Nissan Fairlady Z (S30)

Nissan Fairlady Z (Datsun 240Z, 260Z, and 280Z)
1970–1973 Nissan Fairlady Z
Overview
ManufacturerNissan
Also called
  • Nissan Fairlady Z
  • Datsun 240Z
  • Datsun 260Z
  • Datsun 280Z
Production1969–1978
AssemblyJapan: Hiratsuka, Kanagawa (Nissan Shatai Plant)
DesignerYoshihiko Matsuo
Body and chassis
ClassSports car
Body style
LayoutFront-engine, rear-wheel-drive
Chronology
PredecessorDatsun Sports
SuccessorNissan Fairlady Z (S130)

The Nissan S30, sold in Japan as the Nissan Fairlady Z, but for export badged as the Datsun 240Z, and later as the Datsun 260Z and 280Z, are 2-seat sports cars and 2+2 GT cars produced by Nissan, from 1969 until 1978. The S30 was conceived of by Yutaka Katayama, the President of Nissan Motor Corporation U.S.A., and designed by a team led by Yoshihiko Matsuo, the head of Nissan's Sports Car Styling Studio.[1] It is the first car in Nissan's Z series of sports cars.

Aiming to compete directly with established European sports cars, Datsun priced the new 240Z within $200 of the British MGB-GT in the United States, offering a straight-six for the price of a seven-year-old four-cylinder that showed its age. The 240Z's styling, engineering, relatively low price, and impressive performance resonated with the public, received a positive response from both buyers and the motoring press, and immediately generated long waiting lists.

As a halo car, the 240Z broadened the acceptance of Japanese car-makers beyond their economic image. Datsun's growing dealer network—compared to limited production imported sports cars manufactured by Jaguar, BMW, Porsche, Alfa Romeo, and Fiat—ensured both easy purchase and ready maintenance.

All variants of the S30 have four-wheel independent suspension consisting of MacPherson struts in the front (borrowed from the Nissan Laurel C30) and Chapman struts in the back. Front disc brakes and rear drums were standard.

The 240Z used twin SU-style Hitachi one-barrel side-draft carburettors. These were replaced on the 260Z with Hitachi one-barrel side-draft carburettors beginning with model year 1973 to comply with emissions regulations, resulting in diminished overall performance. A Bosch-designed L-Jetronic electronic fuel injection was added to US market 280Zs in 1975 to compensate.

Continuing through the 1975–1978 model years, markets outside of the United States (and Japan, which only offered the 2-liter engine from 1974) still received the 260Z coupé and 2+2. The S30 240Z is unrelated to the later 240SX, which is sold as the Silvia in Japan.

  1. ^ Buckley, Martin; Rees, Chris (1998). The World Encyclopedia of Cars. Hermes House. ISBN 9781840380835.