Home » The Datsun 210ZX Was A Great Way To Demonstrate That You Can Pay Money To Make Something Worse

The Datsun 210ZX Was A Great Way To Demonstrate That You Can Pay Money To Make Something Worse

Gg 210zx Top

I want you to imagine something. A sandwich. Let’s say it’s a nice corned beef Reuben, on rye with just the right ratios of corned beef, sauerkraut, and Russian dressing. It’s not a fancy thing, but it does its job as a sandwich just right. Now, what if I told you that for a mere $14 over the price of the off-the-menu Reuben, you can get a paperback-sized slab of drywall smeared with industrial lye soap inserted into your Reuben? Would you be interested in that? Would it make your sandwich better, or just bulkier and, arguably, completely ruined? Your answer to this question, I think, will reveal what you might think about the 1980s-era F.E.D. (Fiberglass Engineering and Design) Datsun 210ZX kit for the Datsun B210.

I actually wrote about this amazingly misguided body kit for the Old Site way back in 2017, but I think it’s worth revisiting here, because it fits the concept of Glorious Garbage so wonderfully. Except, perhaps, it may be a little light on the “glory” part. Still, it’s fascinating, and worth talking about.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Much like sliding a chunk of poison-smeared drywall into a perfectly good Reuben, the 210ZX body kit from FED had the remarkable ability to take something fundamentally quite good and, via the careful application of money, time, and effort, transform it into something that is, let’s be honest here, dazzlingly awful.

Before we dig into the details of this terrifying kit, let’s consider the donor car for a moment, the humble and charming Datsun B210.

B210 W 12 21
Image: Datsun/Nissan

The 210ZX kit (the ZX clearly was lifted from the Datsun 240ZX, in the interests, I assume, of adding more confusion to the world) was designed to bolt or rivet or adhere, perhaps via caulk or something, to the outside of a B210 fastback.

Datsunb210 Ad
Image: Datsun/Nissan

The Datsun B210, especially in fastback form, I think was already quite a slick-looking little car! It had good proportions, appealing lines, and look at those honeycomb wheel covers! This wasn’t exactly a boring, soulless econobox screaming for any bit of personality it could grab onto. This was a reliable, efficient little car that had its own considerable charm.

Clearly, though, that was not enough, not nearly enough for the designers over at Fiberglass Engineering and Design, who felt that you, as a Datsun B210 owner, had an opportunity to turn your B210 into a champion. They explain it all in their quite verbose ad:

210zx Kit Ad 1

I think we need to scrutinize the copy in this ad just a bit, because it’s pretty fascinating. I’m going to emphasize some key phrases in here:

The most uncommon Datsun this side of the 280ZX. The 210ZX takes you beyond economy into a world of show-stopping elegance. ECONOMY PLUS. Energy shortages demand more efficiency. Cleaner air demands more technology. You demand more value. Comfort. Safety. Economy, Performance and dependability. That’s why the fuel saving economy of the B210 has made it one of the best compact values in recent years. Now you can add a previously unavailable beauty to your car without sacrificing the qualities you bought your Datsun for. The Datsun 210ZX conversion kit provides an instant restyling of your car’s looks. It breathes new life into your car’s appearance. The ZX kit replaces over 50% of your Datsun’s body area with rust-resistant fiberglass. This assures you that the beauty of your 210ZX will be with you for years to come. The ZX conversion kit may even have the effect of providing better fuel economy since air dams, rear spoilers, fender flares, and similar cosmetic accessories were first developed to improve the aerodynamic performance of sports racing cars. TURN YOUR DATSUN INTO A CHAMPION. The 210ZX is pure thoroughbred, with award winning looks. In fact a 210ZX took 1st place in both the 16th annual LA. World of Wheels and the 25th annual San Diego International Competition. The ZX kit can turn your docile little street car into a sizzling super street charger.

There’s so much unhinged thinking going on here, starting with the phrase “a world of show-stopping elegance.” Just take a moment to look at what a competently completed 210ZX actually looks like:

210zx Fbad 1
Image: Facebook

I’m sure there are shows that would indeed stop at the sight of this thing, but I don’t think it would be because of all the elegance. The 210ZX kit looks a bit like the Datsun is wearing the skin of a slightly larger car, perhaps a skin that it won in combat, or perhaps to honor the other car, sort of like an automotive interpretation of the ancient Aztec skin-wearing tradition where a person would impersonate the diety Xipe Totec, The Flayed One.

I don’t think any other angles of the car actually do anything to remove this association; you can look at more views of this car in this Facebook post:

It’s a lot of things, but I don’t know if “elegant” is any of them. It’s a fiberglass kit, and the ad copy makes special note that “over 50% of your Datsun’s body area with rust-resistant fiberglass” and suggesting that somehow that will help preserve your Datsun’s body longer, safe from the cruel decay of rust, though if you look at this thing carefully:

210zx Fbad 2
Image: Facebook

… I feel like what we’re seeing is just more places for moisture to get trapped between fiberglass and sheet metal, creating many fantastic crucibles for rust all over the car, hidden in innumerable and inaccessible nooks and crannies.

My favorite phrase in the ad copy has to be this one, though (emphasis mine):

“The ZX conversion kit may even have the effect of providing better fuel economy since air dams, rear spoilers, fender flares, and similar cosmetic accessories were first developed to improve the aerodynamic performance of sports racing cars.”

It’s that “may” that gets me, because it reveals that precisely zero FED employees were tasked with actually finding out if any of this fiberglass crap actually provides better fuel economy, which they guess it could, since stuff that sort of looks like this was developed to improve the aero of race cars! So, you know, it might be helping, right? It looks sort of like it could help, after all?

Just, you know, ignore the fact that all this crap is heavy and sloppy and never actually wind-tunnel tested or anything like that. You’re missing the point: it might be helping!

This is the same logic that backs up phrases like “TURN YOUR DATSUN INTO A CHAMPION” and how the 210ZX kit can “turn your docile little street car into a sizzling super street charger,” despite the fact that there are zero mechanical performance upgrades provided with the kit, meaning that your B210’s little 1.3 liter inline-four making about 75 horsepower now has to drag around a few hundred extra pounds of fiberglass, which is always a great way to turn into a champion.

210zx Cabin
Image: FED

I mean, look at that. That’s a lot of fiberglass. I like how this promotional photo poses the car in front of a log cabin, the ultimate visual metaphor for high-tech racing sleekness. I mean, what looks faster than a log cabin? They leave thatched-roof mud huts in the dust.

210zx Brochure 2
Image: FED

The 210ZX really embodies so much of the Glorious Garbage ideals; it’s a modification of a car that pretty clearly makes the car worse, possibly even significantly worse, and yet, somehow, despite every rational thought telling me how miserable this thing is, somehow I can’t entirely dismiss it. There is a sort of deranged glory to this thing, a stunning tribute to the concept of writing checks your butt can’t cash, in automotive form.

If I saw one in person, it would catch my eye. I’d be drawn in despite myself, repelled yet drawn, rolling my eyes that I somehow simultaneously couldn’t keep from staring. I can’t think of anything that embodies the ethos of Glorious Garbage better than that.

Top graphic images: FED; Facebook

 

 

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Subscribe
Notify of
95 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Redapple
Redapple
2 days ago

B210 were popular near me growing up. I liked them. They were better looking than 80% of the other small cars

Redapple
Redapple
2 days ago
Reply to  Redapple

Man- Nissan has fallen so far.

RustyJunkyardClassicFanatic
Member
RustyJunkyardClassicFanatic
2 days ago

Wow! That is one ugly blob

Axiomatik
Member
Axiomatik
2 days ago

The Datsun B210 might look charming nowadays, but in the 80s and 90s, it just looked old fashioned and cheap. I don’t think this particular kit is well styled, but I can see that they were trying to transform the styling of the car to fit the trends of the 80s. It reminds me a bit of the 1980s Dodge Chargers mixed with the “Batmobile” BMW 3.0.

Red865
Member
Red865
2 days ago

Oh yeah, the honeycomb hubcaps!

Peter Spinale
Peter Spinale
2 days ago
Reply to  Red865

It’s literally the first thing I think of when someone says “B210”..

Y2Keith
Member
Y2Keith
2 days ago

How about a nice MLT? A mutton, lettuce, and tomato sandwich, where the mutton is nice and lean, the tomato is ripe, and we drizzle the whole thing with artisanal gear oil, freshly-harvested from the differential of a 1967 Ford Galaxie that’s been sitting in a field for the last 35 years, then smoked for 24 hours over a ground fissure in the heart of Centralia, Pennsylvania.

Vulcan's Forge Hot Sauce Co.
Member
Vulcan's Forge Hot Sauce Co.
2 days ago

The copy says: “The ZX kit replaces over 50% of your Datsun’s body area with rust-resistant fiberglass”. So, do you actually take off the factory fenders, etc. and screw these on? Or are they just stuck on top of the body as the article says? If the original panels are removed, then this would in fact prevent rust as they could be stored in the corner of your garage until the fiberglass fell apart.

Sklooner
Member
Sklooner
2 days ago

You cut the metal away and then attach the new parts with a fibreglass adhesive/boding goop and temporarily attach with screws which you take out when dry- this is how I did a 914 Chalon kit in the 90s

Vulcan's Forge Hot Sauce Co.
Member
Vulcan's Forge Hot Sauce Co.
2 days ago
Reply to  Sklooner

So, it could actually be lighter after the transformation!

Peter Spinale
Peter Spinale
2 days ago
Reply to  Sklooner

a “saber saw” is noted, that was the term used for a Sawa-all or jigsaw.
Also somehow a “torch”.. a torch?

Sklooner
Member
Sklooner
2 days ago
Reply to  Peter Spinale

probably to bend pieces to fit- those early body kits were sketchy to put it mildly I did a couple of slant nose conversions that were equally bad- and lets not get into the XJS convertibles with some bolt on ‘chassis reinforcement’ that I think was shelving uprights

Peter Spinale
Peter Spinale
1 day ago
Reply to  Sklooner

Wait, bend fiberglass with a torch? That’s a thing? (clueless about this kind of thing)

Sklooner
Member
Sklooner
1 day ago
Reply to  Peter Spinale

Metal bits- you cut away a lot then bend the remaining pieces- like tops of fenders so that you can attach the fibreglas

Uncle Cholmondeley
Uncle Cholmondeley
2 days ago
Reply to  Sklooner

OMG, it’s even worse than I thought.*

* I figured that “replaces … the body area” just meant that the sheet metal was no longer, you know, area — since it was hidden under the fiberglass. Clearly, I work with lawyers too often.

Dodd Lives
Dodd Lives
2 days ago

I just can’t get past the wording of “rust-resistant fibreglass“. Shouldn’t fiberglass, by its very nature, be rust-proof? How is their fiberglass only rust-resistant? Does it contain iron fibers? Are they not confident in its properties? I’m trying to imagine how fiberglass could possibly start rusting.

Last edited 2 days ago by Dodd Lives
Peter Spinale
Peter Spinale
1 day ago
Reply to  Dodd Lives

When you’re more confident there will be lawsuits than you are about your product..

Pneumatic Tool
Pneumatic Tool
2 days ago

At first glance, I thought a Monza was hiding under all that crap. Knowing that it’s a B210 makes it that much worse.

Cyko9
Member
Cyko9
2 days ago
Reply to  Pneumatic Tool

It’s like a IMSA Monza got left out in the sun. Garbage yes, but not at all glorious.

Goblin
Goblin
2 days ago

…So don’t front, MC Ren, ‘Cause I remember when you drove a B210…

Njd
Member
Njd
2 days ago

I just want you to know that if you ever question the layout and design of the homepage, or your own particular brand of weirdness (I’m sure you’re long past questioning that), let it be known that I only clicked on this page because there was talk of reubens.

Elhigh
Elhigh
2 days ago

I also like the implied threat that the “good” looks will endure for years beyond what you might expect of an unsullied Datsun.

Some other things that modified the appearance and then endured in that ruined iteration for years: mummies. Cash registers. Me.

Frank C.
Frank C.
2 days ago

I live in the Mecca of automobilia. I have never seen one of these in Southern California. I can’t imagine many were unleashed upon the public.

Mike F.
Member
Mike F.
2 days ago

There’s someone in my area who actually drives an intact B-210. It’s in pretty decent shape, which I find amazing as I had friends who owned those back in the day and they seemed to be made of thick gauge tin foil. Can’t imagine hanging a bunch of fiberglass on one of them.

Parsko
Member
Parsko
2 days ago

While both are mayonnaise and ketchup-based dressings with a pinkish hue, Russian dressing is spicier and tangier, featuring ingredients like horseradish and Worcestershire sauce. Thousand Island is sweeter and chunkier, relying on additions like sweet pickle relish and finely chopped onions.

Parsko
Member
Parsko
2 days ago
Reply to  Parsko

Not that anyone asked.

MarkC
Member
MarkC
2 days ago

Anyone else see the shift pattern on the knob in the “Nifty Fifty” ad and think it’s really weird to have reverse right there?

Guess I’m more used to having R as a dogleg off either end of the pattern.

FloridaNative
Member
FloridaNative
2 days ago
Reply to  MarkC

Yeah! Good way to slow down that 1-2 shift!

MarkC
Member
MarkC
2 days ago
Reply to  FloridaNative

Though now that I think about it, this might be how old three-speed manuals have their pattern.

My late father started driving in the 1950s, when a lot of cars were three-speed column shift.

My dad and his high school buddies would modify their columns so the shifter was on the left, which would turn a slow up-and-away 1-2 shift into a supposedly faster down-and-away motion.

Red865
Member
Red865
2 days ago
Reply to  MarkC

Ah, that was what my Mom was talking about when she said my Dad had his shifter on the left. ’54 Ford w/ Mercury flathead V8. He taught her to drive.

Dylan
Member
Dylan
2 days ago

So this is how Mitsuoka got their start?

TheNewt
Member
TheNewt
2 days ago

A little off topic, but I would like to get a Datsun Saves t-shirt with the lettering of the B-210 ad.

James McHenry
Member
James McHenry
2 days ago

Look, I get it, but I actually kinda love this thing. It’s stupid in that ’70s way. Fiberglass was all over the custom scene, and everything from Corvettes to Beetles had Gr. 5 wide bodies and even complete conversions. An attempt to break free from the malaise of the everyday car, from front ends that looked more like mansions than cars, from emissions choked engines that didn’t yet have the technology to overcome the demands of the government. Sure, the people who bought these kits might have been local “characters”, but that’s what makes life interesting.

The modern equivalent is like people putting Mercedes or M-badges on non-Mercedes or M-cars, or cheapo headlight units from eBay with LED DRLs that clash with the rest of the car. When I was younger, I didn’t get Fast&Furious Tuner Style, or Donks, or lowriders, but now that I’m older, I appreciate it. I love the massive flares and exhaust pipes of Shakotan and Bosozoku, the chrome, stereo, and paint of Sydney Sex Spec, and even if they’re unsafe, the kneecapper wheels of the Houston SLAB. ’70s fiberglass kitcars are a part of that legacy of owner creativity, and even if it’s not fashionable, especially not anymore, I’d take it over a white Chevy Traverse in a heartbeat.

…Moog car mod rant over. Purity is overrated.

Manuel Verissimo
Manuel Verissimo
2 days ago

“Datsun 240ZX” ? Did you mean “280ZX” ?

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
2 days ago

They’re all My Fair Lady:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nissan_Fairlady_Z_(S30)

The S30 underpinned the 240, 260 and 280Z cars.

Manuel Verissimo
Manuel Verissimo
2 days ago
Reply to  Max Headbolts

Yes but the ZX isn’t an S30, it’s an S130.

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
2 days ago

Please remove your network spy from my home. I was looking at this same Facebook post two days ago.I said it back on Jalop and I’m saying it again now, I’d absolutely take one of these and given time, money, and skill (I don’t have any of these things) make it a goddamn champion.The best use of bad taste is to make it good again:Drop the ride height by like a foot, flatten that front aero out to actually work, and add
some lower cladding to the sides, with a rear diffuser to really take advantage of all that airflow.
The spoiler will have to grow three sizes, and then it gets bastardized with a significant horsepower upgrade.
An Sr20 will drop in, and may not immediately grenade the rear end. Those extra wide rear tires might though….

Last edited 2 days ago by Max Headbolts
Hangover Grenade
Hangover Grenade
2 days ago
Reply to  Max Headbolts

I’m with you. The headlights are the worst part. I’d love to see it with some Porsche 911 Slantnose-style popups. Plus, a huge wing that springs from the rear flares. And some huge gold BBS wheels, like a Group 5 race car.

Bishop, where are you?

SAABstory
Member
SAABstory
2 days ago

Is this from the import car version of Corvette Summer?

Jay Vette
Member
Jay Vette
2 days ago
Reply to  SAABstory

From the director of Corvette Summer comes the long-anticipated sequel: Datsun Autumn. That photo of it in front of the log cabin is from the start of filming.

Logan
Logan
2 days ago
Reply to  SAABstory

For basically the past 20 years online whenever I see a particularly cheesy looking Corvette (not necessarily but usually a C3) I post a clip from that movie when he wanders into the Vegas hotel and sees the horrible 240z on the turntable.

Gary Wright
Member
Gary Wright
2 days ago
Reply to  SAABstory

Except the Corvette Summer car aged well (?), the 210ZX definitely did not. Mark Hamill would never look for the 210ZX if it was stolen! Maybe Jar Jar Binks would?

Jonathan Green
Member
Jonathan Green
2 days ago

Cocaine is a hell of a drug…

Christocyclist
Christocyclist
2 days ago

The 210ZX is horrific but mostly came to say that I’ve always loved the look of the B-210. Would love to see a successor in spirit to that styling…

Butterfingerz
Butterfingerz
2 days ago

Terrible

Logan
Logan
2 days ago

Datsun Mustang II

Gregory A Hasselbach
Gregory A Hasselbach
2 days ago

Looks like a toy from the M.A.S.K. cartoon

95
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x