?

2022 vs 2023 Supra

No – but evidently, BMW is considering it even if only for the US market. Much like the way that the Supra is only available with a stick in the 3.0 and not the 2.0, it sounds like if the Z4 gets a third pedal it’ll only be available on the M40i trim level.

Did we miss anything else that you wanted to know? Feel free to ask in the comments below!

Nostalgia is a powerful thing. It pervades so much of the zeitgeist, with TV reboots getting cranked out at an almost alarming rate, and vinyl record sales topping $1 billion for the first time since 1986. Car enthusiasts are a particularly nostalgic bunch; just look at the values of the cars Gen X and Millennials saw as icons. This cultural force has seen a number of great nameplates revived, like the Toyota Supra, or reinvigorated with an eye towards past glories, as is the case with the new Nissan Z.

Z vs. Supra is by no means a perennial battle like Mustang vs. Camaro, though the 300ZX and Supra went after the sort looking for a fast, technologically advanced, sports-GT through the Eighties and Nineties. Today, these two fit the more traditional sports car mold: Six-cylinder engines under a long hood, two seats in the middle, driven wheels at the back.

Price Comparison

This comparison test was obvious beyond any nostalgic connections. The Nissan Z costs $51,015 in "Performance" guise, makes 400 hp and 350 lb-ft from a twin-turbo V-6 and weighs 3507 pounds. The Supra 3.0 starts at $52,500, makes 382 hp and 368 lb-ft from a single-turbo straight-six, and weighs 3347 pounds.

(We're simplifying things a bit, as the base Z costs $41,015, though it does without the limited-slip differential, upgraded brakes, and sportier suspension tune of the Performance model. The Supra starts at $43,450, however, that's with four-cylinder power. Our Z tester was a $54,015 2023 "Proto" spec, mechanically identical to the Performance but with gold wheels and yellow interior accents. The Supra was a 2022 Premium model retailing for $57,355.)

Choice of venue was obvious, too. Lime Rock Park is one of America's great road courses, fast, flowing, and surrounded by gorgeous country roads that would give us the opportunity to thoroughly test each car. Lime Rock is also one of the tracks where the original Datsun Z made its mark, earning a reputation as one of the finest sports cars on sale in America. Driving a car that evokes the 240Z, channeling legends like Bob Sharp, Sam Posey, Paul Newman, and many others, was irresistible.

Did someone say something about nostalgia?

2023 nissan z performance and 2022 toyota supra 30

DW Burnett

Nissan Z on Track

The Z exudes traditional sports-car charm. This new model rides on the same chassis as the 370Z, itself an update of the 350Z that entered production 20 years ago, Consequently, it feels old, but in a good way.

While not an out-and-out track car, the Z was a joy around Lime Rock, and impressively quick. Editor-at-Large Travis Okulski was on hand to set lap times, and we followed our usual procedure where each car got a handful of hot laps. The idea is not to get the quickest time possible, but to show how approachable a car is. The Z posted a 1:02.603 in its third flying lap around the "classic" 1.5-mile layout of the circuit. A very respectable time, and one that wasn't difficult to achieve, thanks to its balanced chassis, stability under braking, and communicative controls. Okulski said the Z drives like a big Miata and everyone else agreed. There's a fair bit of body roll in cornering, though the car never feels like it's overworking the tires. That roll, combined with well-weighted steering—and a great steering wheel—give the driver a tangible sense of connection. Okulski noted some mid-corner understeer in Lime Rock's long first turn, Big Bend, yet it can be managed with a slight lift of the throttle. It's all wonderfully cohesive, the rear faithfully following the front, giving the driver a ton of confidence.

Nissan equipped our tester with NISMO brake pads, which will be available at dealers for $450 a set. The brakes were a highlight, giving fade-free performance throughout our track time. Pedal feel was good, too, with a little bit of "sneeze factor" at the top of the travel, and easy modulation. Those are great qualities for Lime Rock, which has only one big brake zone, at the end of the front straight, where the Z was hitting around 125 mph, and a few spots where a dab of brake is necessary to scrub off speed. The only caveats here are that the pads are quite pricey and generate an extraordinary amount of dust.

2023 nissan z performance and 2022 toyota supra

DW Burnett

The Z returns to turbocharging for the first time since the demise of the Z32 300ZX in 2000, borrowing a 3.0-liter unit from Infiniti. When you first get on throttle, there's a bit of lag, followed by the two turbochargers spooling up very progressively and providing linear delivery to a little over 6000 rpm. (Peak power is achieved at 6400 rpm, but torque drops off above 5200 rpm.) Overall, it's a very nice engine, if not entirely special, and it gives the Z serious pace.

Our tester was equipped with a manual, and we couldn't be more delighted. Well, we could. The gates aren't as precisely defined as we'd like, and both Okulski and I worried about accidental 5-2 downshifts braking into turn one. I found the pedals to be well-spaced for heel-and-toe, though Okulski—who has excessively long legs—didn't. It's somewhat of a moot point, because the transmission comes with auto rev-matching—something Nissan pioneered—which works intuitively. A short-shift kit would help the feel here. We kept coming back to two words: "engaging" and "fun." The Z is a great sports car, plain and simple, a reminder of why we fell in love with sports cars in the first place. For the money, a Camaro SS 1LE is perhaps a better track car, but for someone who mainly drives on the road and does one or two track days a year, the Z is just about perfect.

Toyota Supra on Track

Notably, "engaging" or "fun" were not words used to describe the Supra. Fast? Definitely. It beat the Z with a 1:02.151 and we're confident it could've gone even quicker (a Supra test we did in 2019 for an all-out lap time saw one turn a 1:01.51 at Lime Rock). Thank the Supra's Michelin Pilot Super Sports, which are superior to the Z's Bridgestone S007s, the eight-speed automatic in this test car, and a higher roll stiffness. Unfortunately, we're still about a month out from testing the new, manual Supra, making this a slightly lopsided fight.

The experience simply isn't as enjoyable. Speed comes much easier in the Supra, though there's a nagging sense that the car is more eager to bite you. The rear end is far too soft, wandering under braking, struggling with the prodigious output of the BMW straight-six, and generally unable to keep up with the very sharp front end. Unlike with the Z, where you occasionally have to think about the fronts washing out, the Supra requires focus on the rear.

It's not all bad, of course. The engine is the highlight, far smoother than the Z's V-6 and with much better throttle response despite only having one turbo. There's much more low-end torque, too, and the straight-six pulls harder to its 7000-rpm redline. Most of the time, the ZF eight-speed automatic works as seamlessly as you'd expect, though Okulski and Digital Director Aaron Brown found that it occasionally denied downshifts.

Interestingly, we all felt the Supra wouldn't be as engaging as the Z even if it had a manual. At least not without some meaningful chassis tweaks. The Toyota holds you at arm's length, with dead steering, and not much more feel through the seat of your pants either. It's faster in hands of all experience levels, just not fun.

"The Supra feels like a newer car," Okulski said. "Which is to say, it has all the bad traits of new cars and all the good traits. It's got a quicker gearbox, a much better, more responsive engine, better tires, a more connected front end, and it also feels like it was built only in pursuit of lap times, not making the driver feel involved in the process."

On the Road

Out on the road, it was a similar story. The Z's playfulness stood out, and the softer setup started to make even more sense. It breathes better with the road and engages at lower speeds, even if it's easily capable of pace that could charitably be described as "extralegal." Outside the track, in the beautiful countryside at Connecticut's north westerly border with New York, the Z feels at home. At road speeds, the turbo lag and the relative imprecision of the gearbox become less noticeable. It is, however, obvious that the Z is a much older car inside, with a lot of cheap switchgear carried over from the 370Z and other Nissan products. It's a necessary evil, as Nissan doesn't have the development budget to build a sports car from the ground up. It’s also easily forgivable because the important stuff—seats, steering wheel, transmission, pedals—is all lovely. The gauge cluster is especially great and gimmick-free, with a nice big tach in the middle and legible gauges for temperatures and pressures. Exactly what you need in a sports car. Bonus points go to the three auxiliary gauges on the dashboard, the best of which is the highly unusual turbo speed sensor, a knock-on benefit of Nissan's use of speed sensors on the turbine shafts.

The Supra's BMW roots are obvious in the cabin, and it feels much more luxurious than the Z. There's a slickness and polish Nissan simply can't match. In some ways, the Supra is the better daily driver, the preferable car to be in when you're puttering around town, clicking off miles on the highway, sitting in traffic, listening to a podcast. Yet, when you're trying to have fun, the Supra doesn't deliver. It's a car that leaves the driver feeling cold and distant, and the suspension tuning isn't right. That rear end skips over bumps and imperfections, and it's much harder to get into a flow with the road surface beneath.

In a perfect world, you'd have the Z's chassis and stunning exterior and the Supra's engine and interior. We don't live in a perfect world, so the Z remains the best choice. After all, this is a sports car. We don't buy sports cars on interior trim; we buy them for the joy they bring to our lives.

Which brings us back neatly to nostalgia. In far more than just looks, the Z evokes the spirit of the sports car greats, its predecessors among them. It's fun for fun's sake, the rare modern car that truly engages the senses like a classic.

It's something of a triumph from Nissan. Its track record over the last few years has been lackluster. We were prepared for disappointment, but the Z lives up to its promise. It's one of the best Nissans since the GT-R. Despite being made with theoretically better, more modern components, the Supra's whole is less than the sum. I'd like to think there's a great sports car in there somewhere, and maybe the 2023 version will be exactly that. For now, if you want a great Toyota-badged sports car, buy a GR86.

For the nostalgia obsessed, the choice is obvious.

Chris Perkins Senior Editor Chris Perkins is the Web Editor for Road & Track magazine.

Will the 2023 Supra have more power?

Toyota has since unlocked more power from the engine (but not more 0-60-mph quickness), added an turbo-four base powertrain as well as a six-speed manual transmission, and improved steering turn-in since the current generation's debut.

Does 2023 Supra have BMW engine?

The manual will be available as a no-cost option with the more powerful turbocharged 3.0-liter BMW-sourced inline-six and will be standard on a new special edition, called the A91-MT model.

How much horsepower will the Supra 2023 have?

3.0-Liter Turbocharged Inline-Six Producing 382 horsepower * with an impressive 368 lb. -ft.

What engine will the 2023 Supra have?

The stick-shifted Supra will be available exclusively with the 3.0-liter straight-six engine that makes 382 hp and 368 lb-ft of torque—same as the eight-speed automatic-equipped GR Supra.