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In most European markets the 720 was sold as the Datsun PickUp (regular cab) or Datsun King Cab. As elsewhere in the world, the "Nissan" name gradually replaced Datsun in 1983 and 1984. The SD22 diesel in European trim produces 64 PS (47 kW; 63 hp) while the 1.8-liter L18-engined versions offered 80 PS (59 kW; 79 hp). [32]
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]
Datsun 1200 coupé, B110 (with aftermarket wheels) Datsun 1200 coupé, B110 (with aftermarket wheels) In April 1971, halfway through the model year, the Sunny Excellent (PB110 series) coupé debuted for the Japanese market. It was based on the B110, but with new hood, fenders and grille, and featured a SOHC 1.4-litre Nissan L engine. The front ...
1951–1953 Datsun 5147 Pickup; 1952 Datsun DC-3; 1953–1954 Datsun 6147 Pickup; 1955–1957 Datsun 120 Pickup; 1955–1986 Datsun Truck; 1957–1961 Datsun 220 Pickup; 1959–1970 Datsun Sports; 1961–1965 Datsun 320 Pickup; 1962–1970 Datsun 1500, 1600, 2000 Roadster; 1962–1986 Datsun Bluebird. 1979–1986 Nissan Bluebird (910) 1965 ...
In Japan, it represented one of three core products offered by Nissan at Japanese Nissan dealerships, called Nissan Shop, alongside the Datsun Truck and the Bluebird (1000). The second generation Fairlady, called the Datsun 2000 in export, was the two-seat roadster that made their name, fitted with a potent 1,982 cc overhead cam engine with ...
Outside the US it was sold as either the Datsun Bluebird or as the Datsun 1300/1400/1500/1600/1800 (depending on engine variant). The rear-wheel drive 510's engineering was inspired by contemporary European sedans, particularly the 1966 BMW 1600-2 – incorporating an overhead camshaft engine and four-wheel independent suspension by means of ...
Datsun vehicles This page was last edited on 24 November 2023, at 17:39 (UTC) . Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ; additional terms may apply.
The Datsun 210 name is used to describe a few different Nissan automobiles from 1959 until 1982: 1957–1959 — The internal code for what was to become the long-running Nissan Bluebird nameplate. Usually marketed as the Datsun 1000 or 1200, various versions received the chassis codes 114, 115, and 211, although "210" is the most commonly used ...