The Arna is a vehicle with a mixed legacy. Even now, some Alfa Romeo devotees refuse to mention its name. Others regard it as blending the charisma of the Nissan Cherry with the build quality of the average Alfasud. But today, some argue that the Arna was a brave attempt at Japanese/European co-operation – and a highly underrated car.
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The UK s rarest cars: Datsun Sunny 1000, one of only three left on British roads
The ultra conventional Sunny 1000 rivalled the Ford Escort and was the first Datsun for the British market
22 January 2021 • 6:00am
In June of 1968 Nissan-Datsun Concessionaires of Shoreham took delivery of the six models that represented a cross-section of the company’s line-up. The largest was the 2000 Cedric Saloon while the smallest was a B10-Series 1000 Sunny, registration OKJ 213 F, which is now the property of Mark Ashbridge.
The Daihatsu Compagno of 1964 was the first British-market Japanese car, but imports were in single figures. Three years later, Toyota and Honda had cars on sale in the UK, and Mazda GB was commencing operations, but the total sales of Japanese cars for 1967 still amounted to less than 2,000. British Nissan sales were initially under the auspices of the former NSU importer Octav Botnar with the early dealerships often compromising small family-run firms.