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Archive 1

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"The Silvia or S-chassis series of cars" this dosen't sound right. Silvia isin't the total name for the S-Chassis. it's just the Japanse Market Name.


I think that probably the first thing this article should say is that "silvia" is the Japanese Market Variant of the Nissan S-Chassis. I don't think calling the US market 240SX "the american version of the silvia" is correct either. I think the "240SX" should be called the US Market Variant of the Nissan S Chassis...

also the S13 and S14 "Silvia" page shouldn't go into detail about the KA24DE engines in the US market 240SX, that's what the 240SX page is for...

Talk History from Nissan 200SX prior to consolidation

Link or expansion needed for RWD, and the article needs Date context. Are we talking 2004 or 199f or 1984? --Tagishsimon 13:56, 14 Mar 2004 (UTC)


I think the information on Nissan 200SX should be moved to Nissan Silvia. Nissan 200SX, Nissan 180SX, Nissan Gazelle and all other naming variants should redirect to Nissan Silvia.

The information is much too confusing right now. eg. "Generally powered by a 1.8/2 Litre turbo-charged straight four engine and based on a Nissan Silvia Chassis". Except, the 240SX was based on a Pulsar and had a 2.4Lt naturally aspirated engine.

This article should be broken down into regions: Japan, USA, Europe, Australia. AND/OR broken down into series: S10-S15.

Agreed with Tagishsimon about date context.

Microsnot 04:04, 13 Sep 2004 (UTC)

the 240sx is not based on or related to the pulsar in anyway- —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.189.129.54 (talk) 10:54, 21 May 2009 (UTC)


Silvia A's

I was wondering why the Silvia A's trim wasn't featured? The Q's, K's etc were in the article. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 142.192.10.50 (talk) 00:34, 30 December 2012 (UTC)

Production dates/engines

The dates and engine configurations for the various S series were just my from the top of my head. I haven't verified these dates and engines.

Microsnot 01:51, 15 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Too much tech, not enough normal stuff

Guys, I'm sure the tech stuff belongs in the article, but I get dizzling eyes trying to figure out what the point is. All I know is, I saw a car today badged as a Nissan Silvia and I wanted to know more about it, like how it came to be here, seeing as how it looked fairly recent. All I came away with was... well, I still have no idea how it came to be in the US. The preceding unsigned comment was added by Andrewhime (talk • contribs) . --Adding Silvia bodyparts and name plates is quite common in the US. S13 that convert to the coupe will install the Silvia trunk lock, Silvia front and rear nameplates, while S14 owners can use the Silvia rear nameplate and front hood emblem (replaces the Nissan badge). It's common rebadging, but usually, it's not considered a (so-called) "ricer-mod" if the person is using a JDM-Silvia motor as well as body parts. The Nissan Silvia itself is illegal to import to the US under all circumstances.

Explaining my edit

I mistakenly marked this edit: [1] as a minor edit, when in fact it included major changes.

Most of the changes I made for this edit were to reduce duplicity and ambiguity betwen this article and Nissan S platform, Nissan Gazelle, Nissan 240SX, and Sileighty. This article should, IMO, ideally describe only those models sold as Silvia, with readers directed to the Nissan S platform article to find information or links to articles about the 180SX, 200SX, 240SX, and Gazelle.

The correct capitalization of Nissan's electronic four wheel steering system is Super HICAS. See the scanned Nissan brochures for the 1991, 1992, and 1993 240SX here: [2] AKADriver 21:17, 1 March 2006 (UTC)

What about the removal of this?

	S12 Model Breakdown: 	 
	United States and Canada: 200SX (XE, Turbo, and SE-V6). 	 
	Europe: 180ZX or Silvia. 	 
	Australia: Gazelle (GL & SGL). 	 
	Japan: Gazelle and Silvia (RS, RX, RS-X, Fisco, and others).

and the shortening of

Because the Silvia and 180SX used different nose styling, but the body panels could be directly swapped, it became popular for enthusiasts to mount the cheaper and lighter S13 Silvia components on the front end of a 180SX body, particularly as a collision repair for cars damaged during motorsports. This combination is commonly known as a Sileighty. This modification became so common that Kid's Heart, a Nissan dealer in Japan, built and distributed about 500 Sileightys in 1997 with the help of Nissan, featuring the SR20DET, S13 fascia, a tuned ECU and upgraded LSD.

I apologize I should have been more clear on your talk page what I was referring to. Also, there is a reccomended remedy for mistakenly marking a minor edit on the Wikipedia:Minor Edits page. It is a little tedious but if you ask me it daves a lot of time, confusion, and strife in the long run.--Oni Ookami AlfadorTalk|@ 21:40, 1 March 2006 (UTC)

The S12 model breakdown was removed because it contained errors and little more than duplicate information with the Nissan S platform article, most of it unrelated to the Silvia. Perhaps the last line could be reinstated (though there were more S12 Silvia models than those).
I shortened the Sileighty section because it did nothing but duplicate info from Sileighty, and the Sileighty is not a Silvia to begin with, it merely shares Silvia components. AKADriver 21:46, 1 March 2006 (UTC)

I believe it would be a good idea to reinsert the onevia reference though, perhaps slightly reworded though, because a Onevia, unlike a Sileighty, is technically just a modified Silvia. If you have no objections I'll try reinserting that.--Oni Ookami AlfadorTalk|@ 21:58, 1 March 2006 (UTC)

Go for it. "Onevia" information should probably primarily be here, rather than the Sileighty article. AKADriver 22:52, 1 March 2006 (UTC)

Recent edits by 69.229.11.158

I reverted your edits because there is a Nissan 200SX article for content about the 200SX. This article is about the Nissan Silvia. Yes, the two cars are substantially similar, but, in the context of your edits:

  • no car badged "Silvia" ever got the VG engine.
  • every market where the S12 body was sold as the Silvia, it had the FJ engine, so saying it was limited to those markets is superfluous.

AKADriver 14:10, 20 April 2006 (UTC)

Added Australian info about the S15

I have a few facts to check before I'm totally happy with my entry, and then there's the slight conjecture about Nissan Australia's reason for delaying the introduction of the S15... I am taking that opinion from various Australian Motorsport magazines, now long buried in my cupboards.

It would probably also be interesting to point out that the Silvia is called the 200SX in Australia because Nissan Australia thought that the feminine name would not do well in Australia. There's also an apocrophyial story about the naming of the Nissan Cedric that is closely related and fairly amusing.

One more thought; the salesmen told me that part of the reason for the dropping of the S-series by Nissan was the lack of a suitable replacement engine, apart from the up-coming 350Z. The SR20 would no longer pass Japanese emission laws from August 2002 I was told. That fact (if verified) probably should be added to an SR20 page, but I believe it was another factor that contributed to the demise of the S platform.