Every now and then, a car comes along that turns the automotive world on its head.
A model that not only tops its class, but widens the gap to its competitors by such a degree that it completely redefines it.
All things to all people, the solution to life’s ills.
Jaguar struck on the secret formula in 1961, creating in the E-type a car that was the perfect blend of stunning looks and groundbreaking performance.
Ford managed the same trick with the Mustang three years later, bringing high performance and sleek GT looks to the blue-collar enthusiasts who had hitherto been priced out of buying a car for the sheer enjoyment of it.
But while those companies built on a sales legacy stretching back generations, Nissan’s achievement was all the more remarkable for having come from comparatively nowhere.
The Japanese company’s home-run came in 1969 with the Fairlady Z, sold as the Datsun 240Z outside its home market, which stole a march on its rivals by combining electrifying pace and fresh looks with a level of fit and finish that overnight made its contemporaries look like donkey-carts.
In the crucial US market, the Datsun was so keenly priced that to opt for an alternative from the chasing peloton became almost unthinkable.
Few could have predicted the next big thing to come from the Land of the Rising Sun.