Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1973 Datsun 610 sedan (US; later model years have considerably larger bumpers) In the United States and Canada, the car was sold simply as the "Datsun 610". The four-door sedans, a two-door hardtop coupé, and a five-door station wagon were available, and were marketed as a more luxurious and larger product than the 510. For 1973 and 1974 ...
1972-1973 Datsun Bluebird 1400 Deluxe (510N, Japan) In September 1970, the 1.3 and 1.5-liter engines were replaced with 1.4-liter units. In September 1971 the new, larger, Bluebird U (610) appeared in Japanese showrooms, but the 510 continued on sale as a lower-priced, more compact version. It also received a minor facelift with plastic ...
The Datsun brand was relaunched in New Delhi, India, with the Datsun Go, which went on sale in India in early 2014. [36] [37] Datsun models are sold in Indonesia, Russia, India, Nepal and South Africa since 2014. [5] [38] The brand entered Kazakhstan in 2015, [39] and Belarus [40] and Lebanon [41] in 2016.
Sharp's Datsun. Between 1967 and 1975, Sharp won the Sports Car Club of America national championships six times, (in B-Sedan, F-Production and C-Production) and the IMSA GTU title, racing for Datsun, whose cars he also sold. [1] One of his main motivations to campaign Datsuns was, he said, "You race cars to sell cars."
Subcompact car (B-segment) oriented for the Japanese market. ... 1971–1975 Datsun 610; 1971–1979 Datsun 240C; ... 1995–1998 Nissan 200SX (US 2-door Sentra coupe)
Savings interest rates today: Save smarter at 10x the average with yields of up to 4.50% — Jan. 9, 2025
In Australia, it was called the Datsun Stanza, and in Canada and the United States it was the Datsun 510, a name which recalled the successes of the previous Datsun 510. Datsun 160J Coupe (A10) Originally it was only sold with the 1.4-litre A-series engine (not available in the Stanza) and the 1.6-litre L , although North American market cars ...
The forerunners to the hotrod were the modified cars used in the Prohibition era by bootleggers to evade revenue agents and other law enforcement. [7]Hot rods first appeared in the late 1930s in southern California, where people raced modified cars on dry lake beds northeast of Los Angeles, under the rules of the Southern California Timing Association (SCTA), among other groups.