The mid to late sixties was an exciting time for sports cars. Out of Europe, you could take your pick from any number of greats like MG, Aston-Martin, Triumph, Austin-Healey, Ferrari, Lamborghini, Mercedes-Benz…the list goes on. In the U.S., you had the stunningly gorgeous C2 Corvette and fastback Mustang; not so great around corners but the styling was en pointe and they had the power to match. Meanwhile, the Japanese market was just finding its footing making the beginnings of some of the greatest sports cars of all time with the S600 from Honda, the 2000GT from Toyota, and this, the Fairlady from Datsun. The predecessor to the modern-day Z, you can find this 1967 Datsun 1600 SPL311 here on eBay.
It’s a project in the truest sense of the word, but aside from some surface rust, the body and frame look decent. There’s a dent on the driver’s side rear fin and rear bumper, the windshield is cracked, and there’s not much paint left. It looks like at one point it was maybe white? But that looks like just about the only things that are wrong with the body and frame. It’s a solid and relatively complete car; not only that, but the seller will throw in a new windshield and a few body panels! Scrub off the surface rust, pull out that dent, replace the lighting fixtures, and you’d have a good base to paint it whatever color you like.
Inside, the seats have some tears in them. The steering wheel is cracked, and the dash could use a new layer of leather. But, as with the exterior, that looks like just about the only things wrong inside the car. Objectively a bonus, the seller includes a spare set of gauges with the sale. I have no idea if the gauges currently installed in the dash work or not, but between the two sets included, you could probably cobble together something that told you vital things like water temperature and oil pressure.
Under the hood is the 1.6 liter where the car gets the “1600” from. Breathing through a pair of SU carburetors and overhead valves, it made 95 horsepower when new, driving the rear wheels through a four-speed manual gearbox. Anecdotally, I’ve been noticing a growing interest in the midcentury aesthetic, and an appreciation for smaller, simpler, but more fun cars. This Datsun 1600 fits that perfectly. It’s a roadster, and with the classic engine up front, drive wheels out back, row-your-own-gears layout with no roof, you’re guaranteed every drive will be a fun one.
Good luck finding parts for this one.
If you search “Datsun roadster“ on eBay several thousand listed parts will turn up in results. There is at least one seller that specializes in roadsters. With the advent of the internet savvy owners of cars that were popular at one point in time can find most parts are looking for without much trouble. Beyond eBay, there is Amazon, clubs, Facebook and hoarders. There has never been a better time to own cars like this, though one thing hasn’t changed, always start with the best and most complete car you can afford. That will pay dividends in the long run.
Steve R
A great candidate for a Ford 302 and a 4 speed top loader, just my 2 cents
Always liked these, and I know some don’t agree, but I still consider these the “Japanese MGB”. Lyman suggests , go the “Tiger” route, IDK about that, those are wildly unpredictable, nothing wrong with the mechanicals supplied by Datsun. I don’t think parts are the biggest problem here, it’s finding someone that would actually do a total restoration on one, and this needs it. While prices are all over the map, highs in the low 5 figure range, there are plenty in the $5-$7,000 range and are drivable. Still a nice find.
A modified 2000 engine will get you an easy 140hp which for a car this light puts it right up there with most more powerful cars but with handling to boot. Could be a nice car but it’s going to take some work.
I had several of these in the ’70s, did some Auto crossing and scca racing. This one doesn’t look like a 67, windshield is too tall. It’s likely a 69 or 70.
would that it B the 2000…
Ended:
Jun 26, 2021
Price:
US $2,200.00
Item location:
San Tan Valley, Arizona