Wow, two model years, I think, before the 810, which was later the Maxima.
Datsun's early-malaise "luxury" ride, this was.
I was a Datsun freak around this time because I had the 1976 color brochure from when my mom bought a 2-door B210. Dark blue w/matching dark blue interior. The Z-car was the coolest set of pictures when I was a kid.
I vividly remember my folks towing the '72 Vega with a cracked head, to near the dealership, then driving it like a block to trade it in. Clever...and now I see where installing a shift-kit in the V-8 Grand Cherokee, to hide a badly flaring 2-3 shift, trade-in idea originated.
Sidebar: The GC did drive quite nicely afterward, and the salesman even commented on how nicely the transmission felt, even though I had a trailer hitch on it. My jaw almost hit the floor. The Suzuki Grand Vitara JLX+ I bought to replace it was just as big a heap-o-junk, but without the luxury or off-road prowess.
Given what else was available in the marketplace, from US manufacturers, this car was pretty appealing. You had, in the same size category, Gremlin, Vega, Pinto, Maverick...kinda..., and Aspen...bad...just bad. #1975
My grandparents went to Datsunfor a few years for the same reason. The American choices were terrible and their traditional choice, VW, was no longer cheap enough to put up with the quirks.
They later went back to Ford after a nasty customer service fail by Nissan. #1975
I need a cap for one of these, if anyone has a spare.
On a serious note, it looks quite good until you get to that grille treatment... what's up with that? It makes my own Violet (that's the 244DL's name) look attractive, and that says something. #1975
I vaguely remember a Datsun ad from this era with the tag line, "Datsun saves and sets you free." I've always wondered about the thinking behind "sets you free." A vague appeal to religious folks?
The Datsun 710 deserves a special award for being the only car sold in the US (at least that I can think of) that has ever attempted a "sagging shoulder" character line.
Hmmm. Perhaps it hasn't been tried before or since because it just doesn't look very good. #1975
It was a dark day indeed when cars lost "chrome" -- or at least some metal or metal-like, metaloid substance on the front--because once you got uni-colored plastic nose/grilles with maybe a tiny strip of trim for bezels around the headlights, there was nothing much to use to make designs--except making angry little headlights that now stretch back toward the A-pillar as far as possible, or Frenched tiny round pig eyes. Goodbye, unique interesting faces, even homely ones--hello, jellybeans.
@Novaload: Hey now, in the 1970s it was really only the Japanese that were making chrome-less cars. Americans held out until... 1992, when Ford introduced a face-lifted, monochromatic (and chrome-less) Ford Tempo. The three-bar chrome visage was no more, but hey, in '05 the Fusion resurrected the Tempo's timeless grill.
Judging by the late 80s plates this car may have been from out of state. Funny how the FU combo got pass the DMV. This car looks really good for the age and I have never evah seen one of these in person. Too bad about loosing 3/4 of the hubcaps, but I am sure other ones that fit can be found. Another thing missing from modern cars is hub caps. Now and days they are attached by lug nuts. #1975
@87CapriceEstate: I have seen a number of cars with license numbers containing the letter combination "FU" around where I live (Oregon, not Cali), notably the Lotus Elan+2 in my garage, with its license number starting with "SFU". Now that one is lucky to have passed through the DMV! #1975
Not Datsun's finest hour, and surprising that there are any left at all. The Celica would have been a far better choice at the time. Friends got a similar vintage Datsun wagon right around then, and they just hated its lack of reliability. #1975
The 710 was the replacement for the beloved 510, and there were a lot of people (including the enthusiast magazines) who were not happy about that. The 510's IRS was gone on the 710, along with much of the rest of the sportiness. The styling for mid-70s Datsuns became busy, dumpy, and overcooked, and the 710 was probably the dumpiest of them all.
This particular car is the plain two-door sedan. Datsun offered a "sportier" hardtop coupe - I'm not sure it was an improvement, though (click on the picture to see it).
I love these old ads. Not just the car, but the people, the clothes, hair--each ad is a tiny, perfect passion play: here was cool, here was exciting, here was everything we value.
11/08/09
11/08/09
It does have racing pedigree. Sort of. #1975
11/08/09
Datsun's early-malaise "luxury" ride, this was.
I was a Datsun freak around this time because I had the 1976 color brochure from when my mom bought a 2-door B210. Dark blue w/matching dark blue interior. The Z-car was the coolest set of pictures when I was a kid.
I vividly remember my folks towing the '72 Vega with a cracked head, to near the dealership, then driving it like a block to trade it in. Clever...and now I see where installing a shift-kit in the V-8 Grand Cherokee, to hide a badly flaring 2-3 shift, trade-in idea originated.
Sidebar: The GC did drive quite nicely afterward, and the salesman even commented on how nicely the transmission felt, even though I had a trailer hitch on it. My jaw almost hit the floor. The Suzuki Grand Vitara JLX+ I bought to replace it was just as big a heap-o-junk, but without the luxury or off-road prowess.
Given what else was available in the marketplace, from US manufacturers, this car was pretty appealing. You had, in the same size category, Gremlin, Vega, Pinto, Maverick...kinda..., and Aspen...bad...just bad. #1975
11/09/09
My grandparents went to Datsunfor a few years for the same reason. The American choices were terrible and their traditional choice, VW, was no longer cheap enough to put up with the quirks.
They later went back to Ford after a nasty customer service fail by Nissan. #1975
11/08/09
On a serious note, it looks quite good until you get to that grille treatment... what's up with that? It makes my own Violet (that's the 244DL's name) look attractive, and that says something. #1975
11/08/09
The Datsun 710 deserves a special award for being the only car sold in the US (at least that I can think of) that has ever attempted a "sagging shoulder" character line.
Hmmm. Perhaps it hasn't been tried before or since because it just doesn't look very good. #1975
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That's what I like to believe, at least. #1975
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Or the also 1984 Ford LTD LX? #1975
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TLAs?
Yea, Old Grimey, your plate combo is even more suggestive than EFU since SFU stands for "S%&t $@ed up." #1975
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Odd then, odd now. #1975
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The 710 was the replacement for the beloved 510, and there were a lot of people (including the enthusiast magazines) who were not happy about that. The 510's IRS was gone on the 710, along with much of the rest of the sportiness. The styling for mid-70s Datsuns became busy, dumpy, and overcooked, and the 710 was probably the dumpiest of them all.
This particular car is the plain two-door sedan. Datsun offered a "sportier" hardtop coupe - I'm not sure it was an improvement, though (click on the picture to see it).
11/08/09
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01/07/09
01/07/09
[jalopnik.com]