I once thought that if I couldn’t afford a 240Z, I’d never own a 260 or a 280 despite their much cheaper prices. I’ve changed my mind, at least about the 260. Made for one year only in 1974, the 260Z was a response to US emissions and safety requirements. The emissions knock came in the form of a larger but asthmatic engine larded up with valves and pumps. Meanwhile, the safety drag was most apparent at the bow and the stern: the new 5 mph bumpers were ungainly and weighed tens of pounds more than their previous iterations. Still, the car is almost as quick as the ’73 240Z, every bit as nimble, and enjoys a few ergonomic improvements over its older sibling. Performance parts can easily upgrade the engine, and many a 260 owner has backdated his bumpers. If you want to “ground zero” one of your own, here on eBay is a former forest resident, a 1974 Datsun 260Z. This Z is bid to $1,801, and you’ll need to pull your trailer to Red Oak, Iowa to pick it up. The seller suggests undertaking a major restoration or using this one for parts – keeping in mind that the 260 was constructed differently from the 240.
This one’s engine is still nestled in its nose, and it doesn’t look like a single item is missing from this landscape – a minor miracle. With a displacement of 2.6 liters, the in-line six-cylinder makes about 140 hp, a reduction of ten ponies versus the year-earlier 240. This ’74 would be about a second slower over the quarter mile too. But the 260 gained a more rigid chassis and beefier sway bar, lending a handling edge. Braking via front discs/rear drums remained the same for both models. This car has a four-speed manual.
The interior is beyond repair. A restoration will require a new dash, steering wheel, seats, headliner, carpets, door panels – and we haven’t even tackled the likelihood that the gauges won’t work and trim bits might be missing. Datsun improved the shift linkage in ’74, added a dead pedal, and upgraded a few other components – changes that were prompted by customer feedback. Unlike its American brethren, Datsun listened to buyers and fixed things accordingly.
The seller highlights rust in the floor pan and behind the passenger’s door. The glass looks decent, and the panels are largely straight. I’m a fan of the color, but it’s not everyone’s cup of tea. Production of this one-year-only model is estimated at 3000 to 5000 copies. With 240Z prices reaching into the high five figures on a good day, any 260 looks like a bargain. How would you tackle this car – renovate it or tear it up for parts?
Broken and abandoned, underpowered and overweight (though it’s lighter now than when it was dumped)-worth resurrecting? Someone would have to REALLY want a time sucking money pit to bring this one to its former glory. It’s the automotive version of a popular TV theme nowadays-title this “The Rolling Dead”. If ever there was a Datsun zombie in Iowa, this is it.
Parts.
Michelle, I didn’t see a link to the ebay auction?
Anyway, a restoration probably would be expensive as halftrack stated, but you dont need to restore it to have fun with it. Get it running and de-sconge the interior maybe swap in some different seats, address the floor rust. Who knows? Maybe someone sees this running and driving and and makes an offer you can’t refuse.
Thanks! Corrected…. I put the link in at the very end, and forgot to save it. It did manage to sell slightly over $3k. It was pretty derelict so I think the seller did well.
If the cancer is not affecting any critical structural points, the car is restorable. Floor-pan sheet metal can be concocted and welded into place. Anything that doesn’t work can be made to work, even if it may require a bit of mad-scientist creativity. The seats can be reupholstered by any skilled car upholsterer. I resurrected a far more complex car from the dead; if that car could be revived to primary-transpo status, this car can.
I love that people misquote some of the facts about the 260Z. There were 2 versions of the 260Z. This is the early 260 which was is the weaker 240z chassis. The later 260 has the big bumpers you referenced….that is actually the stiffer 280Z chassis. I have the stiffer late 260 and, BTW, the horsepower is 162….not 140. So, I can easily stay with and dust most stock 240Z, especially on a nice curvey road. Remember this is still an S30 and prices are starting to reflect that fact.
I used to co-drive a well built Datsun 260 with a lady who built the car with her Dad in a small garage. The car was 90% pure race car and 10% street legal
Her Dad got me to co-drive with her to keep her from being bumped into another class. We autocrossed all over NC. Never beat her time but got close once?