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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. It was replaced in 1997 by the Frontier and Navara .
Pickup truck: Navara: 1985 2016 2020 ... 1982–1985 Datsun/Nissan Sunny/B11; 1968–1973, 1978–1981 Datsun 510 Sedan; 1970–1973 Datsun 240Z; 1970–1974 Datsun 100A;
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 Nissan J series are straight-4 and straight-6 gasoline internal combustion engines produced by Nissan from the 1960s through the 1980s. It is similar to the BMC B-Series engine that was built in Japan under licence as the Nissan 1H before being de-stroked to become the 1.0 L Nissan C [1] [2] and 1.2 L Nissan E engines, [3] but wasn't a direct copy.
1977.11–1982 Datsun Sunny HB310 (aka Datsun 140Y or Datsun 210) 1977–1982 Nissan Pulsar N10 (aka Datsun/Nissan Cherry, Datsun 310) 92 PS (JDM) 1977–1981 Nissan Stanza/Auster/Violet, 80 PS (JDM) [8] 1978–1988 Nissan Vanette (PC120) – 75 PS (55 kW) at 5400 rpm [5] (originally only in 'Coach' passenger versions) 1982–2008 Nissan 1400 ...
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 ...
The Nissan Z engine is a series of automobile and light truck four-cylinder engines that was engineered by Nissan Machinery, manufactured by the Nissan Motor Company from 1979 through August 1989. All Z engines had 4 cylinders, a total of 8 valves and a single overhead camshaft (SOHC) .
A 4WD model had been planned from the beginning, [2] but the original bodyshell's lack of rigidity made Nissan rethink the concept. The vehicle was launched as the Datsun Prairie in Europe and was rebranded to Nissan along with the rest of the range from 1984, at first featuring "Datsun by Nissan" badging and then solely "Nissan" badging from 1985.