Nissan Gloria 1968
Nissan Gloria 1968
Heres my new ride anyone seen one like it in NZ? Anyone got one?
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Re: Nissan Gloria 1968
Yep seen a few of them around, they pop up now and then.
Not sure who else on here has them. At least one dude had a black one on here.
Not sure who else on here has them. At least one dude had a black one on here.
Re: Nissan Gloria 1968
pretty sure the black one belongs to mark105, cool car by the way and welcome to the site
Re: Nissan Gloria 1968
Mark has a President, not a Gloria. JurassicAutos has one, I think. Also Big A.
Re: Nissan Gloria 1968
I've seen this car around, mean patina...don't ever repaint it. What's the story? Had it been off the road long?
Re: Nissan Gloria 1968
Hey bud it's a mean old thing garage find. Been going well till someone smashed into it. Now on the hunt for parts
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Re: Nissan Gloria 1968
Gutted, all the best for the parts huntfrazbroon wrote:Hey bud it's a mean old thing garage find. Been going well till someone smashed into it. Now on the hunt for parts
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Re: Nissan Gloria 1968
Mine is different to the other Gloria's in NZ as I have an HA30 or the super deluxe where as all the other ones are PA30's which is the standard model.
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Re: Nissan Gloria 1968
great ride I use to have the previous generation (Prince before Nissan bought it) S40 when I got my license back in '87 well engineered and pretty tuff, just have a read and compare to the dowdy offerings from ford and holden back in the 60's..wish I still had itfrazbroon wrote:Heres my new ride anyone seen one like it in NZ? Anyone got one?
Launched with the old four until a new single-overhead-cam six could complete the package in 1963, the Gloria shocked the world at the Japanese industry’s progress. The new G7 six boosted output by 25 percent, delivering 106hp (79kW) from just 1998cc. This was significantly higher than the Mark III Zephyr achieved on 2.6-litres (which the Gloria undercut on price) and ahead of Holden’s bold new 149ci/2.4-litre ‘red’ engine, but under its 179ci/2.9-litre.
The G7 had a cast-iron block with wet-sleeve cylinder liners, cast-iron head and an alternator. Inspired by Mercedes-Benz, it was a mirror image of the German engine with its two-barrel Nikki carburettor and exhaust manifold on the passenger’s side like a Holden, in deference to right-hand drive. The elaborate air filter design that moved its intake into the cold air flow and a modern under-bonnet fan-boosted heater system were typical of the detail.
The impressive ZF-type four-speed manual transmission, with a column-shift pattern similar to the early Peugeot 404, was no less impressive, with an overdrive fourth ratio similar to a VW Beetle’s. Although all Gloria ’boxes contained the extra gear, you had to pay for the overdrive option to access it! The differential was solidly attached to the chassis with enough rubber bushing to warrant a two-piece, centre-bearing tailshaft. Prince was smart enough to replace the sometimes scary Benz swing axles with double-jointed half-shafts and sliding splines. The Gloria’s de Dion tube, attached to unusually long leaf springs, kept the wheels perpendicular to the road. Why Wheels, in March 1965, described the Gloria as having "swing axles" is puzzling. Was it ignorance or too confronting that the Japanese were almost using global best practice as early as 1963.. I think the latter
Launched with the old four until a new single-overhead-cam six could complete the package in 1963, the Gloria shocked the world at the Japanese industry’s progress. The new G7 six boosted output by 25 percent, delivering 106hp (79kW) from just 1998cc. This was significantly higher than the Mark III Zephyr achieved on 2.6-litres (which the Gloria undercut on price) and ahead of Holden’s bold new 149ci/2.4-litre ‘red’ engine, but under its 179ci/2.9-litre.
The G7 had a cast-iron block with wet-sleeve cylinder liners, cast-iron head and an alternator. Inspired by Mercedes-Benz, it was a mirror image of the German engine with its two-barrel Nikki carburettor and exhaust manifold on the passenger’s side like a Holden, in deference to right-hand drive. The elaborate air filter design that moved its intake into the cold air flow and a modern under-bonnet fan-boosted heater system were typical of the detail.
The impressive ZF-type four-speed manual transmission, with a column-shift pattern similar to the early Peugeot 404, was no less impressive, with an overdrive fourth ratio similar to a VW Beetle’s. Although all Gloria ’boxes contained the extra gear, you had to pay for the overdrive option to access it! The differential was solidly attached to the chassis with enough rubber bushing to warrant a two-piece, centre-bearing tailshaft. Prince was smart enough to replace the sometimes scary Benz swing axles with double-jointed half-shafts and sliding splines. The Gloria’s de Dion tube, attached to unusually long leaf springs, kept the wheels perpendicular to the road. Why Wheels, in March 1965, described the Gloria as having "swing axles" is puzzling. Was it ignorance? or too confronting that the Japanese were almost using global best practice as early as 1963...mmm
Re: Nissan Gloria 1968
So am on the hunt for valve clearances in the prince G7 engine. Found in Glorias and early skylines.
Can anyone help??
Can anyone help??