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Nissan Pulsar

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Nissan Pulsar is a compact car / small family car produced by the Japanese automaker Nissan since 1978. It was originally conceived as a replacement for Nissan's first front-wheel drive platform, the Nissan Cherry family (models E10 and F10). So the Pulsar was actually the third-generation FF layout Nissan. All Pulsar models were produced in a front-wheel drive configuration, though from the 1980s, Nissan did offer four-wheel drive models, and in the early 1990s, the four-wheel drive turbocharged Nissan Pulsar GTi-R.


Contents

[edit] N10 series (1978-1982)

The Pulsar was first released in 1978. The N10 series Pulsar was exported to Australia with the Datsun Pulsar name. This model was known as the Datsun Cherry or Datsun 100A/120A/130A/140A/150A in Europe and the Datsun 310 in the U.S.. The Nissan Langley, from 1980, was a more upmarket Pulsar.

The Pulsar was available as a three or five-door hatchback, four-door sedan, a two or four-door van or station wagon, a two-door fastback with wraparound rear window, and a short-lived four-door fastback.

A mid-term facelift brought new E-series engines for 1981 and 1982. The Nissan Pulsar is a beautiful car with all the creature comforts and nitty-gritties.

[edit] N12 series (1983-1986)

Nissan Pulsar NX
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Nissan Pulsar NX

A more angular version was announced in mid-1982. This model was also built in Italy by Alfa Romeo as the Arna (named after the joint venture which created it, Alfa Romeo Nissan Autoveicoli), using Alfa Romeo engines. Confusingly, the Italian models were also sold with Nissan badges, in Japan as the Nissan Pulsar Milano and in Europe as the Nissan Cherry Europe. At Alfa Romeo, the Arna was meant to replace lesser versions of the popular Alfasud, but never had the Italian car's appeal. By this time, Nissan had more or less standardized its naming policy worldwide, so as a Nissan it tended, with few exceptions, to be known as a Pulsar.

Those exceptions included related models in the Japanese home market. The Nissan Langley was a Pulsar with more powerful engines and four headlights. The Nissan Liberta Villa was a four-door version. The Nissan Pulsar EXA was a two-door coupé version with pop-up headlights.

1986 Nissan Pulsar NX (North American Model)
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1986 Nissan Pulsar NX (North American Model)

The Pulsar EXA was known in North America as the Pulsar NX and shared many of its parts with the Nissan Sentra. This version of the Pulsar NX was available from 1983 to 1986 and came with either the fuel injected turbocharged E15ET engine or the carbureted naturally-aspirated E16S engine. The Langley was built in Australia as the Nissan Pulsar, while the more standard Pulsar appeared there as the Holden Astra. The three-door and five-door hatchback versions of the Pulsar were also made available, replacing the old Datsun 310 hatchbacks, but they proved to be unpopular and they were withdrawn from Nissan's North American lineup after one year.

[edit] N13 series (1987-1990)

1987 Pulsar NX SE
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1987 Pulsar NX SE
1987 Pulsar NX SE with optional Sportbak
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1987 Pulsar NX SE with optional Sportbak

In 1986, Nissan's design chief refused to follow the smoother, aerodynamic look of other cars. A squarer Pulsar (N13 series) was released as a result; innovations included a four-wheel drive model. The Pulsar–Astra relationship continued in Australia, with the Langley sold as the Pulsar there and the four-door sedan version of the Nissan called the Vector. The Langley also continued sales in Japan as a "Japanese-spec" Pulsar with a more powerful DOHC 1.8 L engine as opposed to its SOHC counterpart in Australia. The N13 Langley featured other options such as a limited-slip differential, luxurious interior and the much sought-after black headlights, center grille and round Skyline-style taillights. In countries such as New Zealand, the Sunny and Pulsar were combined into a single model, the Nissan Sentra — which differed (apart from the station wagon) from the models sold under the same name in the United States.

Versions in the United Kingdom were:

  • 1.3 L
  • 1.3 LS
  • 1.3 GS
  • 1.3 LX
  • 1.4 LS
  • 1.4 GS
  • 1.6 LX
  • 1.6 SLX
  • 1.6 GSX
  • 1.8 ZX
  • 1.8 GT.

Saloon models were badged as Pulsar; this was the basis for the Holden Astra.

In Europe, it was sold as the Nissan Sunny, unrelated, however, to the Sunny sold in Asia. In South Africa it was sold as the Nissan Sabre. There were three and five-door hatchbacks and a four-door sedan.

The EXA was spun off as its own model, with an innovative modular rear end: customers could opt for a coupé, hatchback or an open-top car depending on what they put on. This version of the EXA was available in North America under the name Pulsar NX and was sold from 1987 to 1990. The EXA/Pulsar NX was replaced in 1991 with the Nissan NX coupe. [1]

[edit] N14 series (1991-1994)

In 1990, the N14 model finally saw Nissan conform to the rounded look. There was no Holden equivalent. The Vector name continued in Australia in this series, from 1992 to 1995. It continued to be offered in New Zealand as the Sentra. In Europe, the Sunny name continued, applied to three, four and five-door models, alongside the Sunny California station wagon from Japan (called either the Sunny Estate or Sunny Traveller). The Langley and Liberta Villa models were not offered.

This generation was badged as the Nissan Sabre in South Africa, and the Nissan Sunny in Europe. The Pulsar was Wheels magazine's Car of the Year for 1991. Also, a coupé model was offered in this generation, called the Nissan NX100.

The N14 series also saw the introduction of the Nissan Pulsar GTi-R (labelled Sunny GTi-R in Europe). It featured a turbocharged SR20DET engine producing 169 kW (230 hp JIS) of power, as well as the ATTESA all-wheel drive system.

The GTi-R, which was identified as a RNN14 model, was entered by Nissan into the World Rally Championship. However, it did not prove to be very competitive, and many believe it was hampered by excessive weight over the front wheels, causing a deficiency in handling where the car could understeer excessively. The GTi-R raced under the Nissan Motorsport Europe banner. It was more competitive in the hands of privateers, winning the Group N class of the World Championship in the hands of Grégoire de Mévius. It also proved popular in the European Rallycross Championship.

[edit] N15 series (1995-1999)

1997 Nissan Pulsar
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1997 Nissan Pulsar

In 1995, the N15 Pulsar was launched and sold in Europe as the Nissan Almera. New Zealand Sentras changed names (to Pulsar) during this generation as local assembly of the range ceased in favour of imports from Japan. Again, three, four and five-door models were offered. The station wagon continued to be from the Sunny, later spun off in Japan into the Nissan Wingroad.

The N15 Pulsar had 1.4 L, 1.6 L and 2.0 L gasoline and 2.0 L diesel engines in the European-market versions. Japanese models had 1.5 L, 1.6 L, and 1.8 L engines.

The N15 range in Japan included the Pulsar VZ-R N1, which was a racing homologation version intended to compete with the Honda Civic Type-R. Producing 200 PS from its 1.6 L SR16VE engine, it claimed the highest specific output for a production car prior to the introduction of the Honda S2000.

[edit] N16 series (2000-2005)

In 2000, Nissan launched the N16 Pulsar, which included a compact MPV version (the Nissan Almera Tino or Nissan Tino) for the first time. The Wingroad continues to be sold as the Pulsar Wagon or Almera Traveller in many countries. To keep the Bluebird nameplate alive, Nissan shifted it to the four-door version of the Pulsar, and named it the Nissan Bluebird Sylphy in Japan. Unlike other Pulsars, the Bluebird Sylphy has a chrome grille.

In the Philippines and Taiwan, the Bluebird Sylphy is sold as the Nissan Sentra. In New Zealand and Thailand, the five-door Pulsar is imported from the UK, while the four-door model is essentially a rebadged Bluebird Sylphy. Consequently, each body style has a different front end.
In Thailand and China, the N16 Bluebird Sylphy is sold as the Nissan Sunny.

[edit] Australia (2000-2005)

In Australia, as with New Zealand, it is marketed as a hot hatch rather than a small family car. This model was known, in Nissan terminology, as the N16. A four-door sedan and a five-door hatchback are offered.

Trim levels are LX, Q and ST. Engine choices consisted of a 1.6-litre or a 1.8-litre four-cylinder with 16 valves. Power output was 83 kW and 92 kW.
The four-door was available in four trim levels - an LX with the 1.6, the ST and Ti with the 1.8-litre engine as standard, and a Q version with the 1.8 motor and a sportier level of trim, including a rear spoiler and alloy wheels.

In the five-door range there was no LX version, this being four-door only. Nissan launched the hatchback model with the ST trim level and a sporty Q version. As such, all hatches were 1.8-litre powered. The base-model LX sedan came with a driver's airbag, air-conditioning, remote locking and power mirrors, although no anti-lock brakes (ABS) or power windows were offered. Surprisingly, the ST five-door gained an extra front airbag, whereas the four-door model did not have one as standard.

In Ti form, the four-door gained both front airbags, ABS, climate-control air-conditioning, alloy wheels and power windows. The Q model was similar to the Ti four-door, although there were slight discrepancies between the sedan and hatch, with the latter version gaining an extra air-bag and 15-inch alloy wheels versus the 14-inch alloys on the sedan.

[edit] The future

Current event marker This article contains information about a scheduled or anticipated future automobile.
It may contain preliminary or speculative information, and may not reflect the final version of the vehicle.


Nissan is expected to replace the Pulsar with models based on the Renault Clio. In Japan, the Nissan Tiida and Tiida Latio sedan replaced the Pulsar in 2004, while Europeans will get niche vehicles such as the Nissan Note to replace the Pulsar. The Tiida was introduced in Australia and New Zealand in early 2006.

In October 2005, a new Nissan Bluebird Sylphy (G11 series) was previewed and appeared at the Tokyo Motor Show.


[edit] References and notes

  1. ^ nissanexa.com
Preceded by:
Nissan Cherry
Succeeded by:
Nissan Tiida
Part of the Nissan series
Vehicles 100NX | 1200 | 180SX | 200SX | B210 | 240SX | 240Z | 280ZX | 300ZX | 350Z | 510 | 720 | R89C | R390 GT1 | Almera | Altima | Armada | Avenir | AZEAL |Be-1 | Bluebird | Caravan | Cedric | Cefiro | Cherry | Cima | Crew | Cube | Elgrand | Fairlady | Figaro | Frontier | Fuga | Gazelle | Gloria | Hardbody Truck | Laurel | Leopard | Lafesta | Liberty | Livina Geniss | Maxima | Micra | Multi | Murano | Navara | Note | NX | Pao | Pathfinder | Patrol | Pintara | Platina | Prairie | Presea | Primera | President | Pulsar | Qashqai | Quest | R'nessa | Rasheen |S-Cargo | Saurus Jr | Sentra | Serena | Silvia | Skyline | Skyline GT-R | Stanza | Stagea | Sunny | Teana | Tiida | Titan | Urge | Versa | Wingroad | X-Trail | Xterra
Engines 4 cylinder D | C | G | J | H | L | A | Z | CA | CG | CR | E | FJ | GA | KA | SR | QG | QR | YD | HR | MR | MA
Inline 6 L | H | S20 | P | RB | TB | RD | SD
V6 VG | VE | VQ
V8 Y | VH | VK
See also: Infiniti division Edit this template


<- Previous Nissan car timeline, European market, 1980s-present - [edit]
Type 1980s 1990s 2000s
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Supermini Micra K10 Micra K11 Micra K12
Small family car Cherry N12 Sunny N13 Sunny N14 Almera N15 Almera N16
Large family car Primera P10 Primera P11 Primera P12
Executive car Maxima I Maxima II Maxima III
Coupé Silvia S12 200SX S14 200SX S14
Sports car Nissan 280ZX 300ZX Z31 300ZX Z32 350Z
Mini MPV Note
Compact SUV Qashqai
X-Trail
Crossover SUV Murano
Off-roader Pathfinder
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