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Article - Datsun 280-ZX Turbo, Car & Driver, May 1981


jhaag

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This five page article, titled Datsun 280-ZX Turbo, appeared in Car & Driver magazine in May 1981. Note how the title has a dash in it whereas the Road & Track article of the same title and date does not have a dash.

 

John

 

Datsun280-ZXTurboCarDriverMay1981.jpg

Datsun280-ZXTurboCarDriverMay198-1.jpg

Datsun280-ZXTurboCarDriverMay198-2.jpg

Datsun280-ZXTurboCarDriverMay198-3.jpg

Datsun280-ZXTurboCarDriverMay198-4.jpg

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  • 4 months later...
Guest TeamNissan
..the was quicker than a 308 and the Corvette...Man!

 

 

Is it really that shocking though? The crossfire vettes were making the same hp/tq on all cast iron v8s if I'm not mistaken. they even got their butts handed to them by the 944 turbo on the track.

 

The 308 was no power house either. USA 308gtbs (carbed) made about the same hp but out of a alum 3.0 v8 in Europe it was like 20hp more. They also had a 2.0 v8 option. A engine I have been looking to find for sale for a long time lol. When it switched over to the gts and bosch fuel injection hp and tq fell below 200. So Dragging, it doesn't really shock me that the zxt kicks some butt. He does note draging though unless I read that part wrong. I think a 81 308gtb would rock a zxt autox, thats my opinion though lol. It's lighter and more agile with a better designed suspension and its just about the same power.

 

Whats funny to me about this article though is that ferrari a "world leader" in auto performance was using 4 down draft carbs at the same time nissan was mas producing "The most sophisticated turbocharged-engine ever introduced to America"

 

 

 

 

I love datsun lol.

I'm going to try and scan a 71 bre car and driver to post. Between us all I'm sure we could amass a nice collection of articles. No?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thnx for the artical

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That's why so many on here consider the L28ET the pinnacle of L series factory development and why it's so natural to swap these into first gen cars with less weight and more easily modified suspensions and smack down a lot more of them.

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My dad has every Road & Track from around the late 50s. When I'm at my parents house for Christmas I may get adventurous and go through them all looking for anything related to Zs...and scan/upload every article.

 

Last time I was there I was reading a 1970's article on Peter Brock's 240Z...and it had a list of all of the Peter Brock parts you could buy (like $250 for high comp pistons haha)

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Not the cheapest car back then, but a great performance bargain.

 

Estimated price of $16,500 in '81 dollars is $38,000 in '07. http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/cpicalc.pl

 

About the price of a top end 350Z, but higher performance than the Covette and 'entry' Ferrari. Wish Nissan would make a turbo 350Z. Won't happen, as that would kill pretty much all GT-R sales.

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Guest TeamNissan
That's why so many on here consider the L28ET the pinnacle of L series factory development and why it's so natural to swap these into first gen cars with less weight and more easily modified suspensions and smack down a lot more of them.

 

Well I'm sure the cost and ease of installation play a big part in that decision as well.

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