I loved my 1st gen Pathfinder. Unlike today's CUVs, it was a proper SUV — derived, and barely civilized from the compact pickup truck beneath. The ride was, as they say, trucklike. The accomodations, Spartan. And, until my wife decided the normally-sturdy VG30 V6 needed some additional positive crankcase ventilation on a subzero February morning, indestructible.
(I blame my wife, but really, I'm probably at fault, as I likely botched the coolant ratio when I changed fluids the prior fall. Alas, she doesn't read TTAC.)
Unfortunately, when our truck was hauled to the nearby Nissan dealer, our phone call came not from the service department, but from sales. A quick inspection while on a lift revealed entirely too much of the inside of the frame rails, and not enough of the outsides. The Ohio winters had claimed another victim.
I reminisced about my truck while scouring eBay, Cars.com, and Autotrader today. I noticed that there are plenty of early Pathfinders out there, but very few with low miles. I saw a bunch with over 250,000 on the odometer, which is remarkable for any car with a propensity for rust.
This '95 looks quite clean, with around 150,000 miles under the seemingly-rust-free body. The dealer only offers three photos, so I'd insist on more photos and/or a third-party inspection before winging it to Idaho. This is a no-frills, take the family anywhere machine, unlike the modern cute-utes which wince at the suggestion of gravel.
I miss my Nissan. It never let me down (let's forget about the better half for a moment), and carried everything I threw at it. It even hauled a dead Mazda RX-7 a couple hundred miles on a heavy trailer with no complaints. I wouldn't try that with a modern CVT-equipped equivalent.
The post Crapwagon Outtake: 1994 Nissan Pathfinder appeared first on The Truth About Cars.
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