Nissan 300zx 2-dr Coupe Twin Turbo on 2040-cars
Denver, Colorado, United States
Hello, and thank you for looking at my 1990 300zx Twin Turbo. The car is in great shape overall and I am the second owner. I have all of the original receipts .Other than the small cosmetic defects the car is in great shape for it's age. As you can tell from the pictures it is very clean inside and out. There are no modifications to the body, rims or glass. The engine is VERY strong and runs at full boost when you want it. Being stage 3 for this car means that it has the following engine modifications, Stillen Cold Air Intakes, Still Cat-back exhaust & Stillen ECU chip.
Nissan 300ZX for Sale
- Nissan 300zx 2+2 coupe 2-door(US $1,000.00)
- Nissan 300zx gl(US $2,000.00)
- Nissan 300zx 300zx twin turbo(US $10,000.00)
- Nissan 280zx 2+2 t-top(US $2,000.00)
- 1992 - nissan 300zx(US $7,000.00)
- 1990 - nissan 300zx(US $1,000.00)
Auto Services in Colorado
Wollert Automotive ★★★★★
Vanatta Auto Electric ★★★★★
Ultra Bond Windshield Repair & Replacement ★★★★★
Tunerz, Boomerz And More ★★★★★
Star Crack Windshield Repair By Joy ★★★★★
Spradley Barr Mazda ★★★★★
Auto blog
World's Strongest Man champion pulls a dozen Nissan Note hatchbacks to set record
Fri, 06 Dec 2013On December 1, Zydrunas Savickas, a five-time World's Strongest Man champion, pulled 12 Nissan Notes (the equivalent to our Versa Note) weighing 28,530 pounds over 16.4 feet in 32.9 seconds. The feat, performed in Lithuania at the end of the country's Car of the Year test camp, was enough to secure him the Guinness world record for "Most Cars Pulled By One Man."
"Once I got into my stride pulling the 12 Nissan Notes, [it] was fine," Savickas said after the pull. "Obviously, a big thank you to Nissan for helping me set the record and making it all happen."
"We at Nissan like setting records and are always aiming high," said Taina Erkkilä, Communication Director of Nissan Nordic Europe. "Today we are delighted to have been able to help Zydrunas set another world record and see so many people turn out to support him."
Nissan Safari police truck a sort of A-Team van from Japan
Wed, 28 May 2014Television today might be at one the best points in the medium's history with shows like Mad Men, Louie, True Detective and streaming offerings like House of Cards. However, none of those come close to the number of car chases and explosions of '70s and '80s offerings like Charlie's Angels, The A-Team or The Dukes of Hazard. Apparently, this prevalence of action at the time wasn't just an American phenomenon. In Japan, a show called Seibu Keisatsu fulfilled the nation's need for shootouts and stunts.
Nissan was a major sponsor of the show, and therefore the brand's vehicles were used extensively, including a highly modified Nissan Safari SUV (also known as the Nissan Patrol), pictured above. In the show's lore, it was equipped with radar, a camera and a fire extinguisher capable of turning over a car. The series ran 236 episodes from 1979 to 1984, and with the trailer below as indication, that allowed time for plenty of car jumps and explosions.
The entire Seibu Keisatsu series is now coming out in Japan on DVD and Blu-Ray packed in a fake gun case. The trailer below shows off some of the action of the series. It all starts out normal enough, but about a minute into the video there are all sorts of Nissans jumping and crashing. Plus, there is a guy on fire in a shootout. This show looks like some seriously cheesy fun. Scroll down to get a taste of it.
Nissan GT-R goes 183 mph on ice in Russia
Sat, 06 Apr 2013When a pair of Russian pilots wanted to set a local ice-speed record, they chose a stock Nissan GT-R for the task. Roman Rusinov, a Russian race car driver, and Andrey Leontjev, a Russian auto journalist, took Godzilla to Lake Baikal and ran it up to 294.8 kilometers per hour (182.8 miles per hour) across frozen stuff estimated to be 1.4 meters thick.
While the worldwide record of 205.48 mph was set by Juha Kankkunen in a Bentley Supersports Convertible, the mark achieved by Rusinov and Leontjev establishes a new Russian record. Well done, boys. You can watch it all go down in the video below.