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Mike

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Everything posted by Mike

  1. Nice, did you tell him about the club? ? Glad you were able to get the car sold to someone who will appreciate it. Mike
  2. Mike replied to bpilati's topic in Open Discussions
    Hope you all had a great holiday! I didn't have a chance to log in much this year due to family and travels..
  3. @718Miata, your car seems to be priced well. If you'd be willing to accept $15k as listed in our classifieds, you'll get a buyer. It's not a great time to sell a car right now though, most people are thinking about the holidays. Give it until spring and you'll find someone. Mike
  4. Looks like a great car at a good price! Did you list it for sale in our classifieds yet? I would recommend putting up an ad and including more photos. If you haven't already... https://www.classiczcars.com/classifieds Edit: Ah, nevermind I found your listing and linked below. Sorry the auction buyer didn't come through. I recommend more photos if you have some. -- Mike
  5. It may require a new seal on the back-end of the transmission. Did you take any photos while you had the shaft removed?
  6. Mike replied to 240260280's topic in History
    I wish they would have stuck with the dual exhaust. It makes the back of the car look so much better IMHO.
  7. What... is.... that....
  8. Only 3 days left on that auction. I don't know, I've heard horror stories about Ferrari engines. It would be an interesting project though, for the right person.
  9. Mike replied to jonbill's topic in Introductions
    Gents, in the future please refrain from responding to spammers in the forum and use the "report post" feature. I have tools and methods in the back-end that can usually help me determine if this is a spam bot or a real user. Just assuming this kind of user is a spammer on the front-end doesn't work. He could have been a valid user who was just trying to be friendly. However, in this case, I was 50/50 split on my decision. His profile looked legit but the red-flag was his posts were very general and the email address was questionable. It had nothing to do with our Facebook SSO or other integrations. Remember, I have tools that can help me solve the kinds of issues, so please report posts so I can look into it. Thank you! Mike
  10. Mike replied to jonbill's topic in Introductions
    Nevermind, it looks like he's going around and spamming. I'll take care of it.
  11. Mike replied to jonbill's topic in Introductions
    Damn guys, why so angry?
  12. Wow, looking good on BAT! Good luck
  13. Good luck with the auction! Hope it goes well. I also recommend putting up a classified ad here on our site with a link to the auction in the ad. Here's the link to the cars for sale section: https://www.classiczcars.com/classifieds/category/1-cars-for-sale/ Mike
  14. Mike commented on Mike's gallery image in Member Albums
  15. Welcome to the site! Sounds like you have a great project and would love to see your build process. Take lots of photos because you'll look back and remember the 'dirty days' when you're driving around in your restored beauty. Most of us have been there... ?
  16. by Brendan McAleer // November 19, 2019 - Hagerty.com Dawn breaks on a clear Sunday morning in Yokohama, Japan, as Taketora Fukuchi rolls open his garage door. It has been a long week at work, plus evenings are busy caring for his elderly father. Today, though, he has time. Time to entertain a dream he's had since childhood. Fukuchi slots the key into the ignition and turns it. Five thousand miles across the Pacific, Ray Carroll also twists an ignition key. For Carroll, several times zones away in Vancouver, British Columbia, it's early Saturday afternoon. The sound of the straight six sparking to life brings an instant grin to his face. Taketora and Carroll have never met. There’s an ocean of time, geography, and culture that separates them, yet they understand something fundamental about each other. They speak the language of Z. The birth of the Z Brendan McAleer Unveiled at the Tokyo Motor Show in 1969, the Nissan Fairlady is 50 years old. Released on North American shores as the Datsun 240Z shortly after its debut, it became one of the greatest successes of the Japanese motoring industry. The earlier Toyota 2000GT proved Japan could build a beautiful sports car, but it was, and remains, prohibitively expensive. The 240Z was the car an average person could afford. Exiled to America for the crime of being a little too enthusiastic about motor racing, Nissan executive Yutaka Katayama was the sort of historical figure you'd want to have a round of beers with. He was doggedly diligent in his work, yet also infectiously enthusiastic about cars. After a few years slinging tiny pickup trucks to Japanese gardeners in Los Angeles, he had become fully marinated in Southern California car culture. Japan was his birthplace, but America felt like home. Mr. K, as everyone called him, pushed hard for a proper sports car from Nissan. He knew it would elevate the growing brand's standing in the U.S. While many on Nissan's executive board weren't well pleased with Katayama's enthusiasm, he'd also championed the Datsun 510, which was turning out to be an unqualified success. Mr. K. pointed to the Jaguar XKE as the archetype for what he was pushing for, just as the 510 had become “the poor man's BMW.” Brendan McAleer There are still some argumentative rumbles about how the 240Z's genesis came about, but there is no doubt the car was an all-Japanese design led by chief designer Yoshihiko Matsuo. Like Katayama, Matsuo was also something of a corporate rebel with a penchant for sports cars. If you look at Matsuo's early sketches from 1965, the embryonic Project Z looks a little like a Lotus Elan—officially, he was only supposed to be working on an open-topped replacement for the Fairlady roadster. When Matsuo later sketched out a fastback version, the first seeds of the Z car were sown. On a trip back to Japan, Katayama saw Matsuo's work and knew it was what Datsun needed in America. He took it to the executives and fought for it. There is an apocryphal tale that has him prising the “Fairlady” decals off the first shipment of cars himself, and replacing them with Z badges instead. Whatever the truth is, by the beginning of the 1970s, the world was already in love with the Z. A daily dose of Z Brendan McAleer Back in Vancouver, Carroll doesn't remember the first time he saw a 240Z, but he does remember the Z from his youth. It was a wild machine, wide-bodied and hopped up. As a youth in the 1980s, it was both a ticket to freedom and something of a gateway to trouble. Still, he managed to stay mostly out of harm’s way. After getting married, he sold the car. Even if the marriage didn't last, memories of the Z lingered in the back of his head. A couple of years later, as he was proposing in Italy to his current wife, the utterly romantic moment came with an extra request. “I told her, there's just one more thing,” Carroll says, laughing, “I want to buy a Z.” The search took a while, but he stumbled across his current car on America’s East Coast. Freshly restored, it's flawless inside and out, and it has a little American flavor to it; the raised-white-letter BF Goodrich tires are a match for the set Carroll had on his Z in the 1980s. Brendan McAleer Carroll stands 6-foot-4. His friend's vintage 911 sometimes feels a little cramped. Part of the genius of the Z's design, however, is the way the production team lowered the floor to allow for more room inside for American-sized drivers. You won't fit in a Toyota 2000GT unless you're under six foot and have had a recent haircut. Matsuo wasn't happy with the tweak to his initial design, but it made the 240Z work for (quite literally) a larger audience. Carroll went through the extensive process to get collector plates on his Z, a move that comes with a break in insurance rates but also some restrictions that forced him to drive less than he wanted. “I found that I just wasn't driving the car. As a consultant, I work from home, but sometimes I visit clients, and I wanted to really enjoy the car.” So Carroll put the plates back to standard, and now he drives the Z daily outside of the winter months. “Every time I get in it,” he says, “I get to experience that feeling again.” Working for the weekend Brendan McAleer Thousands of miles away, Taketora Fukuchi meets me in Daikoku Parking Area, a broad tarmac rest stop in Yokohama. Accessible only from elevated toll highways that crisscross Tokyo, this is the unofficial nerve center for car culture in Japan. On Sunday morning, it's humming with cars, from a squadron of TVRs, to multiple Lamborghini Countaches, to a Lancia Stratos. And many, many Zs. Fukuchi-san is an officer with the S30 Z car club of Japan, and he's brought along a few other members. One of them, Akira Takeuchi, drives an incredibly rare Z432R, the Z-car with a GT-R's 2.0-liter, dual overhead cam engine. Fukuchi's car is even rarer. It's one of the 37 cars restored and sold by Nissan in 1997 in select U.S. dealerships under the Vintage 240Z program. Highly sought after by dedicated Z fans, a few have made it across the Pacific to Japan. “When the S30Z was announced, it was almost a dream to buy a private car for ordinary households,” Fukuchi says. “The 2000GT was a car in the movie, and [wanting a] Z was a longing that I would reach if I stretched out my hand.” Brendan McAleer He shows me the redone brochures for his car and the club stickers on the back. Clubs of all kinds are very popular in Japan, and the Z club is very active. Fukuchi doesn't get much chance to drive his car, as his corporate job is all-consuming (as is also typical in Japanese culture). However, this car is a link to his college years, when he drove a 1978 Fairlady. Fukuchi ticks off an impressive list of cars he's had over the years, including a race-prepped rear-drive Corolla GT-S he campaigned in the 1980s and ’90s. “As I get older, I like fast sedans and still value the 2018 M3CS and the 1993 M5. But only S30Z is exceptional.” For both Carroll and Fukuchi, the Z still fulfills the dreams its creators intended it to. It is a daily reward for one, a special treat for the other. For both men, and for thousands of owners, a Z is a machine that’s both special and accessible. A sports car for all, united by a love of driving. 1 / 11 Car Profiles
  17. Ah, it's likely that I have to go into each article and update the URL for the linked content. It's all still here, the links just changed since we moved over to the current software platform years ago. This is a good reason why I kept the old site alive. It may take a few solid weeks of work to get everything updated and I've been doing it as I have spare time. ? FYI, the link you want to use for the current site is: https://www.classiczcars.com/forums/topic/31615-280zx-distributor-advance-curve-reference/ Basically add https://www.classiczcars.com/forums/topic/ to the front of the title. And it looks like there's a new ID, so, that will have to be updated too. I have better luck simply searching for the title "280zx distributor advance curve reference" and I can find it easily.
  18. Nice, I like the wagon with the golden skeleton.. ?
  19. I love this kind of creativity! Thanks for posting, Joseph!
  20. No no no no... not appropriate for testing. They should use their own equipment for that purpose.
  21. Awesome! Very fun stuff, nice work. Grabbed a snapshot.
  22. This does look like a good deal. HOWEVER, be warned the condition of this car will likely chew through the rest of your budget and then some. You will likely spend more like another $10k-15k if you include bodywork and paint. Go into this project with a plan and you'll have a great time!

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