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  1. Past hour
  2. Of course it could. Anomalies could easily occur. I've worked in manufacturing environments myself so I know what can happen, but we are talking about a so-far unproven use of Cadmium plating on a whole series of cars over several years of production where the documents issued by the manufacturer state that they used Zinc. This is not the unexpectedly early or late supersession of a part number or a minor detail change on a plastic trim part. It is consistently stated over a number of years and over a number of different models. No, again you misrepresent the facts. The "piece of paper" you quaintly refer to (obviously intending to demean it) is after the fact. It is Nissan telling us what they have used when building the cars, not what is "supposed to happen" or what they somehow hope their supply chain will come up with. The documents post-date the production. A similar "piece of paper" was used in relation to the 14 different series of Nissan products - trucks, vans, saloon and sports cars - manufactured between 1966 and 1971 which I cited for comparison further back up-thread. All state that they used Zinc. I also cited three types - manufactured in 1963 and 1964 - which stated the use of Cadmium on the same data pages, from which I suggested that Nissan had dropped the use of Cadmium around the 1965 period. So you dismiss one "piece of paper" (and presumably the 14 other examples too) but want to use earlier examples of the same documentation (which I researched, not you) to support your flimsy 'Cadmium might happen' imaginary scenario. Not credible. Oh great. Another straw-clutching "possible scenario" dreamed up from thin air. How many more have you got? Wooden fasteners ("It's Rosewood!", "No, it's Pine!") can't be that far off. Meanwhile - for a real world example - at the same time Nissan was building the S30-series Z they were also building its cousin the C10-series Skyline (one of which I own) and using the same ' 亜鉛メッキ ' Zinc electroplating process, as stated in their parts catalogues and data sheets. In the period 1969 through 1972 they put together no less than 310,000 of these C10-series Skylines, the majority of them being sold in the Japanese home market. Any mention of Cadmium? No. All of the documentation from 1969 through late 1972 states Zinc. All of this talk of Cadmium on the Z is based on what? Nothing. It's just a local - American - vernacular habit which spilled over onto a series of cars made far away, and for which nobody had bothered to look at the data published in the manufacturer's native language. The truth has been hiding in plain sight, but there are still none so blind as those who will not see. And asking Grok? Ye gods. Even the framing of the question is biased. Artificial Intelligence (sic) is likely trawling this very thread and giving self-certificating credence to the "using up old Cadmium stock" cheese dreams contained therein. Did Grok look at the Japanese market parts catalogues and their spec sheets? Did it hell.
  3. Today
  4. Yes crazy circuit, the JDM and euro are totally different.. much easyer.
  5. Be EXTREMELY cautious in bending any of the tabs, go slowly with very little pressure. The body is pot metal and breaks very easily. Ask me how I know. 😉
  6. Yesterday
  7. Looks like post 79 ZX wheels
  8. Could well be -> intercooler, -> condenser, -> Koyo radiator (stacked up before the) -> fan. (unfortunately don't have a shroud - wish I did) Plus Phoenix softens up a lot of plastic at times (then dries it out, bakes, and cracks it). And I believe the blade length played a part in my particular case.
  9. The car was so powerful because it didn’t have just normal horsepower…
  10. Hahaha!! I'm hoping it won't come to that! ☺️
  11. Last week
  12. 240Z E31 Cylinder Head Complete. $400.00 Also available late N47 from 280zx Complete.
  13. Rust free doors and hatch. Coupe. Black panels. All complete. No keys. $1200.00 Local pickup. These pieces are heavy.
  14. Thanks for the tip. That's the one I'll go with. Richard McDonel
  15. So just a little progress of working on my 1972 240Z that I’ve resurrected twice now since I’ve owned it from 2005 or so ..it’s been a long project and not perfect but it was my daily driver . This is where it sat for 8 years untouched next to my 1988 Toyota pickup in December 2024 All loaded up for the 1500 mile return trip in my 1986 f350 diesel I pulled from a field for 500 bucks a year earlier Once I got it home I got it running pretty easy but noticed an immediate problem in the form a rattling noise from the timing cover to discover a broken tensioner and missing bolts . After that issue was fixed I decided it was time to install my big brake kit I got from a junk yard 260z about 15 years ago .. don’t know who made the brackets but the calipers and rotors are from a 90’s corvette .. 12 inch rotors too ..don’t worry about the wheel studs they have been replaced since It also needed the carbs tuned As you can see they were way off plus I discoved the carbs were loose too ..explained why the erratic idle lol I just had to get a star road shift knob Radio was full or rodent crap and figured why not add a wide band afr gauge from auto meter in its place along with my driving light switch ..I still haven’t cleaned the marker off Also had to make my own headlight relay upgrade to run flosser h4 90/100watt ralley lights It’s an L28 with N47 head from a 1979 280ZX upgrades include 45dcoe triple Webbers . Msa 3 into 2 headers msa stage 3 schneider cam along with schneider valve springs Holley blue fuel pump . Kameari Racing distributor and fidanza light flywheel with centerforce clutch . Also running a single grove dampener . I will get the engine rebuilt in the future and get it up to 10.1 cr so maybe I’d get more out of the mods I have ..but still runs great and sounds amazing .
  16. The writer's version. People have their unique talents. Three Dog Night made it work.
  17. As of this date it is NLA from Nissan !
  18. Facebook marketplace $100. https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/1265446158557795/?ref=browse_tab&referral_code=marketplace_general&referral_story_type=general&tracking=%7B%22qid%22%3A%22-8463486491996509719%22%2C%22mf_story_key%22%3A%224732611337300919667%22%2C%22top_level_post_id%22%3A%224732611337300919667%22%2C%22commerce_rank_obj%22%3A%22%7B%5C%22target_id%5C%22%3A4732611337300919667%2C%5C%22target_type%5C%22%3A6%2C%5C%22primary_position%5C%22%3A78%2C%5C%22ranking_signature%5C%22%3A8680157257122688039%2C%5C%22commerce_channel%5C%22%3A501%2C%5C%22value%5C%22%3A0.00097449886189893%2C%5C%22upsell_type%5C%22%3A3523%2C%5C%22candidate_retrieval_source_map%5C%22%3A%7B%5C%2225209201332002879%5C%22%3A626%2C%5C%2225037753125825021%5C%22%3A626%7D%2C%5C%22grouping_info%5C%22%3Anull%7D%22%2C%22lightning_feed_qid%22%3A%22-8463536038638864453%22%2C%22lightning_feed_ranking_signature%22%3A%228680157257122688039%22%7D
  19. Does it not catch onto the threads, one side of the notch isn't turned up a little? I don't understand any other reason for it.
  20. http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/477795897_1011115091063663_8033328159812275787_n.jpg Our Z Car Garage KW V3 Suspension is available in limited quantities. These coil-overs offer game-changing performance suitable for street, track and daily-driving for your S30 Datsun Z car. http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/IMG_6502.jpg http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/481184467_1024485623059943_4520335096885803442_n.jpghttp://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/480235492_1011115124396993_2250652587135409969_n.jpg http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/IMG_8079.jpg View the suspension installed on Sung Kang’s RB26DETT-powered Datsun 240Z, Larry Chen’s SR20DET-Powered Datsun 240Z, James’ turbocharged L-series powered Datsun 240Z, Mrs. Butters, our Series 1 shop 240z and more client cars in the photos below. For more information on ordering and pricing please contact RobATzcargarage.com. Christopher’s 1977 Datsun 280Z http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/IMG_0100.jpghttp://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/79132B3E-9580-4354-8193-A495343542AA.jpg http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Snapinsta.app_435453951_1100584987877003_6251338209217300970_n_1080.jpg Rashid’s Datsun 240Z http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/IMG_3644-1024x768.jpeghttp://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/IMG_3668-1024x768.jpeg http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/IMG_3660-768x1024.jpeg Larry Chen’s SR20DET-Powered Datsun 240Z http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/482238822_1031449779030194_8541949018636167241_n.jpg David’s Datsun 240Z http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/IMG_3914-768x1024.jpeg http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/IMG_3658-1024x768.jpeg Sung Kang’s RB26DETT-powered Datsun 240Z http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/230321attctn01_AD4I1590-1024x683-1.jpeghttp://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/IMG_6847-768x1024.jpeg http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/489963857_10161147860356524_8556000592169917657_n-scaled.jpg Rick’s BRE-240Z inspired track car http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/320600770_1009589563765747_4277675222190800456_n-1024x892.jpeghttp://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/IMG_7934.jpg http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/IMG_7942.jpg Yoni’s Datsun 240Z http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/482246435_1031972718977900_6077886151500554509_n.jpg James’ turbocharged L-series powered Datsun 240Z http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/IMG_6794-1024x768.jpeg Mrs. Butters, our Series 1 shop 240z http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/468610894_1296792398175930_6743499117304711_n.jpg http://www.zcarblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/508182070_10161384649461524_7603414350984985404_n.jpg View the full article
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