Nissan has been selling Sentras in the United States since 1982, when it was one of the first models (after the St anza
What’s extra weird about this car is that it started its career as an Avis rental. Rental fleet buyers in the United States are forced to shell out for automatic transmissions, for obvious reasons, but cheap subcompact rentals of the middle 1980s generally didn’t get extras beyond that.
The MSRP for the ’84 Sentra XE hatchback coupe with automatic transmission was $7,299, or about $22,038 in 2023 dollars. That was $150 ($453 now) more than the price of the same car with a five-speed manual, which was a great price for a slushbox during the era.
But that figure was just the beginning. The air conditioning, which this car has, added 610 bucks (1,842 of today’s bucks). Amazingly, the clock and
The “Sport Accent Stripes,” available only on the XE Coupe, looked sharp. If you wanted them on your new Sentra, the cost was $105 ($317 in today’s money).
The wheel trim rings and wheel lip moldings cost $155 and $55 extra, respectively ($468 and $166 now). Perhaps California Nissan dealers had some of these loaded Sentras gathering dust on their lots, due in part to the mid-1980s oil glut