Junkyard Find: 1983 Nissan Pulsar NX

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

Just about the time Datsuns were getting Nissan badging, the suits at Nissan HQ decided that they needed a cheap sporty car to compete with the likes of the Honda CRX and (cringe) Ford EXP in the American marketplace. A little cutting and pasting on the Sentra and voila! Pulsar!

The 70 horses of the E16 engine wasn’t much, but it was comparable to the competition. I remember reading a review of this car that suggested the best way to get the automatic to accelerate was to neutral-drop the transmission. Argh!

The crazy Sportbak option wasn’t available for a few more years, but the early Pulsars still managed to look science-fiction strange.

I’ve never heard anyone refer to a “Datsun Pulsar,” but Nissan was still slapping Datsun badges on most of its American products in 1983.

Such a red interior, though it’s not quite up to the whorehousey standards of the later Dodge Dynasty.

Genuine Datsun AM/FM sound! This option probably cost plenty back then.









Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • Duster3604 Duster3604 on Jun 10, 2015

    I had a 1983 pulsar nx. A black one with the grey tape treatment. I was in my early 20's. I drove the wheels off of that car. Bought it with 100,000 mile, speedo broke at 180,000. Probably had 240,000 on it when all was said and done. Nothing but 1 exhaust system (factory nissan, looked great like it was powder coated black from nissan), two cat converter bolts and rubber hangers for the rest, 10 min install. Reg timing belt changes and valve adjustments. I broke 2 transmissions, my fault. There was actually a turbo version of this car that is forgotten but very important for nissan. It was their first turbo car and first and only front wheel drive turbo car that they manufactured. These cars had awesome leg room (front only, none in the rear at all) with reclining seats. Great gas mileage, and a/c that would make the windows condensate. I have been looking for another 83 for many years. They are all gone. I bought the last available nissan motorsports front spoiler. It made the car look totally different. That was one of the best cars I have ever owned. I would have put another tranny in it if not for the rust issues. Engine still ran like a top the day I took her to the junk yard. This car was completely toss-able and with the 5 speed wasn't slow considering what was out there in '83. I used to live in Point Pleasant Pa by the mountainside Inn. Every once in awhile I would catch a tourist with a Beemer, Benz, jag, Porsche, or vette. They didn't like the idea of a lowly datsun hanging with them. They would try to out run me but never could. I would run 80-90 mph on some of the straights of rte 32 by the Delaware canal. It was mostly the driver and knowledge of the road but the nissan was a very capable corner burner. I would probably trade my whole fleet for 2 of these in daily driver shape. Thanks for the memories.

  • Marques Marques on Dec 02, 2023

    My father had one of these. A black 1984 Pulsar NX with a 5-speed stick and a grey interior. Dad always kept it in pristine shape-that black paint was shiny even in the middle of the night. I swear I could still smell the Rain Dance carnauba wax! The only issue that car ever had was that it was never driven enough-it would sit for 10 days at a time! The Hitachi carburetor on it(and other Nissans of the time) were known to be troublesome. It went to the boneyard at 72K miles when a hole got punched in the block. By that time the Pulsar had long ceased production.

  • NJRide So this is an average age of car to be junked now and of course this is a lower end (and now semi-orphaned) product. But street examples seem to still be worth 2500? So are cars getting junked only coming in because of a traumatic repair? If not it seems a lot of cars being junked that would still possibly worth more than scrap.Also Murilee I remember your Taurus article way back what is the king of the junkyard in 2024?
  • AMcA I applaud Toyota for getting away from the TRD performance name. TuRD. This is another great example of "if they'd just thought to preview the name with a 13 year old boy."
  • Jeff Does this really surprise anyone? How about the shoes and the clothes you wear. Anything you can think of that is either directly made in China or has components made in China likely has some slave labor involved. The very smart phone, tablet, and laptop you are using probably has some component in it that is either mined or made by slave labor. Not endorsing slave labor just trying to be real.
  • Jeff Self-driving is still a far ways from being perfected. I would say at the present time if my car took over if I had a bad day I would have a much worse day. Would be better to get an Uber
  • 2manyvettes Time for me to take my 79 Corvette coupe out of the garage and drive if to foil the forces of evil. As long as I can get the 8 track player working...
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