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The Datsun truck is a compact pickup truck made by Nissan in Japan from 1955 through 1997. It was originally sold under the Datsun brand, but this was switched to Nissan in 1983.
1936–1938 Datsun 15T Pickup; 1937–1938 Datsun Type 16; 1937–1944 Datsun 17T Pickup; 1938–1940 Datsun Type 17; 1946–1947 Datsun 1121 Pickup; 1946–1949 Datsun 2124 Pickup; 1947–1948 Datsun DA; 1948–1954 Datsun DB Series. 1948 Datsun DB; 1949–1950 Datsun DB-2; 1951–1952 Datsun DB-4; 1953 Datsun DB-5; 1954 Datsun DB-6; 1949 ...
The Nissan Junior was a series of medium-sized pickup trucks built from 1956 until 1982. It was introduced to fill the gap between the smaller, Datsun Bluebird based Datsun Truck , and heavier load capacity Nissans under the Nissan Diesel brand, like the 80-series trucks.
The introduction of a pickup truck based on the Sunny gave Nissan Saito Store and Nissan Cherry Store Japanese dealerships the opportunity to sell a commercial vehicle that was originally only offered at Nissan Store. The 520 series Datsun Truck shared its platform with the Datsun Bluebird, plus the larger Nissan Junior sharing an engine with ...
The Datsun DS series was introduced in 1950 as the replacement for the Datsun DA. It used Datsun's truck chassis, itself based on pre-war Datsun designs closely based on the Austin Seven . A more luxurious range with the same truck underpinnings, called the DB series , was sold in parallel. [ 1 ]
After the Nissan rebrand, the logo remained the same, with "Datsun" replaced by "Nissan". The use of the Datsun name in the American market derives from the name Nissan used for its production cars. In fact, the cars produced by Nissan already used the Datsun brand name, a successful brand in Japan since 1932, long before World War II. Before ...
At the time, Nissan Mexico offered a unique passenger-vehicles lineup, the Datsun Bluebird range (the 510-series and the 410, previously), integrated only by the 4-door saloon and Wagon versions of the Bluebird, respectively commercialized as the Datsun Sedan and Datsun Guayín (Guayín is a moniker in Mexican spanish for "Station Wagon").
The 1400 Bakkie was assembled by Nissan in Rosslyn, South Africa . [8] Another assembly location for the model was the Aymesa plant in Quito, Ecuador which assembled it under the Datsun brand name as the 1200 PickUp. Further facelifts took place in 2002 and 2005. [6] Later models of the Nissan 1400 had a five-speed gearbox. [9]