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26th-Z

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Everything posted by 26th-Z

  1. Were you the one who sent me the PM? I haven't the mental capacity to attach pictures to a PM evidently. Minilites were a very popular wheel at the time; would be surprised if these are not Minilites. I took the picture on the track; Paul Whiteman Trophy Races, SCCA National, Daytona 1971. The other one is the American Road Race of Champions, Road Atlanta, 1971.
  2. Hey! I saw you post this on Facebook and thought; "shame on you, Mike, for not telling us that this is the start of the Suzuka 1000km race in 1970". Here's Nishino Fujita.
  3. The wheels are called 'slots' and they come in many different variations. Slots were very popular at the time and many dealers sold them as aftermarket options. They were never supplied from Nissan. My slots are 14"x6" Japanese aluminum and the lug bolts have the washers press-fitted. I have center caps but they fall off all the time. I would want to say that slots are probably the most common Z wheel. You should be able to find a set in decent condition for a reasonable price. Always beware of people selling bent or broken wheels.
  4. The two styles of early knobs. The ones on the bottom "teardrop shape" are the earliest.
  5. My son-in-law did the same thing when I commented about the word "irregardless". Thank you for the interpretation, Alan! I didn't know WHAT he was talking about.
  6. "You have to dumb yourself down to conversate with 95% of the people." Conversate!?!! You're dumbing down to "conversate"? What!?! Are you some Shakespearian type? Making up words again? The word is converse. Love ya SIteunseen, but I just can't help it. Thanks for the chuckle, Archie! http://www.wordgenerator.net/fake-word-generator.php
  7. I saw the Japanese Art Deco exhibit and recognized the rabbit sculpture. That's what got me started. I bought a book on Japanese Art Deco and began to recognize a whole bunch about Datsun design and advertising. Dan Banks has a wonderful collection of Datsun "art" and we discussed the correlation. Thanks to Dan, I have reproductions of most of the posters. As a student of design, Matsuo san would certainly be aware of the style. I never got the chance to ask Katayama about his thoughts and some day I may go to a ZCON and ask Matsuo. Makes you wonder what was influencing the lines of the S30, eh?
  8. I don't believe the story is that simple. The "story" is cute, quite memorable, and a reasonable sort of marketing response to the question about the Fairlady name. In 1958, Katsuji Kawamata, the president of Nissan Motors, Ltd. attended the Broadway hit musical “My Fair Lady”. It has been said that the performance influenced Kawamata san to name the Datsun brand sports car (SPL212) “Fairlady”. Brian Long wrote in his book; Fairlady Roadster to 280ZX, “He thought people would relate to the beauty of the leading lady in the play to the car!” Indeed. I wonder if Kawamata san didn’t view Eliza Doolittle as a Moga; the icon of modern Japan, embracing Western culture, jazzy and sporting, stronger, showier, and independent. I see too many parallels to ignore the inference. Kawamata san would have been fully aware of the impact Art Deco had on the global sophistication of Japanese culture. In the relationship between “fairlady” and “moga” would characterize the intention of Nissan at the time; to strengthen their exports with the introduction of a sports car and symbolize it with a name that promotes excitement. The name “Fairlady” remains to this day and represents a succession of highly successful Nissan sports cars; faster, stronger, jazzy and very Western. I can't think of a better place to post this: Deco-Japan_Release.pdf
  9. Thanks for the links. I grabbed a bunch of pictures.
  10. The VIN you want to look at is on the firewall of the engine bay - driver's side - etched into the firewall metal. It should say "HLS30-04044". April or May of 1970 manufacture according to www.zhome.com XS3 0T6285475 is meaningless unless the car has a salvage title.
  11. I saw this at Zcon 2005
  12. Too clean. Too sterile, neat, tidy. You're missing drips and runs in the paint. Splotches! We must have splotchy paint! And splatters. It's the splatter that matters!
  13. 26th-Z replied to sweatybetty's topic in Interior
    search http://www.classiczcars.com/topic/28848-kanji-found-when-removing-a-dash/?hl=kanji
  14. Bought them at a garage sale. They must be retail. The outside is a gel coating.
  15. That looks like turns 3 and 4 at Road Atlanta. Don Kearney in the lead. Are you guys interested in Japanese Grand Prix racing from the late 60's? This is the starting grid of the 1966 Japan GP. Four Nissan / Prince R380s, a Toyota 2000 GT and a Fairlady.
  16. Hey! I found some more pictures. Here are the front suspension compression rods I was talking about. I also have yellow paint on the transmission brace bolts and differential mounts. The yellow paint was applied to indicate correct installation and torque. You made me giggle with your overspray, comment, Dan. Who the hell is ever going to know?!!?!! Here is my best oil pan overspray picture...both styles!
  17. And these came from a 4/70 car displayed at ZCON 2005; all original, 29,000 miles. The photographs I have of my car are just that - photographs. But I have signs of yellow in these locations. I also have red paint on the nut / washer holding the front suspension compression rod to the chassis. I never made a map however I'll bet Mike McGinnis knows.
  18. Here are some pictures I have, Dan. These two are from a car Mike McGinnis did several years ago - a gold medallion car.
  19. 26th-Z replied to gira's topic in Racing
    This site has all the races video on demand http://www.scca.com/pages/2015-scca-runoffs-ondemand
  20. 26th-Z replied to gira's topic in Racing
    Congrats Greg! You had a whole cheering section in the bleachers at the horse-shoe.
  21. 26th-Z replied to gira's topic in Racing
    I will come looking for you, Greg. Hope the weather is nice.
  22. This is the exhaust heat riser Dan is talking about
  23. Take your polarizing sunglasses off.
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