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HS30-H

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  1. websteg, You can have one of my spares for free if all else fails. FS5C71-A complete with L-Series bellhousing. Only problem is - its located in London, England. You would have to pay for the shipping.......... Might be worth keeping in mind? Alan T.
  2. HS30-H posted a post in a topic in Open Discussions
    Here's a cod close-up for the hard of herring:
  3. HS30-H posted a post in a topic in 240K Skyline
    Hi Miles, Ah - now I understand. I was ( for some reason ) thinking that you lived part of the time on Okinawa ( maybe it was your 'Y' plate? ). Now that would be a long journey.........! The reason I asked about Uchida san is that he seems to have a bit of a 'rep' for being difficult to deal with sometimes. I visited his shop around 12 years ago ( when he was still sharing his workshop space with an 'ordinary' garage business ) and he was - at first - particularly grumpy and abrupt. He soon warmed up a bit though. Car people are car people. His business has grown a lot since that time, and I hear that he also plays in a band now ( ???! ). Ah yes, I can relate to that. My other half just leaves me to it whenever I want to go on a car-related visit in Japan. She goes out shopping or meets her friends for lunch, and doesn't expect me back until late. "What on earth do you find to talk about?" she says. Plenty! Cheers, Alan T.
  4. websteg, Here's a relatively recent thread that contained lots of data that you might find useful / interesting: http://www.classiczcars.com/forums/showthread.php?t=20792 Alan T.
  5. HS30-H posted a post in a topic in Open Discussions
    Definitely aftermarket. That's a pair of 'Napoleon Auto Mirrors' - early 1970s vintage. Illustrated top right in the mirrors section from this 1971 ad in a Japanese magazine: Alan T.
  6. HS30-H posted a post in a topic in 240K Skyline
    Miles, Glad to hear that you are reunited with your car. Its a nice time of year to be driving. Is 'Victory 50' a long way from where you live ( I don't know whereabouts you live in Japan )? It sounds like you travelled a long way. Uchida san has a reputation for sometimes being a bit 'difficult' with his customers. Was your experience with him good overall? And did he sing you a song?! ( :eek: ) Alan T.
  7. The original stage play was a musical.
  8. aarc240, Whilst I have your attention, can I re-ask you a question I asked a couple of months ago ( you didn't reply last time )? The original thread was here: http://www.classiczcars.com/forums/showthread.php?t=20983 You wrote ( in post #45 ): And I asked ( in post #50 ): If you have any further information I would love to hear it. Sorry to keep asking you for 'evidence' - but what you write is very interesting and begs for questions to be asked. Alan T.
  9. I'm sorry that you find it troublesome and annoying, but I am interested in the truth. If your evidence is only anecdotal, then it might be best to make that clear from the outset. Opinions too are probably best clearly stated as merely opinions, rather than facts. You are referring to the cam cover drawings now, yes? Once again, I'm sorry to disagree with you - but I don't think we should classify the drawings from the factory parts lists as true "engineering" drawings. For one thing, they haven't got very much of the data that an engineer would need on them. Essentially they are guides to help identify individual components, and serve as illustrations to accompany part numbers and their descriptions. They are not "irrelevant" drawings - they just have some slight inaccuracies - and plain mistakes - in them. I have some Japanese-market parts lists and workshop manuals that were hand-notated by the dealers and mechanics to correct inaccuracies. It is clear that mistakes were made, and some inaccuracies were allowed through the net because - presumably - they would result in little adverse consequence ( I'm thinking of the "DATSUN" scripted L6 cam cover illustrations here ). If you spend time looking at the original publications you can spot quite a few incidences like this. Do you have any factory parts lists? I could give you some examples of mistakes if you don't. And with regard to the KPH to MPH speedo conversion on that single KPGC10 - you suggested that 'Jeco' could have performed the conversion ( even though I believe - there's that word again - the KPGC10 speedo and tacho were made by Kanto Seiki ) - which would point to the car being an *official* Factory-sanctioned export. To me, this confuses the situation: You are offering up 'evidence' that is clearly questionable ( Jeco ) - and which can mislead. I went back through this thread and re-read it several times. I picked out the post which caused me some surprise and aroused my interest. Here is what you wrote: So far you have backed this up with anecdotal evidence of one car ( you say it was a KPGC10 ) of which you say no pictures, written reports or other sightings seem to exist. So what about the PGC10s you mentioned? Did they come and go without ever being noted? I would find that hard to believe. This is not a witch hunt - and I'm sorry if it feels that way to you - but you should expect to be asked for a little more evidence after making such a definitive statement. Alan T.
  10. HS30-H posted a post in a topic in 240K Skyline
    Not really. I think it is funny. I know what "chaps" your "@$$" though, so I keep it up. You tw@.
  11. Oh, and by the way - from the 1969 Japanese market factory Parts Catalogue: *13264-E3000 - arse'Y COVER, rocker. L20 engine. = "NISSAN 2000 OHC" script. The parts catalogue illustration - in contrast to the Export market versions - shows exactly that. Maybe there was some *intention* to fit a "DATSUN" scripted cam cover to the Export market cars, but they never quite got around to it? Alan T.
  12. Mr C, The part numbers are easy to look up. I already did it when aarc240 posted the numbers. He told me to check my facts, and I did. From the factory Parts Catalogue for the USA & Canada market: *13264-E3100 ASSY-ROCKER COVER ( applied model L24 ) *13264-P0100 ASSY-ROCKER COVER ( applied model L24, L26 ) superseded 13264-E3100. The illustrations on the pages ( just like the Courtesy Nissan-supplied illustrations in the books he quoted ) show the script "DATSUN 2400 OHC" - but I think this is just one of those Nissan anomalies in the parts books. For the record, I believe: *13264-E3100 ASSY-ROCKER COVER = "NISSAN 2400 OHC" script. *13264-P0100 ASSY-ROCKER COVER = "NISSAN OHC" script. Alan T.
  13. HS30-H posted a post in a topic in 240K Skyline
    So there were no sales staff at Nissan USA HQ that day? Wow. I think you'll find that John B. Rae reported the speech as transcribed in the 'Datsun News' publication of late 1969. I presume that this internal company news sheet was seen by sales staff as well as others? When I refer to "advertising copy" I am of course referring to some of the lines from NMC-USA endorsed advertising that you quote on zhome.com I don't have any "resentment" of Katayama as a man. I have a huge amount of admiration for him. If I "resent" anything it is the bad balance of reporting, and the cult of personality that has surrounded the man and his activities to the exclusion of virtually all others. I find the whole thing rather strange - but perhaps it is an American cultural phenomenon? Nobody seems willing to bring up any suggestion that he may have made mistakes that lead to later trouble for Nissan, or that he might have inherited the credit for the hard work of others. All great men make mistakes, so I don't see why it is taboo to discuss them. Funny how you are ready to pounce at any questioning of Katayama's saint-like status, but also ready to damn the work of Hiroshi Iida and his team in their own particular field of blue collar work without even looking further than my posts on the subject. I don't think you even knew Iida's name until it came up on this site - did you? Why would we need that when we have zhome.com? After all, this is the story of "An American Car, Made In Japan". :classic: Alan T.
  14. You'll have to be a bit sharper than that if you want to try and stitch me up. Here's what I actually wrote ( bold type for emphasis on what you chopped out ): Naughty naughty. Nissan offered the "165SR-14" tyre as an "Option" on the KPC10 and KGC10, and the "165HR-14" tyre as an "Option" on the KPGC10. They are exact quotes from official Nissan literature. Nobody is saying that one is a direct replacement for the other - otherwise why would it be offered as a choice at time of sale? Surely you understand that an 'Option' would by definition be something different to standard equipment - regardless of whether it was "better" or "worse", more expensive or indeed cheaper? But that's my point exactly. You mentioned that the car you saw in the Australian showroom was fitted with CROSSPLY tyres. You also mentioned that the S30-series Z standing in the same showroom was also fitted with crossplies ( we are presuming here that it was an official Australian market 'HS30-U' 'Datsun 240Z' ) - which was worthy of questioning. Why would an Australian market car be wearing crossplies when - as far as I am aware - all Australian market 240Zs were fitted with radials? You keep talking about what was "legal" fitment in Australia, and the marking that Australian market tyres should have. My point was that I don't believe the KPGC10 you said you saw was an official import ( or - more to the point - an official export by Nissan Japan ) and if it was a Grey Import then it would be highly likely that some of the specs of the car would not be fully compliant with Australian regulations and Type Approval. I simply offered the possibility that it might have had standard Japanese-market tyres on it. Thanks for the endorsement. I think a crystal ball might be handy at this point. It looks like it might be the only way of corroborating your story. You seem pretty sure that no evidence of the car's presence in Australia will be found ( what about any others? ) - which I find puzzling. Surely the only way you could be sure of that is if you made it all up in the first place? Cynical aren't I? Alan T. :classic:
  15. Oh dear. I don't think everybody would agree with you there ( especially not the 'bean counters' at Nissan ). I think they would tell you that the 'HLS30' ( 'European' export model 'Datsun 240Z' ) was an arguably 'higher' spec than the USA / North American market 'HLS30-U' model 'Datsun 240Z', which was built down to a price and - again, arguably - 'dumbed down' a little to suit the market it was aimed at. That included softer springing and damping, deletion of the rear ARB and a softer one on the front, and a four-speed transmission and matching diff ratio. But then, I suppose it depends what you want "luxury" to mean in this context. No it doesn't. But then Nissan did not always use the full 'Shanai Kigo' for each model as its VIN prefix. You seem to think it did? Have you ever seen 'HS30-U' or 'HLS30-U' on a VIN tag, or stamped into a body? My particular '240Z' is actually an 'HS30-H' model, but it has an 'HS30' VIN prefix just like your 'HS30-U' model. Like I said, I don't think you are quite up to speed on this yet.
  16. HS30-H posted a post in a topic in 240K Skyline
    Good morning Carl. You yourself repeat advertising copy and sales-team motivational speeches as though they contain nothing but facts. I can see this kind of one-market bias any day of the week on zhome.com - most notably in the speeches of one man ( Mr Yutaka Katayama ). I think you will find that most of the written disdain ( "destain" is surely some kind of cleaning fluid?? ) for the Japanese auto industry found in Britain was post-war, and has to be taken with a giant pinch of salt. Much of it appeared to be a legacy of wartime propaganda that portrayed the Japanese as some kind of sub-standard species. I believe American propaganda at the time was busy convincing the American public ( and its servicemen ) that Japanese people would not make good pilots because they could not see well enough. As we sow, so shall we reap. Some of that prejudice and downright racism still lives on. I even get a slight sniff of it in your writing. All auto manufacturers during that period were purchasing, licensing, cribbing or downright stealing the designs of others. Don't try to make out that the Japanese were the only ones doing it. Awkward questions could be asked of many American and English auto manufacturers in relation to the same period and earlier. You always seem to point at that mid-Sixties period as some kind of Year Dot, but in reality you can't point at a single period and make out that it was the only "revolution" in Nissan's history. There were many. Thanks for 'summarising' some of The Graham Legacy for us. I'm sure that will be of great interest to those who don't know about that period. But why did you stop where you did - just when it was all getting closer to some bigger changes at Nissan, and at a period when their dealings with Austin came to the fore? Is that judicious editing? To sum it all up, here's a quick precis of events so far for people who like things nice and concise: *Japan is a primitive land, closed to the outside world. *'The Black Ships' from America arrive, forcing Japan to open its ports or face the consequences. *Americans teach Japanese about everything. *Nasty thankless Japanese take all the help from the Americans and then throw them out. *Silly Japanese take themselves too seriously and threaten the old World Order. They want a slice of the Empire Cake. *America puts Japan in its place. Japan devastated. *America rebuilds Japan out of kindness and charity. *Nasty thankless Japanese steal American technology and designs and don't give any credit. *Yutaka Katayama arrives in USA to sort it all out. *Carl Beck sells his "Porshay", and buys "An American Car, Made in Japan". OK - that's more than slightly satirical, but this deep historical mining of the overall history of the Japanese auto industry ( with added bias ) is leading us further away from the core truth of this thread's subject. YES the Nissan 'L-gata' engine cribbed some design details from the products of other manufacturers - but so what? This wasn't outright stealing. Nobody sued. It was engineers doing what engineers have always done. None of them existed in a vacuum. If you start splitting hairs and trying to break down this kind of activity into 'The Japanese' and 'The Americans' etc you will just end up in mire. How about we turn our 'scopes on American race engine history for example? That might be dangerous. We would soon see that Harry Miller pinched the design of the Grand Prix Peugeots, or that the Frontenac Ford conversion ( can't get more Old School American than a 'Fronty Ford' ) was designed by a Japanese-American called Sakayama, who copied some of Louis Coatalen's ideas which he had incorporated into the 1912 Sunbeam race engine. We could trace a huge percentage of high-performance auto engine design principles back to four men: Ernest Henry, Paulo Zuccarelli, Jules Goux and Georges Boillot - but they are hardly household names are they? None of were American either - so does that mean American engineers 'copied' them? Is the American nation and society itself a pastiche of ideas taken from other countries and other civilisations? Where do we stop all this? Just about all of them Carl. But then you wouldn't know that, as you don't ever seem to have more than two Japanese publications in your bibliographies. In fact Gorham, Graham and Deming are just some of the many non-Japanese figures that the Japanese automotive press and Japanese authors have covered IN DEPTH down the years. Again, you don't seem to have much in the way of Japanese source material from the 1960s and 1970s - so you will surely not have noticed the extensive coverage of WORLD automotive history that the Japanese press contained during the period that Matsuo and his team and Iida and his team were doing their 'stuff'. You don't seem to be able to comprehend that these men were influenced by ALL the products and ideas that came before them ( whether they realised it or not ) in just the SAME way that any other designer or engineer has ever been. I must say that I find this particularly small minded of you Carl. First of all, Hiroshi Iida hasn't written a book - and he hasn't been beating his chest and telling everybody how wonderful, innovative and world-changing his work was. The information I gave was taken from an interview that Nostalgic Hero magazine conducted with Mr Iida, and Mr Iida seems to be a particularly modest, unassuming and realistic interviewee. But you wouldn't know any of that because you obviously haven't got any idea of the substance of the article. You appear to be happy to judge him without hearing what he had to say. Perhaps if you read the words of Mr Iida ( Iida begins with a letter 'i' when Romanised, please don't start it with a letter 'L' ) you might be better placed to judge. I don't believe that the Nissan 'L-gata' module design ( by the way - Mr Iida was the leader of a team effort ) resulted in any patents being filed by Nissan ( I presume you mean 'patents' when you write "patients" ) but is that the way that you judge a good, solid workaday engine design? I don't think anybody has ever claimed that it was an earth-shattering addition to the world of automotive engineering. It was however a bloody good effort for the short time that it was developed in, and they had the foresight to incorporate a number of core design features that would ensure a long and varied commercial use of the design. The reputation of figures such as Yutaka Katayama were built on foundations such as the work of Iida and his team, rather than the other way around ( which seems to be what you would have us believe ). I'm interested in the 'Back Room Boys', and I'm very happy to see them being interviewed after so long in the shadows. Seems to me that you are scornful of them without even having heard what they have to say for themselves. That's not very scholarly. Alan T.
  17. The 'HS30U' was the Export-spec RHD 'Datsun 240Z' that was sent to BOTH Australia and the UK. I don't think you are quite up to speed on this yet. Fishy? Like a Caelocanth for example? Like a KPGC10 on a dealer's showroom floor in Australia.......
  18. No. It just comes naturally No smoke without fire? Ironic that you should be asking for "proof" Personally, I'd be very pleased to see some "proof" of this ( I say again, single ) car that you say you saw in an Australian dealer's showroom. I never said that the newly-introduced '6.45H - 14 - 4PR' tyre "shared identical markings" with a crossply. I merely said that they could be mistaken for a crossply. I don't suppose that would happen with the 'optional' 165SR-14 tyre. Yeah, but when you write the word "Nissan", I'm wondering if you mean Nissan Japan or Datsun Australia PTY. You don't seem to be able to make up your mind as to whether this was an official Nissan import or a Grey Import by the dealer. And all the while I'm remembering that this is ONE car that we are talking about here. Jeco? I thought Kanto Seiki made the KPGC10 speedo and tachometer units. But you are doing it again. Why would the OEM manufacturer of the KPGC10 speedos be making one special unit for the Australian market? If there were more cars, where is the evidence of them? This question is the at the very heart of why I am questioning what you have written. I don't understand one car being sent unless it is for promotion, and if there was no promotion then why was it imported? If there were more, who sold them, who bought them and where did they go? I don't see any attempt to address these big questions. Maybe you are the wrong person for me to ask? Alan T.
  19. In a word, yes. We have already agreed that the L4 engines and some of the others had the word 'DATSUN' on their cam ( and valve ) covers - but the L6 cam cover with the word 'DATSUN' on it from the Factory is proving to be as easy to pin down as Nessie. Pointing at pictures from publications 'approved' by NMC USA ( one of which shows an L4 anyway ) is not enough 'evidence' for me I'm afraid. I've had my knuckles rapped in the last few months on this forum for posting Nissan factory literature that supposedly related to parts for the L6, but showed an outline of an S20 engine. Show me an OEM Factory-fitment 'DATSUN' scripted cam cover fitted to an L6 in a Z or Skyline and I'll soon STFU though. Yes, the USA / North American market was Nissan's biggest export market in 1970. Australia was the next biggest export market for Nissan at that time, and was very important to Nissan ( and had been a serious target for Nissan's export drive before the USA ) - but BOTH those markets were dwarfed by Nissan's domestic market at that time. Let us not forget that. This KPGC10 we are discussing was a domestic market model. You can take the wizz out of the amount of cars that Nissan exported to the UK and mainland Europe if you like, but it can't be denied that Nissan took those markets seriously and they were actively engaged in addressing the logistics of increasing sales there. Special models - modified to local market requirements - were being aimed there. The UK market HS30U 'Datsun 240Z' was mechanically the same spec as the Australian market cars, so I don't see what your point is there. Yes - we got 5-speeds in the UK. So did 'Europe'. But all this is beside the point isn't it? We wouldn't be discussing it unless you had brought it up as some reason why the KPGC10 did / didn't ( I'm not exactly sure which you believe ) get officially exported and sold in Australia. This looks like a major sticking point. The '6.45H - 14 - 4PR' tyre fitted to the KPGC10 in the Japanese market ( a Japanese-made tyre! ) was of RADIAL construction. It was NOT a crossply tyre. Maybe it wouldn't have been recognised as such in Australia - but it wasn't aimed at the Australian market, and therefore would not have had to conform to any Australian regulations. Yes - we all know that cars aimed at markets that used MPH had speedos and odos that read in MPH. The point I was making was that you have two scenarios running in parallel: You say that this single KPGC10 you saw in the Australian showroom was badged as a 'Nissan', but you also say that it had details that were 'converted' to suit the Australian market. Seems like a lot of effort for a single car ( I keep asking you if there were more......? ) - so why did they go to the trouble? And then to not convert it to 'Datsun' badging? I still don't get it. Converting a KPGC10 speedo / odo ( an item unique to the 'GT-R' - and obviously reading in KPH too ) to MPH would not have been a 5 minute job. In fact, I think it would be a bloody BIG job to do it well enough to look OEM. You insist that the car was 'delivery mileage' on the showroom floor, but if it had been converted to use an MPH speedo / odo then how could you be sure that it was the car's true mileage? Wow. 110 MPH? Can human beings actually breathe at that speed? Here in funny old England we were still driving around in three-wheelers powered by wood shavings at that time. Maybe that explains why I'd be impressed with something you would call "a joke" ( even if you did admit you considered the possibility of buying one ). I still can't figure out why you are so sure that this car ( cars? ) never got ANY press coverage in Australia. How would you know that for sure? It sounds pretty definitive to me. Surely someone took a picture of it at the very least? I don't think we should be ready to give up just yet. :knockedou Alan T.
  20. E32 = Showa 45 ( that's 1970 ) 'H130' series Nissan Cedric part ID. Didn't someone on this forum once post a question ( with pics ) asking about one of these carb / manifold setups that they found installed on a Z? Maybe it was a couple of years back. But it wasn't FACTORY ....... :-)
  21. HS30-H posted a post in a topic in Open Chit Chat
    Sure Miles, Perhaps I should use the 95 Degree 'Boil Wash' program in the washing machine before shipping it to you. Should save a little on volumetric weight too. :classic: Alan T.
  22. Not fitted to any S30 as standard equipment from the Factory
  23. aarc240, I'm sorry you feel that way. I certainly don't think I ".....know everything about Nissan / Datsun." - but I'm determined to find out as much as I can about the things I am interested in. I usually only pipe up on threads such as this when I'm fairly sure of my facts, and I try not to post bad information or incorrect data. I'm not out to humiliate you or anybody else, and if you can show me that anything I have written is wrong then I will stand corrected. I'm sorry, but ( to my mind anyway ) there are a fair few things that don't add up about your KPGC10 in Australia story. I'm not saying that you are a liar ( far from it ) - just that the single car you have offered as an example sounds to me to have been a one-off 'Grey Import' that was most likely not any part of a sales plan by Nissan's planners in Japan. You seem quite sure that there was no press coverage and that it would not have been documented. I find that hard to believe. I'd have thought it would have aroused some interest, even if the car was seen as something of a white elephant that stood no chance against more powerful domestics and other imports in the Australian market. And what happened to any others? Is this a one-off, two-off, three-off or were there more? The flat black bonnet was surprising ( I still think this is non-Factory on the KPGC10 ), and the mention of crossply tyres was even more so. I'm wondering if you were mistaken in thinking that the '6.45H - 14 - 4PR' markings on a standard-equipment KPGC10 tyre denoted a crossply type rather than an early radial that still used some of the crossply identification codes ( which was what they were )? It's certainly a possibility. I don't wish to insult you by inferring that you don't know the difference between the two, but it might have been easy to be misled by that format of tyre sizing. In case you haven't noticed, a couple of other people picked you up on the 'NISSAN' cam cover issue too. Perhaps they did it more politely than I did. I'm sorry that you took offence when none was intended from me. I'm really only interested in the facts being correct, and recorded properly so that we can all learn something from them. Alan T.
  24. Hi Michael, Ah - now I understand. It thought for a minute that you knew the car - which would have been a big surprise as I don't think the owner shows it to very many people. I vaguely remember the UK magazine article you mention. Was the car in a bit of a state, and sitting in a field ( or at least on waste ground )? I was told that it was probably beyond saving at the time - but who knows? I certainly haven't heard anything about it recently. Cheers, Alan T.
  25. aarc240, What have cam covers made in Japan by Nissan for the Australian market got to do with "the Americans"? Sorry, but I think your memory is playing tricks with you. No offence intended. :classic: Very odd. I thought all official HS30U 'Datsun 240Z' models for the Australian market were fitted with Radials from the Factory. Nearly 35 years worth of marque and model history never mentions such a thing, which includes Factory sales brochures, period advertising, dealer options and Sports Options lists, period magazine articles and full road tests at launch. Also around three decades of magazine articles, books and model analysis in Japan. Never a flat black bonnet on a 'normal' street-use KPGC10 for sale to the general public spotted amongst all that. But then, we are only talking about one car here aren't we? I guess anything is possible........ ............like a KPGC10 odometer that read in MPH instead of KPH. Unique! :knockedou Alan T.

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