This is the formal build thread for project D A T S A N I T I - my GRM $2000 Challenge car.
Edit: Table of contents:
DATSANITI $2000 Challenge Budget
DATSANITI $2000 Challenge Receipts
Page 7 - First firing of the engine
Page 15 - First autocross of 2019
Page 26 - Nitrous install and first 1/4 mile
Page 32 - 2019 $2000 Challenge
This year's Challenge "Sub-Class" was chosen to be station wagons. You can find that discussion in the $2018 Sub-class thread. I have already brought one blue wagon to the Challenge in 2016: my 1995 Roadmaster Estate which was given an honorable mention in the Soccer Mom sub-class. It had good LT1 V8 power, but it was slow due it's massive size and weight. It was over 4,400 lbs. This year I have different goals: a lightweight, nimble, spartan wagon. Shortly after the sub-class for 2018 was decided, this intriguing opportunity revealed itself locally on Faceplace marketbook:
1980 Datsun 210 Deluxe. No engine or trans, a few missing interior pieces, but it rolls, is wagon-shaped, and has a clean title. A little research tells me these wagons had a curb weight of only 2,080 lbs! Perfect lightweight starting point for a Challenge car. These 210's are the descendants of Datsun 1200, and even smaller and lighter than the popular 510. It is RWD with the tiniest solid axle I have ever seen and only came with a 67 hp 1500cc engine, which was missing but not really missed. The seller and I agreed on $180, so I brought it home with my wife's minivan.
And in the back of the garage it lingered while I worked on my 2JZ hot rod project through the winter.
The Datsun sitting idly in the background all winter gave me plenty of time to mull over the build. I wanted to keep it light, but it certainly needed more power. I became fixated on the Nissan VQ35 V6: the all-aluminum, DOHC, timing chain, 60 deg V6, with a minimum of 260 hp that powered the 350Z and Infiniti G35. In both cars, they came with sporty and proven double-wishbone suspension front and rear. Research was telling me G35's are finally becoming cheap enough to cross into Challenge car territory. I found one in January for $1,000 and test drove it. Incredible power, hard pulling, and that sound - I was hooked. This was not the right car due to questionable head gasket health, but now I knew the path forward. A little more patience and I found this:
2003 Infiniti G35 automatic with 151,000 miles. Fresh from rear-ending another car. The seller bought it back from insurance after it was deemed totaled, but it still ran and drove despite the cracked radiator. I test drove it while keeping the coolant topped off. I gave the man $1,100. I called AAA. I apologized to my wife.
Within a week I found a used radiator on Craigslist for $30 and wedged it in. This is actually a M35x radiator, so it was never meant to fit, but the whole front of the car so bashed up it didn't matter. Yeah it's missing a fan blade, fan shroud, and the radiator is held on with sheetmetal strips and self-tapping screws, but it got me to work for two months. More on my G35 donor car ownership experience here.
Which brings us to last weekend - the $2018 Midwest Parking-lot-style Build Weekend that I hosted as a way to kick off the Datsaniti, catch up with old friends, and shake off the winter snow in the company of fellow GRMer's. Much more detail in the linked thread, but here are some highlights of that weekend:
This brings us up to 4/8/18.
Challenge budget: $180 Datsun + $1,100 G35 + misc G35 parts to get it running again = $1,393.27