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Automobile magazine named the 300ZX Turbo to its "All Stars" list. Road & Track picked the 300ZX Turbo as "One of the Ten Best Cars in the World". Car and Driver included the 300ZX Turbo in their list "One of the 10 Best Cars" 1991: The 300ZX Turbo is listed in Car and Driver's 10Best, and is again one of Automobile magazine's "All-Stars"
1939–1941 Nissan Type 50; 1941 Nissan Type 30; 1941 Nissan Type 53; 1941–1952 Nissan 180 Truck (based on the 1937–1941 Chevrolet 133/158 trucks) 1941–1949 Nissan 190 Bus; 1949-1951 Nissan 290 Bus; 1952–1953 Nissan 380 Truck 1952-1953 Nissan 390 Bus; 1953–1955 Nissan 480 Truck 1955 Nissan 482 Truck; 1953–1955 Nissan 490 Bus 1955 ...
Nissan 300ZX (Z32) The only thing unchanged from the previous generation 300ZX is the 3.0-liter V6 engine, now with dual overhead camshafts (DOHC), variable valve timing (VVT) and producing a rated 222 hp (166 kW) and 198 lb⋅ft (268 N⋅m) naturally aspirated. The turbo variant was upgraded with twin Garrett turbochargers and dual ...
This led to Nissan winning the constructor's championship and 12 Hours of Sebring in 1989 and 1990. During 1990, the GTP ZX-Turbo was replaced by the newer NPT-90. The GTP ZX-Turbo was named due to its shared engine with the production Nissan 300ZX, the turbocharged VG30ET V6. Although the engine block was similar, the GTP ZX-Turbo's engine was ...
The NPT-90 would go on to win the championship in 1990 and 1991 before being retired by Nissan at the end of the 1992 season. Although officially known as the NPT-90, the car continued to race with the GTP ZX-Turbo naming painted on it. This was an attempt by Nissan to continue to use that name to market for the Nissan 300ZX road car.
A Nissan Fairlady Z 200Z-T, replica of Super Z from the Japanese TV show Seibu Keisatsu. The 280ZX was branded in the North American and Australian markets as the "Datsun 280ZX"; and in the local Japanese market as the "Fairlady Z". For the 1979 model year, in the American market, it was co-branded "Datsun by Nissan" through the 1983 model year.
The VG30DETT is an iron block/aluminum head twin-turbo, twin intercooler 2,960 cc (3.0 L; 180.6 cu in) version first seen in the 1987 MID4-II concept. Producing 330 PS (325 bhp; 243 kW) in the MID-4 and coming in at a weight of 237 kg (523 lb), it was the last of Nissan's DOHC belt driven 4 valve per cylinder turbocharged engines put into ...
After the Nissan 300ZX was withdrawn from the U.S. market in 1996, Nissan initially tried to keep the Z name alive by re-creating the 240Z the following year. The car was conceived by Nissan's North American design team in their free time, and the concept was introduced in a four state Road Show in July 1998 to various car media, dealers, and employees.