Buyer's guide
Nissan Safari
The Nissan Safari is the JDM-market badge for the Nissan Patrol — specifically the Y60 (1987–1997) and Y61 (1997–2007) generations sold exclusively in Japan and in the Philippines as the Patrol Safari. The Safari name predates that pairing; Nissan first used it on the 160-series Patrol in 1980. Where export Patrols of the same era were trimmed and engineered for global markets, the JDM Safari diverged on two distinct axes: a 24-volt electrical system on most trims (export Patrols stayed on 12 volts), and an engine lineup that put the TD42 4.2-litre inline-six turbodiesel paired with a 5-speed manual in front of buyers who couldn't get that combination anywhere else. That diesel-plus-manual combination, the coil-sprung solid axles introduced on the Y60, and the relative scarcity (Nissan ended Safari production in 2007 to poor sales) are what now drive overlander and importer interest. Y61 build years from 1999 onward become eligible under the US 25-year rule starting in 2024.
Safari vs Patrol — same chassis, different market
Mechanically, the JDM Safari and the global Nissan Patrol share platforms, drivetrain hardware, and most service parts. The divergence is in trim, equipment, and electrical architecture. The Safari ran a 24-volt system on most trims — the same approach Nissan used on commercial-grade Patrols sold in some export markets, but applied broadly across the JDM lineup. A 12-volt converter feeds the accessory circuits that need it; that converter is a known wear item and a routine failure path when the truck sits. Trim cues split further: some JDM Safari Y60 variants left the factory with a Warn winch and other off-road equipment that the contemporary export Patrol didn't get. Body styles included both 3-door SWB and 5-door LWB, hardtops, and wagon variants. The export Patrol Y60/Y61 was not sold in the United States; the closest North American touchpoint is the older 60-series Patrol, briefly sold by Nissan dealers in limited form. For US buyers, every Safari and every Y60/Y61 Patrol on US roads today is a grey-market import under the 25-year rule.
Why JDM Safari diesel + manual is the import target
The TD42 (and turbocharged TD42T / intercooled TD42Ti on later Y61) is the engine that drives most import interest. It's an OHV 4.2-litre inline-six diesel built for longevity and torque rather than refinement, and JDM Safari was one of the few markets where it was paired with a 5-speed manual gearbox in a passenger-grade SUV body. Buyers cross-shopping the Toyota Land Cruiser 80 1HD-T tend to land on Safari when the budget can't stretch to a clean 80 — Safari delivers similar solid-axle articulation and similar diesel character at a meaningful discount, with the trade-off being a smaller global parts ecosystem outside of dedicated Patrol specialists. The early Y61 ZD30 diesel is a separate engine to flag: some early ZD30 units had failures under heat and boost stress, and a documented service history (with EGT monitoring and cooling upgrades) is the standard advice from the Patrol/Safari forums (patrol4x4.com, expedition portals).
Quick read
Key takeaways
- Safari = Patrol; Japan name for Y60/Y61
- TD42 diesel is most desired; pricey but durable
- Rust + cooling are top inspection priorities
- Lockers/5MT add value; heavy mods can hurt
- Y61 is more refined; Y60 is simpler/cheaper
- Import timing: 1999+ becomes legal from 2024+
Constants
Common across all Safari generations
- JDM-market name for the Nissan Patrol; badge-engineered sibling sharing the same platforms
- Ladder-frame body-on-frame construction across all generations
- Part-time four-wheel drive with low-range transfer case standard
- Inline-six petrol and diesel engine options, including the TD42 diesel
- Right-hand drive throughout all JDM production
Chassis history
Generation timeline
The Safari ran across two generations from 1987 until 2007, and the gap between them matters more than you'd think. The Y60 is the simpler truck, with coil-sprung solid axles and the TD42 diesel that built the Safari's reputation. The Y61 is more refined and got the TB48 petrol and turbocharged TD42T diesel options, but you have to watch out for the early ZD30 diesel that some build years got stuck with.
160 series (1980–1987)
Y60 (1987–1997)
Buyer's call
Should you buy a Nissan Safari?
The Safari is what you'd expect from a heavy-duty Patrol with a Japan-only badge. The strong points and weak points have stayed the same across the entire run. You're buying a solid-axle 4x4 that'll go anywhere with the right diesel, and giving up fuel economy, modern manners, and easy parts sourcing outside of Patrol specialists.
Why you'll love it
- Heavy-duty solid-axle platform Coil/solid axles (Y60/Y61) deliver articulation and strength for trails and touring loads.
- Legendary TD42 diesel option TD42 is valued for longevity and torque; ideal for remote travel when maintained properly.
- Strong global parts ecosystem Patrol-based support worldwide; suspension, drivetrain, and touring parts widely available.
- Simple mechanicals (esp. Y60) Less electronics than newer SUVs; easier field repairs and straightforward diagnostics.
- Excellent towing and payload feel Body-on-frame heft and gearing suit towing; stable at speed compared with lighter 4x4s.
- High ceiling for builds Supports lockers, gearing, turbo kits (diesel), long-range tanks, and expedition setups.
Why you might not
- Rust can be severe and hidden Common in sills, rear quarters, gutters, floors, body mounts; repairs can exceed purchase delta.
- Fuel economy is poor (petrol) TB42/TB45 are thirsty; range and running costs can surprise buyers used to modern SUVs.
- Age-related cooling issues Radiators, hoses, viscous fan, and head gasket risk if overheated; verify temps under load.
- ZD30 reputation (early Y61) Some early ZD30s had failures when overheated/overboosted; buy with proof of care and upgrades.
- Heavy and slow by modern standards Great stability but modest acceleration and long braking distances; upgrades often needed.
- Modified examples can be risky Big lifts/tires can stress driveline and steering; poor wiring and tuning reduce reliability.
Who should not buy this
- Anyone expecting modern crash safety
- People who can’t wrench or pay a specialist
- Rust-belt buyers without indoor storage
- Drivers wanting quiet highway cruising
- Anyone needing 20+ mpg consistently
- People who need fast parts availability locally
- Those who hate diesel smell, smoke, and clatter
- Buyers who won’t baseline cooling system immediately
- Anyone relying on shops unfamiliar with JDM diesels
- People who must pass strict emissions inspections
- Those wanting modern ABS/ESC behavior
- Anyone towing heavy without trans cooling upgrades
- Owners who won’t monitor EGT on turbo setups
- People who need tight turning radius in cities
- Anyone expecting cheap insurance or easy financing
- Buyers who can’t tolerate slow acceleration
- Those who need child-seat anchors/modern LATCH
- People who park outside and ignore water leaks
- Anyone who won’t service axles/knuckles regularly
- Buyers expecting perfect odometer accuracy on imports
Reliability
Common issues & solutions
The Safari is a tough truck mechanically. Most of the trouble comes from age and rust, not the engineering. Rust is the one that'll kill a Safari faster than anything mechanical. After that, the cooling system, the 12-volt converter that feeds accessories off the 24-volt main bus, and worn knuckle seals on the front axle are the recurring headaches. None of these are deal breakers if the paperwork shows the work was done.
| Issue | Cause | Solution | Est. cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Frame rust/rot | Road salt, trapped mud, poor undercoating | Probe/repair sections; avoid heavy patchwork | $2000-12000 |
| Body mount corrosion | Moisture trapped at mount cups and seams | Replace mounts; weld mount cups as needed | $800-4000 |
| Windshield frame rust | Seal traps water; prior glass installs | Remove glass; cut/repair metal; reseal | $800-3500 |
| Rear crossmember rot | Mud/salt accumulation; towing loads | Replace/repair crossmember; treat inside rails | $1200-6000 |
| Floor pan rust/wet carpets | Heater core leaks or clogged drains | Fix leak source; patch pans; dry insulation | $300-3000 |
| TD42 low oil pressure | Worn bearings, tired pump, thin oil, sludge | Confirm with mech gauge; rebuild bottom end | $3500-12000 |
| Excessive blow-by | Ring/cylinder wear from dusting or high miles | Compression test; rebuild; fix intake sealing | $5000-15000 |
| Overheating under load | Clogged radiator, weak fan clutch, bad stat | Radiator+clutch+stat; verify shroud and cap | $600-2200 |
| Cracked cylinder head | Chronic overheating; poor coolant maintenance | Pressure test; replace head; address cooling | $3500-9000 |
| Heater core failure | Age corrosion; old coolant; electrolysis | Replace core; flush system; new hoses/clamps | $600-1800 |
| Injection pump leaks | Aged seals; ULSD shrinkage; shaft wear | Reseal/rebuild pump; set timing on bench | $900-2500 |
| Air ingress hard start | Cracked primer, filter head, return hoses | Replace filter head/hoses; add clear line test | $150-700 |
| Injector wear/poor spray | High hours; dirty fuel; overdue service | Pop test; rebuild/replace nozzles; set pressures | $400-1200 |
| Turbo kit overfuel/EGT | Aftermarket turbo with no EGT control/tune | Install EGT/boost; tune pump; proper intercooler | $800-5000 |
| Dusting engine wear | Leaky airbox, poor snorkel sealing, offroad dust | Inspect intake for silt; reseal; rebuild if worn | $200-15000 |
| Manual synchro grind | Worn 2nd/3rd synchros; wrong oil; hard use | Correct oil; rebuild gearbox if persistent | $1200-4500 |
| Auto trans overheating | Towing, big tires, no cooler, old fluid | Add cooler/temp gauge; service or rebuild | $300-4500 |
| Transfer case pops out | Worn detents/forks; linkage misadjusted | Adjust linkage; rebuild t-case if worn | $300-2500 |
| Front swivel hub leaks | Worn knuckle seals; overfilled diff; age | Full knuckle rebuild; set preload; new bearings | $600-1800 |
| Wheel bearing failure | Neglected grease; water ingress; wrong preload | Replace bearings/seals; set preload correctly | $300-1200 |
| Death wobble/shimmy | Worn tie rods, panhard bushes, caster off lift | Replace wear parts; align; caster correction | $400-2500 |
| Steering box leak/play | Sector shaft seal wear; internal wear | Rebuild/replace box; flush PS; check pump | $600-2200 |
| Brake line corrosion | Salt exposure; old fluid; poor underbody care | Replace hard lines; flush fluid; inspect hoses | $500-2500 |
| Seized front calipers | Corrosion; torn boots; infrequent fluid changes | Rebuild/replace calipers; new pads/rotors | $400-1400 |
| Vacuum pump/booster weak | Pump wear/leaks; booster diaphragm aging | Replace pump/booster; check vacuum lines | $500-1800 |
| Alternator failure | Heat/oil contamination; worn bearings/diodes | Rebuild/replace alternator; fix oil leaks | $250-900 |
| Starter slow crank | Worn contacts; bad grounds; heat soak | Rebuild starter; upgrade cables/grounds | $200-700 |
| A/C weak or inop | Old seals, leaking condenser, worn compressor | Leak test; replace parts; convert/charge properly | $400-2000 |
| Window regulator failure | Worn guides/cables; tired motors | Replace regulator/motor; lube channels | $150-600 |
| Rear door sag | Worn hinges; heavy spare/tire carrier loads | Replace hinge pins; adjust latch; reinforce if needed | $150-800 |
| Diff pinion seal leaks | Age; vent blockage; worn yoke surface | Replace seal; clear vent; sleeve yoke if grooved | $200-700 |
| Locker actuator failure | Corrosion, seized motor, broken vacuum lines | Service actuator; replace lines; retrofit manual | $300-2000 |
| Cooling gauge lies | Damped gauge/sender; wiring resistance | Verify with IR/scan; replace sender; add real gauge | $50-400 |
Market
Differences between JDM & USDM
The Safari nameplate was never sold in the United States. The Y60 and Y61 export Patrols were sold in many markets — Australia, the Middle East, parts of Asia, and Europe — but North American Nissan dealers never carried the Y60 or Y61 Patrol. The last factory-imported Patrol on US roads was the 60-series, sold briefly in limited form. Every JDM Safari in the US today is a grey-market import under the 25-year rule: Y61 build years from 1999 are eligible starting in 2024, 2000 in 2025, and so on. The Safari is RHD throughout production; left-hand-drive Patrols of the same chassis exist in other markets but are not Safaris. JDM-specific features to watch for as authenticity markers: the 24-volt electrical system on most trims, the Spirit and Super Safari trim names (JDM-only), and the TD42-plus-5-speed-manual combination that export Patrol markets rarely received in the same packaging.
Specs
Technical specifications
Every JDM Safari runs an inline-six. The Y60 came with the TD42 4.2 diesel, the TB42S 4.2 carbureted petrol, or the RD28T 2.8 turbodiesel. The Y61 kept the TD42 (now turbocharged as TD42T and TD42Ti) and added the TB45E 4.5 petrol and the TB48DE 4.8 petrol. The 5-speed manual is the one to want if you can find it.
Engine options
| Chassis | Engine | Displacement | Power | Boost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Y60 (Safari 160 series) | TD42 | 4.2L | unknown (exact JDM Safari spec varies by year) | N/A | OHV I6 diesel; JDM ratings vary |
| Y60 (Safari 160 series) | TB42S | 4.2L | unknown (exact JDM Safari spec varies by year) | N/A | Carb I6 petrol; market/year dependent |
| Y60 (Safari 160 series) | RD28T | 2.8L | unknown (exact JDM Safari spec varies by year) | Turbo (boost psi varies) | Turbo I6 diesel; rating varies by year |
| Y61 (Patrol/Safari Y61) | TB45E | 4.5L | unknown (exact JDM Safari spec varies by year) | N/A | EFI I6 petrol; JDM ratings vary |
| Y61 (Patrol/Safari Y61) | TB48DE | 4.8L | unknown (exact JDM Safari spec varies by year) | N/A | DOHC I6 petrol; JDM ratings vary |
| Y61 (Patrol/Safari Y61) | TD42T | 4.2L | unknown (exact JDM Safari spec varies by year) | Turbo (boost psi varies) | Turbo diesel; exact output varies by year |
| Y61 (Patrol/Safari Y61) | TD42Ti | 4.2L | unknown (exact JDM Safari spec varies by year) | Turbo (boost psi varies) | Turbo/intercooled diesel; year dependent |
Transmission options
| Type | Ratios | Availability | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5-speed Manual | unknown (varies by gearbox/engine/year) | Y60/Y61 (varies by trim/engine) | Exact ratios depend on FS5R50/others |
| 4-speed Automatic | unknown (varies by gearbox/engine/year) | Y60/Y61 (varies by trim/engine) | Exact ratios depend on RE4R03A/others |
Lineup
Variants & trims
JDM Safari trims include Grand Road, Spirit Type I and II, Hardtop, and Wagon on the Y60, then Gran Road, Super Safari, and the base Safari on the Y61. The differences are about equipment, not the chassis. Super Safari is the top of the Y61 range and usually pairs with the TB48 petrol. Spirit Type II is the equivalent on the Y60.
| Generation | Trim | Engine | Key features |
|---|---|---|---|
| 160 (1st gen Safari, Y60 platform) | Grand Road (3dr) | TD42, TB42S, RD28T (market/yr dep.) | 3dr short wheelbase, solid axles, part-time 4WD |
| 160 (1st gen Safari, Y60 platform) | Grand Road (5dr) | TD42, TB42S, RD28T (market/yr dep.) | 5dr long wheelbase, solid axles, part-time 4WD |
| 160 (1st gen Safari, Y60 platform) | Spirit Type I | TD42, TB42S (market/yr dep.) | higher equipment grade, power options, comfort trim |
| 160 (1st gen Safari, Y60 platform) | Spirit Type II | TD42, TB42S (market/yr dep.) | top grade, upgraded interior, convenience equipment |
| 160 (1st gen Safari, Y60 platform) | Hardtop (3dr) | TD42, TB42S, RD28T (market/yr dep.) | fixed hardtop, 3dr SWB, off-road focused spec |
| 160 (1st gen Safari, Y60 platform) | Wagon (5dr) | TD42, TB42S, RD28T (market/yr dep.) | 5dr wagon, higher payload, family/off-road mix |
| Y61 (2nd gen Safari, Patrol Y61 platform) | Gran Road (3dr) | TB45E, TB48DE, TD42T/TD42Ti (market/yr dep.) | 3dr SWB, coil/solid axles, part-time 4WD |
| Y61 (2nd gen Safari, Patrol Y61 platform) | Gran Road (5dr) | TB45E, TB48DE, TD42T/TD42Ti (market/yr dep.) | 5dr LWB, coil/solid axles, part-time 4WD |
| Y61 (2nd gen Safari, Patrol Y61 platform) | Super Safari (5dr) | TB48DE (primary), TB45E (early/market dep.) | top grade, TB48, luxury trim, off-road equipment |
| Y61 (2nd gen Safari, Patrol Y61 platform) | Safari (base grade, 3dr/5dr) | TB45E, TD42T/TD42Ti (market/yr dep.) | base equipment, heavy-duty spec, utility oriented |
Pricing
Average prices & original MSRP
Today's market range: $14,000 to $65,000 (median ~$32,000). Source: JDMBuySell / USS Auction.
Demand is climbing for rust-free, stock-ish Safari/Patrols as 90s imports mature. TD42 and late Y61s lead price gains; heavily modified or rusty trucks lag. Expect continued firming as more buyers cross-shop LC80/70 and seek alternatives.
Inspect
Pre-purchase inspection checklist
Walk this list with the seller, not in front of them. The Critical items mean walking away if there's no paperwork backing them up, especially anything to do with frame rust or brake lines. The High items can usually be priced into the deal. A cold start, a 30 minute drive with a stop to check for cooling stability, and an underbody crawl will surface most of what you need to know.
Critical priority
- Frame rails Inspect rails for rust scale, patches, cracks
- Rear crossmember Probe for rot near tow points and seams
- Body mounts Check all mounts for rot, crush, missing bolts
- Oil pressure Confirm hot idle pressure; no flicker at idle
- Brake lines Inspect hard lines for rust; flex hoses cracks
- Import compliance Verify title, EPA/DOT, chassis stamp matches
High priority
- Front floor pans Lift mats; check pinholes, wet insulation
- Rear floor/seat base Check under rear seat for rust and water
- Sills/rockers Check inner/outer sills for bubbling/repairs
- Wheel arches Inspect lip rust, inner arch rot, filler
- Windshield frame Check top corners for rust under seal
- Underbody coatings Look for fresh undercoat hiding rust/patches
- Accident damage Check core support, apron wrinkles, gaps
- TD42 cold start Start cold; note smoke, knock, uneven idle
- Blow-by test Check crankcase fumes at oil cap at idle
- Cooling system Check radiator fins, leaks, overflow stains
- Overheat history Look for new radiator/head work receipts
- Fuel leaks Inspect injector lines, filter head, return hoses
- Fuel filter head Check primer for cracks and air ingress
- Injection pump Check for diesel seep at throttle shaft/front
- Turbo setup (if) Check shaft play, oil feed leaks, boost spikes
- Air intake Check airbox seals; dusting in intake tube
- Manual gearbox Check 2nd/3rd synchro; grind on fast shifts
- Auto gearbox (if) Check flare, harsh shifts, burnt ATF smell
- Transfer case Engage 4H/4L; no popping out or grinding
- 4WD hubs Check auto/manual hubs engage; no clicking
- Diff locks (if) Test locker actuators; confirm light and lock
- Driveshafts Check U-joints slip yokes for play and rust
- Steering box Check sector shaft leak and excessive play
- Tie rods/ends Check torn boots and play; shimmy at speed
- Front wheel bearings Check play and noise; inspect grease condition
- Swivel hubs Check knuckle seals; oil/grease sling on wheels
- Brake booster Check pedal feel; vacuum pump leaks/noise
- Calipers Check seized pistons, uneven pad wear, pull
- Electrical grounds Check battery grounds; slow crank issues
- Heater core Check sweet smell, fogging, wet carpet
- Instrument cluster Confirm temp gauge accurate; sender wiring ok
- Odometer proof Check auction sheets/service stickers vs wear
- VIN/engine code Confirm Y60/Y61, TD42/TD42T/TD42Ti match docs
Medium priority
- Firewall seams Look for seam rust and brake booster cracks
- Roof gutters Inspect gutters for rust, sealant, bubbling
- Rear quarter seams Check seam sealer splits and rust bleed
- Tailgate/door bottoms Check drain holes, rust at hem flanges
- Glow system Verify glow light, relay clicks, fast start
- Hoses & clamps Squeeze hoses; check swelling and crusted ends
- Fan clutch Hot test; ensure clutch engages, no freewheel
- Water pump Check weep hole, bearing play, squeal
- Thermostat Verify stable temps; no slow warm-up/overheat
- Injector condition Listen for nailing; check smoke under load
- EGT/boost gauges If turbo, confirm EGT gauge installed/working
- Snorkel install Check sealed joints; no silicone gaps or leaks
- Exhaust Check manifold cracks, soot trails, loose studs
- Engine mounts Check for collapse; excessive engine rock
- Front diff Check pinion seal leak and backlash noise
- Rear diff Check axle seals; gear whine on coast
- Panhard bushes Check cracked bushes; wandering and clunks
- Radius arm bushes Check for split bushes; braking shimmy
- Springs/shocks Check sag, leaks, uneven ride height
- Steering damper Check for leaks; death wobble symptoms
- CV joints Listen for clicking in 4WD full lock
- Rear drums (if) Check wheel cylinders leaks and shoe delam
- Parking brake Check holds on hill; cable seizure common
- Alternator output Verify 13.8-14.4V; check charge light behavior
- Starter draw Listen for slow crank; heat soak issues
- Battery tray Check acid rust and tray rot
- A/C operation Confirm cold vent temps; compressor noise/leaks
- Sunroof drains (if) Pour water; check drain flow and headliner stains
- Tires wear Check cupping/feathering; indicates steering wear
- Lift/oversize tires Check driveline angles; vibrations at 40-60mph
- Tow/overload use Check rear sag, trans temps, diff noise
Low priority
- Blower motor Test all speeds; squeal and resistor failures
- Window regulators Check slow windows; guides and motors tired
- Door locks Check central locking; actuators weak
- Wiper linkage Check slop and slow sweep; linkage bush wear
Cross-shop
Comparable alternatives
If the Safari doesn't end up being the right truck, the natural alternatives are the Toyota Land Cruiser 80 if your budget can stretch (similar solid-axle layout, stronger global parts support), or the Mitsubishi Pajero V20 if you want something cheaper and a bit more comfortable on road. The Land Cruiser 70 is the workhorse alternative, and it'll cost you more than a Safari most of the time.
Toyota Land Cruiser 80
Closest rival: solid axles, 1HD/1FZ, strong resale
Mitsubishi Pajero V20
Cheaper 90s 4x4; good ride; capable with mods
Toyota Hilux Surf N185
Smaller, easier daily; strong parts; IFS comfort
Jeep Cherokee XJ
Light, capable, huge aftermarket; watch unibody rust
Toyota Land Cruiser 70
Workhorse alternative; simpler, pricey, strong global demand
Compare
How it compares
Among the JDM heavy-duty 4x4s, the Land Cruiser 80 is the closest rival, the Pajero V20 is the value alternative, and the Hilux Surf is the daily-driver compromise. The table below leans toward the Safari's strengths because that's where it actually wins, on diesel choice, articulation, and a chassis you can build into a real overland rig.
| Feature | Nissan Safari | Toyota Land Cruiser 80 | Mitsubishi Pajero V20 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chassis/axles | Body-on-frame; solid axles | Body-on-frame; solid axles | Body-on-frame; solid axles |
| Front suspension | Coil (Y60/Y61) | Coil | IFS (most trims) |
| Rear suspension | Coil (Y60/Y61) | Coil | Coil |
| Diesel highlight | TD42 4.2 NA/TD | 1HD-T/1HD-FT 4.2T | 4M40 2.8T |
| Petrol highlight | TB42/TB45 inline-6 | 1FZ-FE 4.5 inline-6 | 3RZ-FE 2.7 I4 |
| Factory lockers | Some trims/markets | Some trims (FF/RR) | Rare; varies by market |
| Off-road durability | Very high; heavy-duty diffs | Very high; proven global | High; lighter-duty than LC |
| On-road comfort | Good for era; truck-like | Good; heavier, smoother | Better ride; more car-like |
| Steering feel | Recirculating ball; vague | Recirculating ball; similar | Lighter feel; less precise off-road |
| Aftermarket support | Strong (Patrol global) | Very strong (LC global) | Strong; cheaper parts |
| Typical rust risk | High in wet/snow regions | Moderate-high; frame/body | High; unibody rot common |
| Purchase price trend | Rising; TD42 premium | High and rising; 80 tax | Flatter; value alternative |
| Best use case | Touring + hard trails | Touring + family hauling | Daily + light/med trails |
Gallery
In pictures
Editorial
The buyer's read
If you're buying a Safari, the safest place to start is a documented Y61 with the TD42T or TD42Ti diesel and the 5-speed manual. That gives you the engine the import scene actually wants, a gearbox you can fix anywhere, and a chassis recent enough that the body hasn't lived through 30 winters. Skip anything with the early ZD30 unless the seller can show you cooling upgrades and EGT monitoring records. The ZD30 isn't unfixable, but an unsorted one is a project, not a truck you can drive home and trust.
If you want the cheaper way in, a clean Y60 with the naturally aspirated TD42 is the move. You'll give up some refinement and you'll need to spend time on the cooling system before you really use it, but the Y60 is the simpler truck and parts are easier to find than people think. The 24-volt electrical system sounds intimidating, but it's reliable once you understand it. Budget for the 12-volt converter that feeds the accessory circuits, because that part fails on almost every Safari sooner or later.
The one Safari to avoid is a rusty one. The frame rails, the rear crossmember, the windshield frame, and the body mounts are the spots that hide the worst rot, and a rusty Safari isn't a bargain. It's a parts truck pretending to be a project. Probe the frame before you fall in love with the auction photos. If you find a clean rust-free truck with the TD42, the 5-speed manual, and a documented cooling baseline, that's the buy. Most of those are still in Japan, but Y61 build years from 1999 onward are now eligible for US import under the 25-year rule, and that's where the supply is opening up.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
- Is the Nissan Safari the same as the Patrol?
- Yes. Safari is the Japan-market name for the Nissan Patrol (mainly Y60/Y61 eras).
- Which engine is most desirable for value and reliability?
- Generally TD42 (4.2 diesel) leads demand. Petrol TB42/TB45 are robust but thirsty.
- What are the biggest problems to check before buying?
- Prioritize rust, cooling system health, drivetrain leaks, steering slop, and evidence of hard off-road use.
- Are early Y61 ZD30 diesels really that risky?
- Some early ZD30 had failures tied to heat/boost. Buy with service records, EGT monitoring, and cooling upgrades.
- Do factory lockers matter for resale?
- Yes. Factory lockers and a 5MT often add value, especially on clean, lightly modified trucks.
- What modifications hurt value the most?
- Poorly executed big lifts, cut fenders, messy wiring, and unknown turbo/tune setups. Quality touring mods can help.
- What should I expect to pay in today’s market?
- Driver-grade trucks often trade mid-teens to 30s; top TD42 or late Y61 can reach 40k+ depending on condition.
- When is a Nissan Safari US-legal under 25-year rule?
- It depends on build year. For example, 1999 becomes legal in 2024, 2000 in 2025, and so on.
Citations
Sources & references
- Nissan Patrol — Y60 fourth-generation history — WikipediaVerified
- Nissan Safari — JDM badge history (Japanese-language source) — Wikipedia (Japanese)Verified
- Nissan Heritage Collection — 1980s product chronology — Nissan Motor CorporationVerified
- Death wobble final fix poll — Patrol/Safari kingpin preload discussion — Patrol4x4 forumVerified
- Pros and cons of choosing a Nissan Patrol/Safari 2012 — Tsikot forum (Philippines)Verified
- Bring a Trailer — Nissan Patrol auction results archive — Bring a TrailerVerified
- Cars & Bids — Nissan Patrol search results — Cars & BidsVerified
- Goo-net Exchange — Nissan Safari JDM listings — Goo-net ExchangeVerified
- BE FORWARD — Nissan Safari export listings — BE FORWARDVerified
- Hagerty valuation tools — collector market data — HagertyVerified
- Nissan Patrol Y60/Y61 — Expedition Portal long-running thread — Expedition PortalVerified
- Nissan Safari Spirit — image source — Wikimedia Commons (Tennen-Gas)Verified
Sources last verified: