Jump to content

IGNORED

Datsun-240z Vs Fairlady-z432


kats

Recommended Posts

9 hours ago, kats said:

One surprising thing is , those PZR normal springs for normal suspension struts ( PZ & PZR front struts is -E4225 , rear struts is - E4125 ) have softer spring rate . 
This is very interesting!

I was wrong about this , normal Z432-R has the same spring rate as Z432 , just free length is shorter than Z432 . Z432-R is 80 kg lighter than Z432 . To have equal dimensions as a variant of S30 series cars ( floor clearance hight is the same as Z432 , )  , the springs are shortened I think . 
I am talking about this car , a plain , raw , ready for building a race car for your own .From Motor Magazine April 1971.


Kats

I probably can’t use my set of PZR springs because my Z is not light like PZR , the hight will drop slightly. I love Higher posture  like Safari car .

1768E047-2780-4BF7-AFF2-4CE98C996292.jpeg

F0EBB21E-2362-4D9F-B80E-0088B99F891F.jpeg

Edited by kats
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

We examined my later 1970 S30 Z-L glove box next to a 240Z glove box, and they appeared to be identical, with notches on both sides. I think my Z-L glove box was original, but do not know for sure. It does have factory AC, so the rules you stated would apply.  I cant remember the serial # offhand, as the car has been under restoration since I purchased it, but I will look tomorrow.   I'd still guess that Nissan switched to a single-style glove box at some point during production, for both LHD and RHD cars, so that they were the same.

Bummed to hear that I mangled a rare piece of cardboard.  I'll have to get some material and make a replica - shouldn't be hard to do. 

Edited by xs10shl
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, xs10shl said:

We examined my later 1970 S30 Z-L glove box next to a 240Z glove box, and they appeared to be identical, with notches on both sides. I think my Z-L glove box was original, but do not know for sure. It does have factory AC, so the rules you stated would apply.  I cant remember the serial # offhand, as the car has been under restoration since I purchased it, but I will look tomorrow.   I'd still guess that Nissan switched to a single-style glove box at some point during production, for both LHD and RHD cars, so that they were the same.

Bummed to hear that I mangled a rare piece of cardboard.  I'll have to get some material and make a replica - shouldn't be hard to do. 

If it helps, I created a 3D step model and flat patterns from a 12/70 parts car glove box I have and uploaded the files here. The flat patterns are in acad.dwg format and pdf as well.  It's from a Canadian market LHD car but hopefully it might help.

FYI, I just noticed a typo for the sheet size I noted on the template drawing. It should be 24" wide x 36" tall, scale is 1:1 when printed on that size of sheet.

image.png

Edited by CanTechZ
  • Like 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks CanTechZ ! 
Here is a glove box collections, white chalk marking is fun to look at . Automatic has “トルコン(torque converter) “, Fairlady 240ZG has “H-H “ ( HS30H ) , Z432 has “ PS30” . But you see SP30 , that is definitely a mistake ! 
Kats

5D50894E-8DD2-4747-A528-1A8AE4F12206.jpeg

BF95D1E5-AB9E-44AA-8E2E-25897612E532.jpeg

D56DAC5F-61AD-4DC8-9A1E-0C5A0C90724E.jpeg

Edited by kats
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, CanTechZ said:

You're welcome Kats, those chalk marks are interesting. My 7/70 HLS30 has an "A" marking. Any significance? It's not an automatic.

image.png

Wow ! Maybe “ A “ stands for USA ? I can’t wait to go and see my HLS30-02146 which may have an original glove box, my 2156 lost original when its restoration a long time ago . 
 

This is my guess , at Nissan shatai factory , the number of car for USA was so high , so workers didn’t need to distinguish them , they needed to distinguish other destinations and rare model like an automatic . That could be why they just put A for our USA cars ?! 
Kats 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I looked up my parts catalog for tracking the glove box .  LHD model has E4600 , RHD model E4100 at first .

Then both cars have E4102 . When did that change ? I took and reviewed an old data which I have got from Mr.Uemura and Mr.Osawa ( test crew US & CANADA late 69) . Let’s do some calculations.

For S30 series domestic cars,

1969 total was 969 .

1970 Jan 127 , Feb 364 , Mar 378 . Total 1838 cars at that period.

Jul 1970 Aircon manual said cars up to S30-01629 have  to buy 68600-E4102 , after S30-01629 already have 68600-E4102.

Total 1838 S30 cars means that the number included S30/S30S/PS30/PS30SB . 
I guess most of them were S30S ( Fairlady Z ) and S30(Fairlady ZL ) , PS30/PS30SB would be 100 or little more  at that point. S30S and S30 share the same chassis number on the fire wall “ S30-xxxxxx” . 
So, maybe in March 1970 , the glove box changed to have notches on both sides . And why not for LHD model at the same time ?

We need to see a lot of actual glove box for this observation.

I attached a picture of the glove box of a Z432 , PS30-00062 made in Dec 1969 . Only an outboard corner has the notche.

Kats

 

 

D38FC1A8-F0E2-4902-B69F-64901286798E.jpeg

28869EE0-E09D-4CDA-AA0E-B7770C1B8F7D.jpeg

AA5FA1E8-D9BC-4876-94F7-A7D5C29ECC3F.jpeg

86FD39D8-BD3E-4CE2-B19C-F5BBEC4676ED.jpeg

Edited by kats
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 minutes ago, kats said:

Wow ! Maybe “ A “ stands for USA ? I can’t wait to go and see my HLS30-02146 which may have an original glove box, my 2156 lost original when its restoration a long time ago . 
 

This is my guess , at Nissan shatai factory , the number of car for USA was so high , so workers didn’t need to distinguish them , they needed to distinguish other destinations and rare model like an automatic . That could be why they just put A for our USA cars ?! 
Kats 

Interesting, actually my car is a Canadian market car. It's an HLS30UN model (non emissions). I guess the "A" is still a mystery.

20220301_163208.jpg

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Who's Online   2 Members, 1 Anonymous, 773 Guests (See full list)

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Guidelines. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.