Nissan Cedric - First Generation 30

First Generation 30

Nissan Cedric 30 and 31
Also called Yue Loong YLN-801 (TW)
Production 1960–1962 (30)
1962–1965 (31)
Body style 4-door sedan/wagon/van
Layout FR layout
Engine 1.5 L G I4
1.9 L H I4
2.8 L K I6 (Cedric Special)
2.0 L SD20 diesel I4 (QGS31)
Transmission Borg-Warner three-speed automatic
four-speed manual
Wheelbase 2,530 mm (99.6 in)
Length 4,410–4,590 mm (173.6–180.7 in)
Width 1,680 mm (66.1 in)
Height 1,520 mm (59.8 in)
Curb weight 1,195 kg (2,630 lb)

The first Cedric was the "30" series, introduced in March 1960 and produced through 1962. It was available only at Japanese Nissan dealerships called Nissan Bluebird Store.

Several models were available, including the Cedric 1500 DeLuxe and Standard (30), Cedric 1900 Deluxe (D30, powered by the 1.9 L Nissan H engine), Cedric 1900 Custom (G30, also powered by the Nissan H engine), Cedric Van (V30, six-seater) and the Cedric Wagon (WP30, eight-seater). Only the Cedric Standard used a 1.5 L (1,488 cc) G-series I4 engine which produced 70 hp (52 kW). The 1.9 L (1,883 cc) H-series with 87 hp (65 kW) was optional. A four-speed manual transmission with the top three gears synchronized was standard, with a three-speed manual fitted to 1900 versions. Diesel engines were supplied by newly acquired Minsei Diesel Industries, Ltd, which was renamed Nissan Diesel Motor Co., Ltd in 1960.

The Cedric replaced the Austin A50 Nissan was building under license from Austin Motor Company of England, which was called the Nissan Austin. The six-seater Cedric introduced Nissan's first monocoque body and a wrap-around windshield. The first Cedric featured two stacked headlights on either side of a large grille (inspired by a late 1950s commuter train from Japan, the Tobu JNR 151). The taillights were the same as the Datsun Bluebird 312. and was considered a six-seater. April 1962 saw the introduction of a station wagon–van, able to seat eight people.

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