Home » Pick A Rip Van Winkle Ride To Revive: 1976 Fiat X1/9 vs 1978 Datsun 200SX

Pick A Rip Van Winkle Ride To Revive: 1976 Fiat X1/9 vs 1978 Datsun 200SX

Sbsd 4 10 2026

Good morning, and happy Friday! Today, we’re going to look at a couple of sporty coupes that have been sleeping for decades. They both deserve to be brought back, though, and it will be up to you to choose which one you’d rather wake up.

Yesterday we looked at two cool wagons with frightening reputations. Lots of horror stories about both were shared, but in the end, a small majority of you felt the Jaguar was less of a risk. Its friendly-sounding Ford DNA helped its case quite a bit, from the sound of it.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

I think I’d go the other way. These are both going to be high-maintenance machines, which means you had better enjoy it in between wrenching sessions. That Jaguar just doesn’t feel special enough for the potential hassles. The Audi sounds like a lot more fun.

Screenshot From 2026 04 09 16 41 35

Not all that long ago, I couldn’t understand why anyone would let a cool, fun car sit instead of driving it. But since my MGB GT ordeal, I get it. Stuff breaks, you don’t have time or money to fix it, and the car gathers dust. Next thing you know you’re paying insurance on a car that hasn’t moved under its own power in far too long, and it glares at you accusingly every time you go out to the garage, and you make the decision to move it along to someone else’s garage. My MG didn’t sit for as long as these two have, but it was still way too long. But that’s water under the bridge; let’s see which dust-gatherer you would be willing to take on.

1976 Fiat X1/9 – $8,500

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Image: Craigslist seller

Engine/drivetrain: 1.3-liter OHC inline 4, four-speed manual, RWD

Location: La Crescenta, CA

Odometer reading: 65,000 miles

Operational status: Runs and drives, but only recently revived

Ever wanted a mid-engined Italian sports car, styled by Marcello Gandini at Bertone, with an engine designed by Aurelio Lampredi? You’re in luck! The Fiat X1/9 has been referred to as a “baby Ferrari,” and really, that’s not too far off the mark. But instead of commanding six-figure prices, this snappy little number will set you back less than ten grand.

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Image: Craigslist seller

The X1/9’s engine, transmission, and rear suspension were all lifted straight from the front end of the Fiat 128 and plunked down behind the seats, in a move later copied by Pontiac for the Fiero. The engine is a 1.3 liter inline four, with a known propensity for high revving, like a proper Italian engine should have. It’s a good thing, too, since the transmission is only a four-speed. This car sat for thirty years, and has recently been reawakened. The carb and brakes have been gone through, and it passed a smog test, which is quite a victory. There’s still some work to do: no mention was made of new tires, and you should change the timing belt before going too far, but it’s a start.

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Image: Craigslist seller

The seller says the interior is “pristine,” but maddeningly, they don’t give us any photos of it, so I’ll have to take their word for it. If that really is the case, it’s a big deal, because soft parts like that are always the hardest things to source when fixing up an old car.

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Image: Craigslist seller

It looks great outside, refreshingly rust-free for an old Fiat. The paint has a bad spot in the middle of the hood, but the rest of it looks fine. This car does have a salvage title, from an accident back in the late ’70s, but that hardly matters now. I like that it still has the original steel wheels, too. I’m less crazy about the gigantic 5 MPH bumpers, but those can be changed out or removed entirely if you really want to.

1978 Datsun 200SX – $7,500

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Image: Craigslist seller

Engine/drivetrain: 2.0-liter OHC inline 4, five-speed manual, RWD

Location: Tucson, AZ

Odometer reading: 56,000 miles

Operational status: Has been sitting for 30 years

Nissan had a big hit on its hands in the US with the Z car, but there was room in the market for a smaller, cheaper sporty coupe. So in 1976, the Nissan Silvia coupe found its way to these shores, badged as the Datsun 200SX. This is one of those cars that has vanished almost entirely; the only place I’ve seen any for sale in the past decade is southern California, where older Japanese cars are safer from their natural enemy: rust. I saw – and if I remember right, featured – an automatic 200SX a while back, but this is the first manual I’ve seen in a long time.

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Image: Craigslist seller

Power for this funky-looking coupe comes from the same L-series four cylinder engine found in Datsun pickups of the era. It’s also the same as the Z-car engine, just with two fewer cylinders. It’s backed by a five-speed manual, which was pretty exotic and sporty for 1978. This one hasn’t been driven since 1994, when the original owner parked it for unknown reasons. The current owner has been its custodian for three years, and either hasn’t tried to revive it in that time, or hasn’t been successful. It’ll take some work on the part of the next owner to get it back on the road, unless, of course, you’d prefer to just let it sit too. (Please don’t.)

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Image: Craigslist seller

The interior is a mixed bag: the seats and door panels look good, but the dashboard is a sea of cracks and splits. Part of the steering column trim appears to be missing. And I’m not sure the front seats are original; the upholstery on them doesn’t match the back seats.

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Image: Craigslist seller

Outside, it’s about as rust-free as a ’78 Datsun gets these days. The paint is dull, but the body looks straight. The missing hubcaps are kind of a bummer; I have no idea where you’d find a set either. It’s funny – when I was a kid, I thought these cars were hideously ugly, but looking at one now, I like it. It’s certainly not like anything else on the road, then or now.

Reviving a car like this is hard work, trust me. It’s not something you want to take on unless you absolutely love the car, and even then, success is not guaranteed. But then again, I tried it with a notoriously unreliable car. Both of these would probably have been a better place to start. If you had to choose, and as always, you do, which project would you take on?

 

 

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It's Pronounced Porch-ah
Member
It's Pronounced Porch-ah
1 day ago

Funky Fiat Friday! Love the blue, and I am a sucker for the X1/9!

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
1 day ago

Fiat, you stated my case in the poll

Griznant
Member
Griznant
1 day ago

That Datsun fell off the ugly tree and hit every branch on the way down.

Fiat for me!

86-GL
86-GL
1 day ago
Reply to  Griznant

Ugly, poor handling, AND it doesn’t run? What’s not to like?

D-dub
Member
D-dub
1 day ago
Reply to  86-GL

You think you hate it now, but wait til you can’t drive it!

Y2Keith
Member
Y2Keith
1 day ago

I really like the idea of the Datsun. Its quirky styling appeals to me, but I don’t feel inclined to put in the effort required to revive it.

The Fiat on the other hand, looks like it could be enjoyed as is, even if it could still use a little sorting out. The petite Italian takes my Internet money today.

Squirrelmaster
Member
Squirrelmaster
1 day ago
Reply to  Y2Keith

This reflects my thought process, especially when it comes to both the effort and price for the Nissan.

Y2Keith
Member
Y2Keith
1 day ago
Reply to  Squirrelmaster

I made the mistake of image searching the 200sx and found this article that made me want to change my vote:

https://dsportmag.com/the-cars/paul-newmans-datsun-200sx-racecar-returns-tarmac/

I mean, if it was good enough for Paul Newman…

Squirrelmaster
Member
Squirrelmaster
1 day ago
Reply to  Y2Keith

Oh dang. That is a pretty good looking. I bet flaring the fenders on that was no trivial task with that rear body line.

Lotsofchops
Member
Lotsofchops
1 day ago
Reply to  Y2Keith

If I’m getting a Paul Newman approved Nissan racecar you bet your bottom it’s gonna be a 510. Love those things.

FloridaNative
Member
FloridaNative
1 day ago

I’m a sucker for the X1/9 and this one appears to be in good shape.

Steve Wilson
Member
Steve Wilson
1 day ago

Young Mark was so right–the 200SX is an atrocity against innocent eyes. The only uglier Japanese car that ever made it to American shores was its deformed little brother the F10. I just don’t think I could drive one of these, let alone lavish time and money on it. Gotta be the Fiat, which is almost ready to delight and infuriate a new owner.

86-GL
86-GL
1 day ago

I’m sure there is a market for the 200sx, but it has no objective desirability beyond nostalgia or ironic JDM posturing. The only practical use I can think of is a prop in a period crime drama- A prop doesn’t move, and then gets blown up.

I have no nostalgia for the Fiat either, but it clearly offers a unique driving experience, combined with great style. You (or your dad) didn’t have to have delivered pizza in one in the 1980s to find it desirable. You could do an electric swap, 500 Abarth drivetrain, or just paint the hood and enjoy it. Take it to auto cross, track days, etc.

As it stands, we have a well-kept, somewhat collectable mid-engined Italian sports car that moves under its own power and passed an emissions test(!), vs. a sun baked, ugly-duckling penalty box with a shredded interior that doesn’t run. Uhhhhhh…

Last edited 1 day ago by 86-GL
Drive By Commenter
Member
Drive By Commenter
1 day ago
Reply to  86-GL

Ooh, 500 Abarth drivetrain swap sounds like a good time! IIRC the stock turbo is a little laggy since it’s sized to make 160 hp from 1.4 liters. Wait until the wheels are straight to punch it if off boost. A car that short will swap ends quickly coming on boost mid corner.

Urban Runabout
Member
Urban Runabout
1 day ago

Easy Choice: Fiat

Grayvee280
Member
Grayvee280
1 day ago

As a hardcore Datsun fan, X1 by like a lot! Also, that is an insane price for any nonrunning Datsun that doesn’t have a Z in it’s name. As soon as you pull out of AZ and it rains you will be able to watch the rust grow faster than bamboo.

Engines of this vintage with carbs are a nightmare with all the emissions vacuum lines. The L28 in the Z moved to real deal EFI in 75. It may have a L block, but I don’t think it will be anywhere near as reliable as the 280 if/when you get it running. I would bet a vacuum leak effected idle/start was probably what parked it.

10001010
Member
10001010
1 day ago

I’ve always been a sucker for the X1/9 and prefer the 80s 200SX so I’m going Bertone today.

JumboG
JumboG
1 day ago
Reply to  10001010

I had a 85 200SX, man are they slow. I switch to a 300ZX shortly after the motor seized in the 200.

10001010
Member
10001010
1 day ago
Reply to  JumboG

I had an ’81 that I bought for $500. It wasn’t the fastest but RWD, 5 speed, $20 used tires, and a handbrake made it a bunch of fun.

I don't hate manual transmissions
Member
I don't hate manual transmissions
1 day ago

Fortunately, I have A mechanic friend named Tony.

James McHenry
Member
James McHenry
1 day ago

The JDM-codedness in me wants the Datsun over the Fiat. So I’m going with the JDM-codedness. Drop, Watanabes, side-drafts, shakotan exhaust, done.

Last edited 1 day ago by James McHenry
Dan Roth
Dan Roth
1 day ago

X 1/9, no contest. It will be reliable, that nonsense is overblown, IMHO. You may have to do a bit of work to make it reliable at first.

The Datsun is so ugly and filthy. And in the end you’re left with car that looks as if a B210 had ’71 Buick quarter panels welded on.

Shop-Teacher
Member
Shop-Teacher
1 day ago

The Fiat is the better choice here, but a family friend has had one for years, so I know for a fact that I cannot fit into it. The Datsun is still pretty funky and cool, and I can shoehorn my fat ass into it, so it wins my vote by default.

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
1 day ago

A running car is worth two in the bush, or something to that effect.

GFunk
Member
GFunk
1 day ago

Decided to give us the day off from decision-making? Fiat Fiat Fiat

Elhigh
Elhigh
1 day ago

While $8500 for an ancient Fiat is cray-cray money, $7500 for a late 70s Datsun is categorically insane. I mean – the Fiat is beautiful and runs; the Datsun can claim neither of these attributes*.

For years I had the abandoned targa panel of an X1/9 lying around on my property, left there by a previous homeowner. I drilled holes through it, attached ropes and used it for sledging rocks and firewood behind the tractor. It worked okay.

I love the X1/9 for the fact that while not quick or even especially fast at any one moment, it is appreciably fast on average especially in twisties, as its compliant chassis does a good job of letting you retain what speed you build. A good driver will progress rapidly with an X1/9.

The 200SX, on the other hand, had a good 40% more power at the crank than the Fiat and, with only a small weight penalty compared to the downright tiny X1/9, would own it at the lights…and nowhere else. Even the periodicals of the day didn’t have much great to say about the Datsun’s handling then; now we would probably call it borderline unsafe.

It’s running – and has passed CA emissions, which implies it might actually be running well – it’s gorgeous and despite the price, still affordable. Fiat for me.

*Other appearances notwithstanding, the arse of the 200SX is a nicely sculpted collection of sheetmetal.

Last edited 1 day ago by Elhigh
PBL
PBL
1 day ago
Reply to  Elhigh

Based on period road tests the Fiat would best the 200SX even in the straights. Even the 1.3 cars were faster. The Datsun carried 400 more pounds which is a huge weight penalty between two cars both weighing less than 2,500 pounds.

And, yeah, the prices for both cars are about 50% too high.

IRegretNothing, Esq, DVM, BBQ
Member
IRegretNothing, Esq, DVM, BBQ
1 day ago

I like the Datsun more, but not for that price while needing who knows what to get it running. With the Fiat I can at least listen to the engine rev while I trouble shoot and wait for parts arrive.

Rockchops
Member
Rockchops
1 day ago

The fiat will be less ugly without those bumpers, the datsun is just ugly ugly. I always felt those old 200SXs looked goofy with such skinny tires. I bet wider tires that fill out the wheel well a bit more would go a long way. Either way, the Fiat is awesome.

Angry Bob
Member
Angry Bob
1 day ago

One of my early memories is of my Dad working on one of those Fiats in our garage. It wasn’t our car, and I don’t know why he was working on it, but I thought it was some kind of exotic car because the engine was in the rear!!

StillNotATony
Member
StillNotATony
1 day ago

When I was in high school, my Dad and I rebuilt a 1960 Chevy El Camino. I loved that car.

Not long after we got it finished, I had a really vivid dream that my Dad had traded my ElCo for a Datsun similar to this one, except it was metallic blue and mounted on a 4×4 chassis with big mud tires. I was really mad when I woke up, and I’ve had a bit of animosity toward these Datsuns ever since.

Gimme the Fiat.

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
1 day ago

I’ve only been eyeing old Datsun’s for twenty or so years. Cut my wrenching knuckles on an 82 B210 that my older brother inherited from my parents. He killed it though a series of poor decisions and hubris; I can be more successful, and make it into a little screamer.

This one would get a full mechanical refresh, which it’ll need after sitting this long. It’ll take several overnight parts from Japan to get the suspension, bushings, hoses, and lines all refreshed.

Once it’s sorted and moving safely under it own power, with all the fun JDM suspension mods, I’ll get a cam/head upgrade for this from the 510s used in SCCA, put some fresh BRIDE seats in, and repair the cracked dash with lots of sanding, putty and flock.

I’ll give it a better stance and some Watanabes, hang a Tsurikawa off the back bumper and cruise to the Japanese Cars and Coffee blasting Guitar Wolf.

Isis
Member
Isis
1 day ago

Fiat runs. Easy choice today.

Theotherotter
Member
Theotherotter
1 day ago

Easiest decision ever – X1/9 all day, every day, and twice on Sunday. They’re marvelous cars.

TK-421
TK-421
1 day ago

I didn’t even need to read the whole story but did just in case.

I’ve loved those X1/9’s for many years and would love to have one. Plus I have Midwest Bayless about 1.5hrs away for all my old Fiat needs!

https://www.midwest-bayless.com/

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