Rare 5-Speed Z: 1977 Datsun 280Z

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The prospect of a garage find may be somewhat more optimistic in nature than your tradition barn find: after all, the owner kept it indoors and close enough to the house that they might very well tinker with it after dinner. At least, that’s probably the intent, even if it never actually happens. This 1977 Datsun 280Z was found in a garage after the long-term owner parked it there following the failure of the clutch slave cylinder, a relatively simple fix that never materialized. The seller found it, brought it home, and had it running a short time later. Find the 280Z here on eBay where the current bid is $6,999 with a Buy-It-Now of $8,900.

The seller reports that this is a well-optioned Z car, fitted with factory air conditioning and the preferred 5-speed manual. The paint is heavily faded and there are numerous cosmetic flaws to report, which does beg the question as to where and when it was allowed to degrade a bit. Was it already a tired driver when it went into the garage, or did it get left outside for a few years before being moved indoors? It’s hard to tell for sure, but the restoration process – should there be one – will likely include both cosmetic and mechanical refreshes. The seller notes that while it does have some of the “typical” rust these cars are known for, it’s not nearly as bad as it could be.

The seller claims he bought it from the original owner, which does make the story of it being parked for years over a relatively simple repair seem more believable; after all, the original caretaker is the one seemingly most likely to keep a car around even after it develops issues. The interior is in so-so shape, and given the sub-100,000 mile odometer reading is believed to be accurate, that’s a surprising amount of wear-and-tear on the driver’s seat. The dash has the typical Z-car cracks, but the door panels appear to be in fair condition. The seller notes this 280Z will come with its original radio, spare tire, jack kit, and tire inflation kit.

This is an interesting model generation for a few reasons, with the most obvious being the addition of Bosch fuel injection. A bump in displacement combined with the L-Jetronic setup meant the 1978 280Z offered performance more in keeping with the original Series 1 cars, and the bumpers were also styled a bit more to reduce their unsightly appearance (but Euro bumpers are still a very worthwhile upgrade.) Perhaps most significant is the fact that this 280Z sports a rare and optional 5-speed ‘box versus the standard 4-speed, which many of these cars were equipped with. Throw in the fact it’s a true 2-seater and not a 2+2 and you have a recipe for a very desirable Z-car.

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Comments

  1. angliagt angliagtMember

    Jeff,
    Why do you not list the location of the vehicles you feature?
    I always have to go to the link to find out.

    Like 8
    • PHILLIP c CLAYTON

      It’s in Guthrie, Oklahoma. Guess they assume we will look at the ad it’s listed on.

      Like 0
  2. Mike76

    Wow, looks identical to the one that my Mom owned. She was a petite lady about five feet tall and she’d muscle that manual steering and shift like no tomorrow. The seat all the way forward so she could reach the pedals! She loved that car. It was the first car that she chose and owned while married to my Dad that was truly “all hers.” I cannot believe she has been gone for twenty five years. Time sure does fly, and my Mom, I sure do miss her.

    Like 21
  3. crankyshaft

    I had a ’77 280Z back in the 90’s. Paid $1500 for it and it was in better shape than this. Most rusted away into dust, and the few remaining with minimal or no rust command crazy money. If the mileage is correct the engine is barely halfway through its serviceable life.

    Like 0
  4. Rob

    $1500, tops.

    Like 6
    • Jerome Soncrant

      $1,500 25 years ago!!

      Like 7
  5. chrlsful

    nother car that just kept gettin worse’n worse (’73 or 4?) as it went on, no? I didnt realize it went to 2+2 as it bloated, acquired chrome and lost it~
    Toranado lost it (dwn hill 70 or 71)
    Riveria (1966)
    Vette (best ’56/60)
    Stang (’71 even B4 the next gen)
    and so on…
    “If I were king of the world I’d… “

    Like 0
  6. Steve

    Love the Z cars! But this one is a mess. IMHO, it’s over-priced!

    Like 5
  7. Gordie

    Maybe a little high on the BIN for my liking but I had a ’75 280Z and it was a great car. Pretty good acceleration, very good handling (except on snow!), and not too bad on gas. The engine took a while to tune properly, but it is a virtual copy of the BMW in-line sixes, uses the same fuel injection and almost vibration-free at idle. I had the four speed and was considering going to the 5-speed, but after finding out it has the same final ratio decided against a swap. Watch out for rust issues with these ones! Mine needed extensive work on the rocker panels and there’s some surface rust showing here. Maybe closer to $6K is a fair offer?

    Like 3
  8. TRUTH

    Who would bid 7k already?? It’s a junker for the most part. Going to cost a fortune to get it to really pretty shape and then it would still only be worth around 10k

    Like 0

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