RE: Tasty MZR Datsun 240Z Sport-Design for sale

RE: Tasty MZR Datsun 240Z Sport-Design for sale

Monday 24th June

Tasty MZR Datsun 240Z Sport-Design for sale

Restomods tend to be take it or leave it. Guess which one this Bahama Yellow 240Z is...


The last time we drooled over a Datsun 240Z it was a very rare UK model that had been restored to showroom condition by Nissan itself. This time, the car was likely sourced in North America and is intended to dramatically exceed the level of quality that was achieved by its maker the first time around. And that’s because this one has enjoyed the full attention of MZR Roadsports, the Bradford-based tuner which has made restomodding the 240Z very much its business. 

Datsun’s ’70s rear-drive sports car is an acutely good choice for such treatment. For one thing, it is very pretty in that delicate way that no modern car manages to be. For another, it already ensures a cult following in this country and is relatively numerous overseas. Having found a likely subject, MZR submits them to a familiar process: each is stripped down to bare metal, dipped in epoxy primer, stitch-welded, liberally strengthened and introduced to some sound deadening. 

It is then painted in-house and treated to the kind of underbody protection programme you’d expect from people taking it very seriously, using a polyurethane two-component waterproof and scratch-resistant coating, followed by the application of Dinitrol wax in all those hard-to-reach places. Then MZR reassembles the car, typically with a new limited-slip diff, six-speed manual ‘box, 30-way manually adjustable damping, bespoke suspension, a motorsport-spec steering rack, custom-made exhaust and a new fuel tank. 

Then, assuming you’ve gone for the Sport-Design package, you get a choice of heavily upgraded 2.9- or 3.1-litre straight-six motors (this example gets the former) which, thanks to electronic fuel injection and individual throttle bodies, ups the 240Z’s output to 250hp. This probably sounds pretty good piped through stainless steel, and with little more than a tonne to push, probably goes pretty well, too. 

We can be absolutely positive that it looks the part. This one went from Oslo Blue to Porsche-borrowed Bahama Yellow - a decision we wholeheartedly endorse - and continues the theme inside with brown leather and slate carpets, alongside yellow stitching and basket-weave leather on the door cards and seat inserts. As tends to be the case with expensive restomods, this one is obviously the result of much time and no little effort spent on getting the spec right. 

Factor in a newly integrated air con system and the DAB tuner and Bluetooth connectivity essential to life in 2024, and you’ve got yourself the perfect marriage of ‘70s style and modern-day convenience. Precisely how much it will cost is concealed behind the usual POA barrier, but for reference, a freshly restored Sport-Design 240Z starts at around £100k. This one is said to have only covered 2,650 miles since it was recommissioned and is ready for a new owner right now. Tempted? We are.


See the full ad 

Author
Discussion

350Matt

Original Poster:

3,747 posts

281 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
that's smashing

not entirely sure its 100K worth of smashing though

sidewinder500

1,213 posts

96 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Finally the car gets the power it deserves

richinlondon

610 posts

124 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Beautiful.

cerb4.5lee

31,344 posts

182 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Very nice. cool

I'd be very happy if that was sat in my garage for sure.

WPA

9,190 posts

116 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Stunning cloud9

CHLEMCBC

269 posts

19 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
It's very yellow.

smithyithy

7,316 posts

120 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Oh that is fantastic

Firebobby

587 posts

41 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Looks lovely, great colour, £100k is quite a fistful of dollars though! One for the back burner as they say.

exgb36

19 posts

70 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
That's very tasty.

s m

23,372 posts

205 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Seems decent value with all the mod cons like aircon and some decent power - wouldn’t pick that colour for mine but that’s just taste and fancy

Friend went through 240Z, 260z….. then an awful 280zx

They were decent enough but this looks very useable

howardhughes

1,040 posts

206 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Gorgeous car, but not at £100k f that

Demonix

507 posts

214 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Lovely looking Z but at £100k it should be! Would prefer it in either the factory metallic blue or metallic purple though.

thegreenhell

15,958 posts

221 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
£100k is a bargain compared to what people spend on hideously cliched restomod 911s.

At first I thought it was this one I saw in a video recently, but although similar spec it's not the same car.


JJJ.

1,437 posts

17 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Oh, that's just lovely.

skylarking808

824 posts

88 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
That is tastefully done...even like the colour.

240z's always have perfectproportions to me.

C5_Steve

3,654 posts

105 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Perfection.

I don't really have anything else to add, the price seems a bargain when you look at what a bog standard 240Z goes for now. MZR do some incredible work, I've yet to see one up close but seeing their latest commissions pop up always brightens my day.


SpadeBrigade

678 posts

141 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
That is fantastic looking. It’s a lot of money but it’s hard a ton of work which won’t have been cheap.

This is a world where a 5 series BMW can cost 100k.

WPA

9,190 posts

116 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Link to the auction: https://carhuna.com/auctions/vehicle/1973-datsun-2...

Guide price £115k to £130k

LotusOmega375D

7,802 posts

155 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
I am the world’s biggest hater of restomods, but even I actually rather like that. boxedin

Puddenchucker

4,197 posts

220 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Fantastic little thing and it's probabaly great to hustle along a B-road, but you've really got to like resto-mod Datsuns to stump-up over £100k for one.