4 screws no water to carbs 70 carbs
For those that haven't seen, there's a new pair of SU carbs for sale on Ebay. This is the second round for the listing. As you can imagine with a starting bid of $1600 there aren't too many buyers
New Unused Still in Plastic and Box Datsun 240 Z Carburetors | eBay
Robert S.
1971 240Z HLS30-21244
4 screws no water to carbs 70 carbs
Bruce,
I should have known you'd comment on this post.If I'm not mistaken these carbs will also work for '71 Series II cars.
Robert S.
1971 240Z HLS30-21244
I thought the same.
$1,600 for two NOS carbs vs. rebuilding/refreshing...... seems like they are concourse bound.
There is scarcely anything in the world that some man cannot make a little worse, and sell a little more cheaply.
The person who buys on price alone is this man's lawful prey.
John Ruskin (1819 - 1900)
ZCars in Eastern Canada seaport ready for shipment to Europe
http://ZSportCanada.com
But rebuilt/refreshed are better correct?
Better running, undoubtly. But they are not "right".....
Last edited by zKars; 10-04-2014 at 02:26 PM.
-----------------------------------------
Jim
73 240Z HLS30 149331
69 510 PL510 77603
www.zKars.com
www.calgaryzclub.ca
Reference materials
www.xenonS30.com
But they are not "right".....
Meaning what exactly? Just curious.
Last edited by rcb280z; 10-04-2014 at 06:04 PM.
Sorry, didn't make my joke/point clear enough. Those who want their car "just like it came from the factory" would not accept rebuilt Z therapy carbs if they had the choice of real, period correct, unused, brand new SU's. Even if they ran noticibly worse... Just wouldn't be right...
-----------------------------------------
Jim
73 240Z HLS30 149331
69 510 PL510 77603
www.zKars.com
www.calgaryzclub.ca
Reference materials
www.xenonS30.com
I figured that's what you were referring to. Makes total sense. It's that "period correct" status that means everything to the "purist". So they would be worth more than gold or diamonds to the right person.
Those sure are pretty. I'd feel guilty about putting fuel into them for the first time. They'll probably end up on a show car, not a driver.
You better have the entire rest of the engine looking new before you slap those things on.
That part number is still good, average price is a little over $1,700.
https://www.google.com/webhp?sourcei...#q=16010-E4302
Last edited by siteunseen; 10-05-2014 at 09:13 AM.
1972 240Z #918 New Sight Orange
1977 280Z #305 Light Blue Metallic
1972 240Z #110 Persimmons Red
I hope he sells them - it will make my set worth that much more…
Although the Part number seems to be good - I wonder if there are really many more in Nissan's Stock.
Carl B.
What's wrong with Ztherapy restored carbs then ? 99% of the people will not see the difference, they use genuine parts for the rebuild.
I feel 1600 is really to much, but somebody might bite..
HLS30 32581, 5/71 Matching numbers
Jay Leno : You know one week after the Americans have walked on the moon, the Japanese introduced this sports car, and…if you’re a car guy pretty equal. I mean walking on the moon was pretty good, but how many times you’d gonna walk on the moon? But here was an affordable sports car that had real performance and looked like it cost a lot more than it did.
HLS30 32581, 5/71 Matching numbers
Jay Leno : You know one week after the Americans have walked on the moon, the Japanese introduced this sports car, and…if you’re a car guy pretty equal. I mean walking on the moon was pretty good, but how many times you’d gonna walk on the moon? But here was an affordable sports car that had real performance and looked like it cost a lot more than it did.
The NOS carb ad is for a single carb price or am i missing something.
16010E4302 - Genuine Nissan
I don't think you're missing anything. The carbs on ebay are a pair of both front and rear stuffed into one box. I didn't check into the P/N to figure out if the box is front or rear, but the point is that $1600 is a little less than half price for the pair.
No guarantee and no returns if there's a problem, but if you just gotta have new, it's not a bad price.
They are a re-list no bids at $1,600. first time.
Jerry Purcell
1970 HLS30 00029 Owner since 1976 Now owned by Les Canaday (Classic Datsun Motorsports)
1972 HLS30 93606 IZCC Registion #105 Original owner back home after full restoration by Classic Datsun Motorsports
On carpartsmanual.com the 16010-E4302 number is a twin carburetor assssembly for an AUTOMATIC, to August 1971.
16010-E4301 is for the MANUAL transmission.
Those on e-bay are E4302, or the box is.
Datsun 240Z Carburetor L24 (To Aug.-'71)
1972 240Z #918 New Sight Orange
1977 280Z #305 Light Blue Metallic
1972 240Z #110 Persimmons Red
Wait a minute... You're saying that part number (that sells for new from a dealer for $1700) is actually for a matched PAIR of front and rear carbs? If that's the case, then $1600 for the pair on ebay is not a good deal.
I was thinking that was each, not a pair, but I do see what you're saying with the parts breakdown.
Last edited by Captain Obvious; 10-06-2014 at 07:38 AM.
As mentioned in the Ebay ad, the owner originally bought the carbs to put on his restoration of HLS30-01138, but never used them on the car. The car was sold on Ebay in Sept. 2013. I found a previous discussion about this car and one of the sale ads still left online:
http://www.classiczcars.com/forums/e...1138-ebay.html
datsun 240 z vin 1138
So, the car he bought the carbs for has a manual transmission. Now I'm wondering what the difference is between carbs for a manual and automatic transmission?
Robert S.
1971 240Z HLS30-21244
The third listing for the carbs is up: New Unused Still in Plastic and Box Datsun 240 Z Carburetors | eBay
Robert S.
1971 240Z HLS30-21244
A lot of non nissan datsun guys know the value of these parts. Unlike the Chevy and fords which u can still catalog parts. They know and try to sell datsun parts for a small fortune because most stuff is hard to find.
I bet these are restored carbs in a nissan box. Makes the box worth a lot of money. Lol
Last edited by 71Nissan240Z; 10-28-2014 at 05:06 PM.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks