The Nissan Patrol Returns to the Spotlight at SEMA

The Nissan Patrol Returns to the Spotlight at SEMA

Nissan’s booth at this year’s SEMA show has something we didn’t expect to see: the word Patrol. That’s right—the nameplate Nissan USA spent years politely ignoring is suddenly front and center, plastered on not one but two heavily modified off-road builds. For a vehicle Americans were never officially allowed to buy, the Patrol sure knows how to make a comeback.

For the uninitiated, the Nissan Patrol has long been Japan’s answer to the Toyota Land Cruiser. It debuted in 1951 and quickly became a global go-anywhere legend—everywhere except here. U.S. buyers only got a taste in 2017, when Nissan’s second-generation Armada quietly revealed itself to be little more than a rebadged Y62 Patrol. Same bones, different passport.

But now, at SEMA, Nissan’s pulling back the curtain. The company brought two very different takes on the Patrol spirit: a modern off-road support rig and a classic restomod monster.

Nissan Dune Patrol: Luxury Meets the Sandblaster

The first is the Nissan Dune Patrol, which Nissan describes as “the ultimate, ultra-comfortable support vehicle for the most extreme off-road events.” Translation: it’s built to hit the dunes hard without turning your spine into gravel.

Underneath, the Dune Patrol packs serious hardware—custom long-travel suspension bits including control arms, spindles, shock towers, and drive axles, all working with Bilstein-based coil-overs. None of it’s off-the-shelf, but that’s SEMA for you.

The good news? The truck is also a preview of what might come to Nissan’s NISMO accessories catalog. Among the prototype parts are high-clearance bumpers with LED driving lights, tow shackles, rock sliders, a low-profile roof rack with integrated storage boxes, and a NISMO cat-back exhaust. Inside, you’ll find a smattering of catalog-ready add-ons: floor mats, scuff guards, and seatback organizers—proof that Nissan’s thinking about practicality along with playtime.

Fosberg Racing Patrol: A 1,000-Horsepower Time Machine

If the Dune Patrol is about refinement, the Fosberg Racing Patrol is pure chaos. Based on a classic 1990 Y60-generation Patrol, this build is a love letter to old-school overlanding—with a dose of modern lunacy.

The chassis rides on a NISMO off-road suspension and 17-inch beadlock wheels wrapped in 35-inch Yokohama tires. Up top sits a Fosberg light bar bristling with NISMO LEDs. Inside, there’s no mistaking its racing intent: Recaro buckets, a quick-release steering wheel, and minimal creature comforts.

Forsberg Racing’s 1000-HP Nissan Patrol Steals the SEMA Spotlight

Then there’s the engine. The heart of this beast is a TB48 4.8-liter inline-six—an engine from the later Y61 Patrols—taken from a humble 248 horsepower to a wild 1,000 horsepower, courtesy of a Garrett Motion G42-1200 turbocharger. Best of all, Fosberg left the manual transmission intact. A thousand horses, three pedals, and solid axles? That’s the good kind of insanity.

The Return of a Legend

It’s refreshing to see Nissan embracing the Patrol name in the U.S.—even if only at a show like SEMA. Between the dune-bashing comfort rig and the turbocharged throwback, Nissan’s message is clear: the Patrol still has the chops to compete with the world’s toughest 4x4s.

You can see both trucks—alongside the latest Nissan Frontier and the Fosberg Racing NISMO GT-Z—at this year’s SEMA show. Whether you’re into factory-backed tech or old-school firepower, these builds prove one thing: the Patrol is no longer pretending to be an Armada.

Source: Nissan