1986 Nissan 4 Wheel Ext.cab Hunter Special on 2040-cars
Brighton, Tennessee, United States
Body Type:Pickup Truck
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:720
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
Number of Cylinders: 4
Make: Nissan
Model: Other Pickups
Trim: extended cab w/2 small seats
Options: Sunroof, 4-Wheel Drive
Drive Type: 4 wheel drive w/2wd high
Mileage: 343,447
Exterior Color: Black
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
Interior Color: Blue
This is a man's truck. It is 4 wheel drive with high 2wd and high and low 4wd. Manual 5 speed. manual moon roof, windows, sliding rear window, heavy duty front brush guard and rear bumper and tow hitch. It is raised and has large 15" tires. The "custom paint" is courtesy of crylon. What does not work is the tailgate handle, a/c, and some gauges. This truck always starts even with 300+ thousand miles on it. It has double spark plugs, wires, distributor cap and and coil. Just like a small airplane. Previous owner said he spent $1500. on customizing the suspension. Seats are good but still have covers on them. I put a 400 amp 12 volt invert er in the Velcro close glove box. Has new clutch cylinder, clutch, and starter. Front tires are 80% and rear 40%. Tool box has a/c parts, new set of wires, extra paint, sifter head, gasket set, and deer horns. IT DOES BURN SOME OIL. It could be fixed up as daily driver. Does need an old truck lover to own this one.
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Auto Services in Tennessee
W & W Motors & Auto Parts ★★★★★
Universal Kia Rivergate Location ★★★★★
Trickett Honda ★★★★★
Swaney`s Paint & Body ★★★★★
Southern Cross Transport tow and recovery LLC ★★★★★
Sound Waves Inc ★★★★★
Auto blog
Nissan settles with FTC over misleading dune buggy ad [w/videos]
Fri, 24 Jan 2014A couple years ago, Nissan created a series of commercials for its compact Frontier pickup showing the truck performing outlandish stunts such as snowboarding, saving a passenger airplane from a crash landing and climbing a steep sand dune to help a stranded dune buggy. As crazy as the first two commercials were, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) took issue with the latter, titled Hill Climb, with the agency considering it to be a misleading commercial since both vehicles required a cable to reach the top of the steep dune.
As such, Ad Age is reporting that Nissan - and its ad agency TBWA Worldwide - has settled with the FTC over the ad despite the fact that it features a disclaimer stating: "Fictionalization. Do not attempt." Nissan did not have to pay out any money in the settlement, but it is prohibited "from using potentially misleading demonstrations in future advertisements for pickups." In addition to the offending commercial, posted below, we've included some of the other related videos from the same Frontier campaign.
Nissan's Nismo celebrates 30th year with video retrospective
Tue, 23 Sep 2014Nismo, the motorsports and high-performance arm of Nissan, has a lot of racing success to celebrate in its history and possibly even bigger accomplishments to look forward to. The company is commemorating its 30th anniversary with a video looking back at its most important milestones from each year of its past.
Nismo's job first and foremost at its genesis was to excel at motorsports. It wasn't too long after the division was founded in 1984 that the company made its first of many attempts to take an overall victory in the 24 Hours of Le Mans. It never quite succeeded in that goal, but still managed to do well in long-distance competition elsewhere. At the same time, Nismo was racking up wins in touring car races in Japan.
Eventually, the division's engineers started dipping their toes into tuning road cars, in addition to going racing. What began as something sporadic has become a growing part of the Nissan lineup with Nismo-branded models of the 370Z, Juke, Note in Europe and the GT-R.
Infiniti's new VC-T changes the rules of small turbocharged engines
Sun, Aug 14 2016The upcoming Infiniti QX50 crossover does not get our pulse racing, no matter how shapely the QX Sport Inspiration concept that previews it may be. No midsize SUV does, to be fair. But it has something special under the hood – the world's first production variable-compression-ratio engine. That means the QX50's 2.0-liter turbo four, which makes 268 horsepower and 288 pound-feet of torque, will have up to 27 percent better fuel economy. Here's how it works. The trend of moving to smaller, turbocharged engines carries with it one big falsehood. Under low load when the turbo isn't needed, these engines are less efficient than an equivalent engine without a turbo because of the low compression ratio the turbo requires. That is, if you never need the extra power, you're wasting fuel. Turbocharged (and supercharged) engines use a lower compression ratio to prevent detonation. When you force extra air in a cylinder and mix it with fuel, it's more likely to prematurely go boom. Lowering the compression ratio prevents this problem, but it's less efficient. Infiniti's VC-T promises the best of both worlds, with a compression ratio that ranges from 8.0:1 for high-power turbo needs to a 14.0:1 ratio for fuel-sipping efficiency. At its heart the VC-T engine is a simple idea, but it's complicated to explain. Consider yourself warned. The photo below from Infiniti serves as a good visual overview. For the truly nerdy, this patent application covers the mechanical concept. Instead of having the pistons connected to the crankshaft, Infiniti's engine has a pivot arm with a connection on each end. One end connects to the piston, the other connects to a second lower shaft, which is controlled by an actuator arm. At any given time the engine's pistons move up and down according to the lobes on the crankshaft. But the actuator arm can change the angle of the pivot arm up and down. That is, the pistons still move in the same motion with the same stroke, but phase the entire stroke up or down. Move the pivot up and there's less room at the top, which means a higher compression ratio. Move the pivot down and the compression ratio goes down, too. As an added bonus, the lower shaft eliminates the need for counter-rotating balance shafts. Infiniti says this system works constantly and can vary the compression ratio to any number between 8:1 and 14:1. It also uses electronic variable valve timing on the intake valves to switch into Atkinson-cycle combustion for greater efficiency.