Nissan North America, Inc. today announced that it will continue its
year-long celebration of the 40th anniversary of the icon Nissan Z®
with a display of historic Z® racers at the Rolex Monterey Motorsports
Reunion, August 12 - 15 at Laguna Seca Raceway, Monterey, Calif.
Four of the six Z®s appearing at the event, formerly known as the
Monterey Historic Automobile Races, have significant racing histories -
including SCCA National Championships, IMSA Manufacturers' and Drivers'
Championship and victories at LeMans, Daytona and Sebring. Among the
well-known drivers who have piloted these vehicles are John Morton, Bob
Sharp, Elliott Forbes-Robinson, Sam Posey, Paul Newman and Steve
Millen. The other two vehicles are a production 40th Anniversary Nissan
370Z and a specially prepared Brock Racing Enterprises 370Z tribute
car.
In addition to the display vehicles, a number of vintage Nissan race
cars have been entered in competition. John Morton will drive the #46
1970 Datsun 510 in the "1966 - 1972 Trans Am under 2 Liter Cars" class
and a pair of 1985 Nissan GTPs (#83 and #84) owned by Toluca Lake
Classic Motorsports will compete in the "1981 - 1989 FIA Mfg
Championship & IMSA GTP" class.
Following are brief descriptions and histories of the Nissan display vehicles:
Brock Racing Enterprises Datsun 240Z
In 1970, when the Datsun 240Z arrived in the U.S, Peter Brock's
Southern California-based Brock Racing Enterprises (BRE) racing team
helped to change the motorsports world by claiming the first SCCA
(Sports Car Club of America) C Production National Championship for the
Z over long-established champions from Germany and England.
Datsun 240Zs swept the top 3 spots with Bob Sharp in second and John
McComb in third, in another BRE car, to firmly establish the Z® as a
force in SCCA C Production racing. Datsun Z®s went on to win 10
straight SCCA C Production National Championships.
The 1970 and 1971 championship car, chassis #492, carried the now
famous red, white and blue BRE livery penned by Peter Brock.
Unfortunately chassis #492 was destroyed in a racing accident in the
1970s. This vehicle is a faithful replica of that car created by Ron
Carter. It carries the BRE front and rear spoilers as well as the
aerodynamic headlight covers. Under the hood is a BRE-built 2.4-liter
inline-6 cylinder engine with the original triple Solex/Mikuni
carburetors and the Nissan Competition intake manifold. Even the wheels
are the original American LeMans magnesium pieces, so it is very close
to the BRE 240Z that John Morton and the BRE team used to rock the
racing world in 1970.
Bob Sharp Racing Datsun 240Z Chassis #00006
This car is the first Datsun 240Z imported into the U.S. It was the
original display vehicle at the 1969 New York Auto Show. It later went
to the Toronto Auto Show and was damaged when a spokesmodel sat on the
roof for a photographer. The car was quickly pulled from the publicity
tour and became the first race winning 240Z under the Bob Sharp Racing
banner. This car appeared at every SCCA Runoffs from 1970 to 1978. Bob
Sharp and the Z® won the SCCA C Production National Championship in
1972, 1973 and 1975. This car was raced as a 240Z, 260Z and 280Z. After
its days at Bob Sharp Racing, it was owned and raced for many years by
Jim Fitzgerald who had also raced it for Bob Sharp Racing.
When the car was a show car it was originally dark green and a patch of
dark green paint was found during the restoration and has been
maintained on the car to confirm its beginnings as the infamous
"spokesmodel" car. It is owned by Dr. Allan Robbins and was restored by
SharpSight Motorsports.
Bob Sharp Racing Datsun 240Z IMSA GTU
This car started its long racing career as a 1970 240Z prepped by Bob
Sharp Racing (BSR) in Wilton, Connecticut. It was the second 240Z BSR
used to compete in C Production in the SCCA after chassis #006. Bob
Sharp won the SCCA C Production National Championship in 1972, 1973 and
1975. Bob Sharp also won the IMSA GTU Championship in 1975.
This car became a backup C Production car for Bob Sharp Racing when new
race cars were created for the 1976 season. The new IMSA GTU car was
destroyed in Sharp's crash at Road Atlanta in April 1976. This car was
pulled from backup C Production duty and quickly converted to IMSA GTU
specs so Sharp could make the next race at Laguna Seca. He finished 2nd
at Laguna Seca and won the next week at Ontario. Unfortunately, Sharp
crashed again three weeks later at Lime Rock Park, ending his
illustrious driving career.
A variety of drivers drove this car after Sharp's retirement including
Elliott Forbes Robinson, Sam Posey and Paul Newman. In 1978 this car
held the all-time IMSA GTU lap records at Brainerd, Daytona, Hallett,
Lime Rock, Mid America, Mid Ohio, Pocono, Sears Point, Road Atlanta and
Talladega. The car is owned by Dr. Allan Robbins and was restored by
SharpSight Motorsports.
Nissan Motorsports 300ZX
Nissan competed with the 300ZX in IMSA GTO and then GTS from 1989 to
1995, winning 19 races during that time. Steve Millen won the Driver's
Championship with the 300ZX in 1992 and 1994. Nissan also won the
Manufacturer's Championship in 1992 and 1994. In 1994 the Nissan
Motorsports 300ZX took the overall win at the 24 Hours of Daytona and
the 12 Hours of Sebring as well as 1st in class and 5th overall at the
24 Hours of LeMans. This car, Chassis #7 (the Sebring and LeMans
winner), is owned by Millen.
After dominating the competition in 1994, IMSA banned the 300ZX's twin
turbo V6 engine. The 300ZXs raced in 1995 with a V8 engine, but they
were never quite the same. Millen suffered career-ending injuries in a
crash at Road Atlanta and the cars were retired at the end of the
season.
Nissan 370Z BRE Tribute Coupe
In recognition of BRE's multiple championships and the Z®'s first
championship, Nissan North America teamed with Brock Racing
Enterprises' Peter Brock to create an updated rendition of the famous
BRE livery, a specially modified 2010 Nissan NISMO 370Z Coupe. The new
BRE 370Z is not just a show car, however, it's built for the track as
well. As is appropriate to commemorate the championship car, it was
built to current SCCA T2 racecar regulations and will see track duty in
2010.
2010 Nissan 370Z 40th Anniversary Edition
To celebrate four decades of Z®, Nissan created a special, limited
production version of the 2010 Nissan 370Z Coupe, the 370Z 40th
Anniversary Edition. Limited to 1,000 units, the 370Z 40th Anniversary
Edition starts out as a 370Z Touring model equipped with manual
transmission and Sport Package (including SynchroRev Match?, front chin
spoiler, rear spoiler, Nissan Sport Brakes, 19-inch Rays forged
aluminum-alloy wheels and viscous limited-slip differential) and adds a
premium "40th Graphite" exterior color and red leather-appointed
interior.
Additional exclusive equipment includes a high-luster smoke wheel
finish, red brake calipers and 40th Anniversary badges on the rear
hatch and front shock tower brace. Inside, along with the red
leather-appointed seats, are red door panel inserts, 40th Anniversary
seatback with debossed logo, floormat logo embroidery, red stitching on
the center stack, shift boot and kneepads, smooth leather steering
wheel with red stitching and interior 40th commemorative plaque. Every
40th Anniversary Z® also comes with a commemorative premium satin car
cover.