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32 minutes ago, HS30-H said:

Again, the cars you are pointing at are not part of the 'Masterpieces' program. Will it ever sink in? Will you sail blithely on by once again? Probably...

This is one of those examples of how your unstoppable urge to dominate leads you to make simple obvious errors. The car is in the "Masterpieces" section of the web site. Is it an error on the web designer's part? It's not supposed to be there?

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36 minutes ago, HS30-H said:

Now you're suddenly classiczcars' very own Walter Winchell.

Thank you.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Winchell

The car that SpeedRoo was talking about is also in the Masterpieces "museum". Once again...

On 9/30/2025 at 8:28 AM, SpeedRoo said:

Wow you make this too easy RAE! Which factory are they making it correct to, certainly not Nissan. Look at the underside of the white December 1970 240Z https://s30.world/collection/datsun-240z-hls30-15652-us nothing like that ever came out of the factory. Look under the front cowling over the windscreen wiper motors and ventilation, never seen that finish from the factory, it's usually gray undercoat beneath that panel. What happened to all the chipseal the factory applied under the car that was then covered with overspray when the final paint was applied. That's a factory correct restoration when you see that, not all this shiny stuff.

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Edited by Zed Head
Better image

I've realized what part of the problem might be. They don't actually show any "Restorations". They talk about the restoration process, and use the words "as they left the factory" or something like that, here and there on the site, but never actually say "here is a restored car". The Restorations sub-menu only shows Masterpieces, with Masterpieces, Icons and Heroes in the "museum". There is no Restored sub-menu. And they left some "outs" on the Masterpieces page. So, which is it - are Masterpieces restored or not? Can't tell from the ad copy. Highlights are mine.

Overall, it looks like they do typical "get as close you can" restorations. Not "as they left the factory". Still looks like an exciting endeavor. Very interesting. The overpromising is the problem. Probably that marketing guy's fault.

"Masterpieces
S30s restored in detail. We are proud to have some of the first built LHD S30s in our collection. These include HLS30-00022 and 23, in addition several restored and unrestored 1969 produced S30s. We also brought to life some (as yet) unknown stars, such as cars with EU specifications and also with Portuguese specifications for living."

Edited by Zed Head
Removing some garbage graphics

Actually, the problem is that the web site is inconsistent. They do say that the Masterpeices are factory correct restorations. Then they say something different in the Museum.

https://s30.world/masterpieces

S30.world launches “The Masterpieces program”

"A celebration of Nissans S30 platform

A limited-run of factory-correct restorations of the iconic Datsun 240Z will become available, with the first one to be sold at auction in the United States on October 23rd 2025.

This unique program is focused on the full, factory-accurate restoration of Datsun 240Zs, also known by the S30 chassis code, to a level of detail that makes them identical to how they left the production line over 50 years ago."

7 hours ago, zspert said:

As one of the "old timers" who has restored to stock his share over the years - rooms, mine and those of my customers, full of first place trophies - and was a very early parts supplier to the owner of some Nissan/Renault dealerships in that part of the world I'm a bit scared to comment, might lose my head!!

As somebody respected in his field, I'd hope that you might empathise with people who are attempting to restore cars as close as is reasonably possible to how they were when they were new and making them available to people who understand and appreciate that intention, whilst also understanding the implicit truth that it is simply not possible to attain perfection in terms of factory finish. That should go without saying, regardless of any over-enthusiastic sales patter written in their second language.

Constructive, objective and informed peer-group critique is something that we can all continue to learn from and the classiczcars forum is a good place to do that. It is nice when wise old heads pass on their knowledge and experience.

But S30.World appears to be the target of some 'Not From Round Here' type finger poking which I would hope looks just as parochial and small-minded to you as it does to me, and it would be refreshing to see an occasional positive comment with regard to the spirit, if not the product of their efforts.

Dear all,

My name is Chris Visscher and I am the owner of S30.world. For the past 10 years, I have focused a significant part of my life on increasing the appreciation of the Datsun 240Z/Nissan Fairlady Z, which we all cherish. With my partner Gustav combined we did about a total of 60 restorations to date. I would like to thank everyone here for their feedback. We are removing the white 240Z with VIN HLS30-15662 from the masterpiece program. You are right, the underside of the car has been completely repainted, and that should not be the case. The press release states that it is factory correct. You are right, it should say: as close as possible to when they left the factory. I am the last person to admit that a complete factory-correct restoration is impossible. All I can say is that we did our very best and made special rubber mats (for the 1969 cars), special air ducts(for the 1969 cars), a fuel tank for each of the different years, the insulation mats under the paint on the bottom, behind the dashboard , etc.etc etc

I myself have dismantled many cars that were produced from October 1969 to the end of 1970 and compared all the parts with other project cars. So I have done everything to gain experience. In addition, we have different first paint cars starting with #2xxx and #19xxx that we have used as examples. We will certainly have made mistakes, but I can tell you that we have done everything we can to do it as well as possible. I am proud of the result and I hope you are too!

If you want to help us and the community and have further feedback on the cars or the website, please email it to chris@s30.world, I appriciate it very much! Thank you in advance for your help.

Good morning and greetings from Germany/Europe. After reading along here for a long time, I am now introducing myself as the ‘marketing guy’ from S30.world.

Even if this might be a mistake, because I'm speaking up as a "newbie" and will surely get 40 knives rammed into my back. But I'm willing to take that risk.

So please forgive me if my language isn't perfect and I don't know most of the people here in the forum.

I think the community here has been connected for a very long time and it's difficult to let someone outside the USA into the "inner circle".

But let me at least try, and I hope that a certain amount of friendliness in all directions will certainly do everyone good.

As Chris already wrote, we are busy every day doing our best and put a lot of effort into understanding and paying attention to every detail as best we can.

Of course, the fact that our team is located all over the world also plays a major role in this.

We are in the Netherlands, Hungary, Switzerland, Australia, England, Japan, the USA... This is very important because the S30 series was not developed solely for Japan, nor solely for the USA, nor solely for Europe.

The entire S30 family is a globally designed car. And every export market is different (even though, as we know, the USA makes up a large proportion of exported cars).

But not many people know that European cars are significantly different from those in the USA.

The fact that cars in Portugal are also VERY different from cars in the rest of Europe is also an interesting story.

But why is that?

What impact do laws in Australia have on cars in the USA, for example? What do changes to cars in Japan have to do with cars in Europe? Why are there still 260Zs and no 280Zs in Europe and other export countries in the years 76-78, while in the USA it is the other way around?

These are all questions whose answers are connected like a tight net.

So you should never look at just one export market. That would not be the whole story.

We, as a group of people spread across the globe, gather our knowledge and try to answer questions. (For example: who knew that between 1969 and 1978 there were 10 different factory hubcaps for the Zs?)

We are simply passionate nerds who not only restore cars, run a museum and reproduce parts, but are also on the hunt for all these undiscovered mysteries.

I think it matters less which words in our press release are "allowed" from this forum – because surely it is also our goal to appeal to people who haven't owned a Z for 50 years, but are new to the topic.

Above all, it's about sharing all our experience (people are already laughing about the fact that I was born in a Datsun. My family has been driving Datsuns since the early 1970s, and the first car I ever sat in was a 1973 Cherry E10, a model that wasn't even available in the USA) and to create a place that inspires all Z fans worldwide.

I therefore invite all sceptics to visit our museum in the Netherlands and take a look at the cars. It's certainly exciting to see how they are built.

Incidentally, we are very grateful if anyone on location notices that, for example, a screw is the wrong colour or a hose does not have the correct number.

But please don't judge something like that just because you see photos on a computer screen.

Come and visit, you are invited, and I am sure that we are all nice people who share the same hobby.

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