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The Nissan 350Z (known as Nissan Fairlady Z (Z33) in Japan) is a two-door, two-seater sports car that was manufactured by Nissan Motor Corporation from 2002 until 2009 and marks the fifth generation of Nissan's Z-car line. The 350Z entered production in 2002 and was sold and marketed as a 2003 model from August 2002.
1999–2001 Nissan Hypermini; 1999–2003 Nissan Bassara; 2000–2015 Nissan Xterra; 2001–2009 Nissan Platina (rebadged Renault Clio) 2001–2016 Nissan Moco (rebadged Suzuki MR Wagon, a Keicar) 2003–2008 Nissan 350Z Z33 (Fairlady Z in Japan) 2003–2020 Nissan Teana; 2003–2024 Nissan Titan; 2003–2009 Nissan Kubistar; 2004–2022 Nissan ...
The Nissan 370Z (known as the Fairlady Z Z34 in Japan) is a 2-door, 2-seater sports car (S-segment in Europe) manufactured by Nissan Motor Company. [2] It was announced on October 29, 2006, and was first shown at an event in Los Angeles ahead of the 2008 Greater LA Auto Show , [ 3 ] before being officially unveiled at the show itself.
The Nissan Z, [4] known in Japan as the Nissan Fairlady Z (Japanese: 日産・フェアレディZ, Hepburn: Nissan Fearedi Zetto), is the seventh generation of the Z-car line of sports cars manufactured by Nissan. The model succeeded the 370Z, though is built on a modified and revised version of the previous generation's platform. [5]
In 1983, Nissan Motor Company established Pilipinas Nissan, Inc. (PNI), a joint-venture with Marubeni, to assemble and distribute Nissan passenger cars. The company took over the former Volkswagen (DMG, Inc.) assembly plant in E. Rodriguez Sr. Ave., Quezon City and refitted it to meet the specifications required by Nissan Japan.
Nissan uses a straightforward method of naming their automobile engines. ... 1954–2003 Nissan H engine — 1.9/2.0 L — H, H20, H20-II, H25 ...
The Nissan Z engine is a series of automobile and light truck four-cylinder engines that was engineered by Nissan Machinery, manufactured by the Nissan Motor Company from 1979 through August 1989. All Z engines had 4 cylinders, a total of 8 valves and a single overhead camshaft (SOHC) .
Nissan engineers wanted the VG to have improved performance, fuel economy, reliability, and refinement, while being both lighter and more compact than its predecessor. The resulting engine was designed by Nissan from scratch, and shared few mechanical components with its predecessor, or with any other automaker.