Chassis Code Explained
| Segment | Meaning | Detail |
|---|---|---|
| S | Platform | S — S-body rear-drive sports platform |
| 13 | Generation | 13 — 13th-generation S-body Silvia (1988–1994) |
The S13 Silvia uses the SR20DET (JDM turbo) or CA18DET (early JDM/export) engines; the 180SX fastback on the same platform uses the RPS13 code (R = retractable headlamps).
Editorial notes
Key Takeaways
- Rust-free shells are the #1 value driver
- Uncut, stock-bodied cars command big premiums
- SR20DET swaps add value only if documented
- Drift history usually hurts collector pricing
- Kouki/rare trims trade higher than base cars
- Parts support is strong, but good shells aren’t
Technical Specifications
The S13 launched in 1988 with the 1.8 liter CA18DE and CA18DET carried over from the S12. In January 1991 Nissan switched the Japanese cars to the 2.0 liter SR20DE and SR20DET. The USDM 240SX got the KA24E and then the KA24DE truck engine and never the SR20DET at any point.
Engine Options
| Chassis | Engine | Displacement | Power — JDM | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| S13 (PS13) | CA18DE | 1.8L | 135PS @ 6400rpm (133hp) | DOHC 16V, EFI |
| S13 (PS13) | CA18DET | 1.8L | 175PS @ 6400rpm (173hp) | T25 turbo, intercooled |
| S13 (PS13) | SR20DE | 2.0L | 140PS @ 6400rpm (138hp) | DOHC 16V, EFI |
| S13 (KPS13) | SR20DET | 2.0L | 205PS @ 6000rpm (202hp) | T25G turbo, intercooled |
Transmission Options
| Type | Ratios | Availability | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5-speed Manual (FS5W71C) | 3.321/1.902/1.308/1.000/0.759 | J's/Q's (NA) by year/market | Common NA 5MT |
| 5-speed Manual (FS5W71C, turbo) | 3.321/1.902/1.308/1.000/0.759 | CA18DET K's (early) | Turbo application (early) |
| 5-speed Manual (FS5W71C, SR20DET) | 3.321/1.902/1.308/1.000/0.759 | SR20DET K's (late) | Turbo 5MT (late) |
| 4-speed Automatic (RE4R01A) | 2.785/1.545/1.000/0.694 | J's/Q's/K's (option) | Lock-up torque converter |
Livability
- Headroom
- 37.0"
- Helmet/headroom tight with sunroof or low seats
- Rear Seats
- Small 2+2
- Adults fit short trips; legroom is minimal
- Cargo
- Trunk ~10 cu ft
- Coupe trunk ok; hatch holds more but noisy
This chassis became eligible for US import under the 25-year rule in 2013. Calculate import costs →
Variants & Trims
JDM Silvia S13 trims followed the card suit naming. J's was the base, Q's was the naturally aspirated mid grade, K's was the turbo flagship. The Club Selection and Dia Selection packages added factory aero and luxury content on top of those base trims.
| Generation | Trim | Engine | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| S13 Silvia (PS13/KPS13) | J's | CA18DE (early), SR20DE (late) | Base grade, manual windows (some), steel wheels |
| S13 Silvia (PS13/KPS13) | Q's | CA18DE (early), SR20DE (late) | Mid grade, LSD optional, power options, alloys |
| S13 Silvia (PS13/KPS13) | K's | CA18DET (early), SR20DET (late) | Turbo, sport suspension, aero optional, LSD optional |
| S13 Silvia (PS13/KPS13) | K's Club Selection | SR20DET | Factory aero, sport interior, alloys |
| S13 Silvia (PS13/KPS13) | Q's Club Selection | SR20DE | Factory aero, upgraded trim, alloys |
| S13 Silvia (PS13/KPS13) | K's Dia Selection | SR20DET | Luxury package, power options, upgraded interior |
| S13 Silvia (PS13/KPS13) | Q's Dia Selection | SR20DE | Luxury package, power options, upgraded interior |
| S13 Silvia (PS13/KPS13) | HICAS-equipped variants | CA18DET/SR20DET (by year/grade) | Super HICAS 4WS (option), viscous LSD optional |
Should You Buy a Nissan Silvia S13?
The S13 is honest about what it is. It's a light RWD coupe from 1988 with the chassis tuning to match, so the strong points and the weak points are baked in. You're not going to fix the second one without ruining the first.
Why You'll Love It
- Lightweight RWD balance Communicative chassis; easy to rotate and control at the limit.
- Huge aftermarket support Suspension, aero, brake, and engine options are plentiful and proven.
- SR20DET ecosystem Well-documented turbo paths; strong parts availability and tuning knowledge.
- Strong culture-driven demand Drift and 90s nostalgia keep buyer interest high across conditions.
- Simple, serviceable platform Straightforward mechanicals; DIY-friendly compared with newer cars.
Why You Might Not
- Rust and crash damage Sills, strut towers, rails; many cars have hidden repairs or seam rust.
- Many are heavily modified Cut harnesses, hacked swaps, cage installs, and drift wear reduce value.
- Interior/trim scarcity OEM dash, door cards, and kouki bits can be costly and hard to source.
- Rising entry pricing Clean cars aren’t cheap anymore; project shells can still be money pits.
- Age-related issues Bushings, wiring, cooling, and fuel systems often need full refresh.
Who Should NOT Buy This
- Anyone needing reliable daily transport
- Buyers who can’t wrench or pay a specialist
- Rust-belt shoppers without lift/inspection access
- People expecting modern crash safety
- Drivers over 6'2" with helmet (track/drift)
- Anyone needing working A/C year-round
- Emissions-strict areas with engine swaps
- Buyers who hate modified-car troubleshooting
Common Issues & Solutions
Most S13 trouble traces back to age and the previous owner, not the engineering. The CA18DET and SR20DET are tough motors when they're left stock or tuned properly. What you're really inspecting on an S13 is whether someone has already broken it.
| Issue | Cause | Solution | Est. Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Front frame rail rust/crush | Jack misuse + thin metal + age corrosion | Rail repair sections; inspect alignment points | $800-2500 |
| Rear subframe mount tear | Hard launches/drift + rust + old bushings | Weld/plate mounts; replace subframe bushings | $900-3000 |
| Overheating under load | Undersized rad, bad fans, clogged passages | Quality radiator, shroud/fans, thermostat flush | $500-1400 |
| Head gasket failure | Overheat + detonation from bad tune/boost | MLS gasket, machine head, fix tune/cooling | $1500-4000 |
| Timing chain rattle | Worn guides/tensioner (CA/SR age) | Timing set with guides/tensioner; inspect sprockets | $700-1800 |
| Turbo smoking/shaft play | Worn seals/bearings; dirty oil; overspeed | Rebuild/replace turbo; add proper oil feed/return | $900-2500 |
| Ringland wear/low comp | Detonation, high boost on stock internals | Compression/leakdown; rebuild with forged pistons | $3500-9000 |
| MAF/AFM drivability issues | Old sensor, wiring corrosion, intake leaks | Smoke test, repair harness, replace MAF/AFM | $200-900 |
| Fuel pump/hose failures | Old pump, cracked rubber, ethanol exposure | New pump, filter, ethanol-safe hoses/clamps | $250-800 |
| Manual trans synchro grind | Worn synchros from abuse/low fluid | Rebuild or swap trans; correct fluid and shifter | $1200-3500 |
| Driveshaft vibration | Worn center bearing/U-joints; bad angles | Rebuild/replace shaft; correct mount heights | $300-900 |
| Steering rack leaks | Old seals; torn boots; contaminated fluid | Rebuild/replace rack; flush system; new boots | $400-1200 |
| Pop-up headlight failure | Worn motor gears/links; corrosion | Rebuild motor, lube links, fix grounds | $150-600 |
| Electrical gremlins | Aged grounds + hacked alarm/stereo wiring | Restore grounds, de-hack harness, relays/fuses | $200-2000 |
| Heater core leak | Corrosion; old coolant; clogged core | Replace core and hoses; flush cooling system | $600-1400 |
| A/C nonfunctional | Deleted parts, leaks, R12/R134a conversions | Leak test; replace compressor/drier; proper charge | $800-2000 |
Differences between JDM & USDM
The S13 split into three market-specific cars at launch and the gap never closed. Japan got the Silvia (notchback, fixed headlights, no SX suffix) in J's, Q's, K's, Club Selection, Diamond Selection, and late Type X trims, with the CA18DE/DET at launch and the SR20DE/SR20DET from January 1991. Japan also got the 180SX (three-door hatch, pop-up headlights) which ran 1989-1998 with the same engine progression. Europe and the UK got the 200SX, which is the 180SX hatch body with similar CA18 / SR20 drivetrains. North America got the 240SX — the same coupe and hatch bodies as the Silvia and 180SX, but powered by the 2.4L KA24E (1989-1990, single-cam, 140 hp) and then the KA24DE (1991-1994, dual-cam, 155 hp), with no factory-turbo option at any point and no SR20DET availability. The KA24 was Nissan's truck and Stanza engine — durable but heavier and torquier than the Silvia's purpose-built fours, with completely different aftermarket support. For US buyers wanting a factory SR20DET S13, gray-market JDM imports under the 25-year rule are the only path; the earliest S13s became legal in 2013 and clean K's-grade Silvias and 180SXs are the import target. Note that JDM K's typically carry an LSD and optional Super HICAS four-wheel steering borrowed from the R32 Skyline — neither offered on the base 240SX.
Pre-Purchase Inspection Checklist
Walk this with the seller, not in front of them. The Critical items on an S13 are almost all structural. Frame rails, subframe mounts, and what the previous owner did with the boost controller. Skip cars where the seller can't answer those three questions.
Critical Priority
High Priority
Medium Priority
Generation History
S13 Silvia (Japan) (1988-1993)
- CA18DET early; SR20DET later
- Lightweight RWD, huge aftermarket
- Kouki updates, aero/trim variations
S13 180SX (Japan) (1989-1998)
- Hatch sibling; long production run
- SR20DET common; drift staple
- Later cars often more worn/modified
S13 240SX (US) (1989-1994)
- KA24E/DE; no factory turbo
- Cheaper entry; many swapped
- Clean USDM survivors now scarce
Sales Numbers by Year
| Year | Notes |
|---|---|
| 1988 | Silvia S13 launch (May 1988); 603 Autech-built Silvia convertibles produced for Japan with CA18DET / 4-speed automatic |
| 1989 | 180SX introduced as JDM hatchback sibling; 240SX launched in North America with KA24E |
| 1991 | SR20DE / SR20DET replace CA18DE / CA18DET on Japanese cars; KA24DE replaces KA24E on US 240SX |
| 1992 | 240SX convertible introduced (American Specialty Cars build, SE trim only) |
| 1993 | S14 Silvia replaces the S13 Silvia coupe in Japan; 180SX continues production |
| 1994 | S13 240SX discontinued in North America; S14 240SX takes over |
| 1998 | 180SX final production year — five years after Silvia coupe ended |
Market Data
JDM Silvia S13 trims followed the card suit naming. J's was the base, Q's was the naturally aspirated mid grade, K's was the turbo flagship. The Club Selection and Dia Selection packages added factory aero and luxury content on top of those base trims.
Production Numbers & Rarity
| Generation | Years | Total Built | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| S13 Silvia (coupe) | 1988-1993 | estimated ~300,000 | Silvia-only; excludes 180SX/240SX |
Motorsport Heritage
| Series | Years | Result | Car |
|---|---|---|---|
| D1 Grand Prix (drift) | 2001–2008 | Multiple event wins; PS13/S13 chassis among most entered in inaugural D1 seasons | PS13 / S13 Silvia |
| Formula Drift (USA) | 2004–2010 | Multiple competition entries and podiums across FD Pro events | S13 Silvia (SR20DET) |
Sources: D1 Grand Prix official records, Formula Drift official records
How It Compares
The S13 is the lightest and most tossable of the JDM RWD coupes of its era. The FD RX-7 has more power and the R32 GTS-t has more weight and more tech, but the S13 is the one that drift culture grew up around. The table below reflects that.
| Feature | S13 | Mazda RX-7 FD3S | Mitsubishi Eclipse GSX |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stock turbo power | SR20DET ~205-220hp | 13B-REW 255hp | 4G63T 195-210hp |
| Chassis layout | FR (RWD), strut/multi | FR (RWD), dbl wishbone | FR (RWD), strut/multi |
| Weight feel | Light, tossable | Heavier, more GT | Very light, raw |
| Tuning headroom | 300hp easy; 400+ built | 350hp easy; heat mgmt | 350hp easy; strong bottom |
| Buyer risk profile | High: rust/previous drift | High: rotary upkeep | Med: parts/age, less drifted |
Comparable Alternatives
If the S13 doesn't end up being the right car, the natural alternatives are the S14 Silvia for a slightly newer chassis with the same SR20DET, the 180SX for the hatchback body on the same platform, or the AE86 if you want something even lighter and more analog.
Nissan Silvia S14
Newer chassis feel; still SR-friendly; often less rusty
Nissan 180SX RPS13
Same core platform; hatch practicality; strong SR20DET supply
Toyota AE86 Corolla
Analog RWD icon; lighter feel; collector demand similar
Mazda RX-7 FC3S
Light RWD coupe; strong handling; cheaper than FD in many cases
Nissan 350Z Z33
Modern RWD alternative; strong VQ torque; easier daily ownership
In Pictures
The Buyer's Read
The safest S13 to buy is a documented JDM Silvia K's or 180SX with the SR20DET, imported on clean paperwork, with evidence the previous owner did not drift it. Stock body, no welded diff, no roll cage, no aftermarket boost controller spliced into the harness. Pay for a pre-purchase inspection — the front frame rails near the tension-rod mounts and the rear subframe mounts take the most hidden damage on these cars.
The 240SX is the cheaper entry path, but you're buying a KA24DE chassis; if the SR20DET experience is the goal, budget for the swap cost from the start. A clean, unmodified KA-powered 240SX is also climbing in value on its own, so the swap path is not automatically the right financial call. For collector purposes, an original-drivetrain 240SX outperforms a hacked SR swap on the same shell.
Pass on anything under $9,000 unless the goal is parts. Below that floor in 2026 the car is almost always a rust case or a drift-taxed shell re-entering the market as someone else's repair bill. The purchase savings typically disappear in the first year on floor pans, wiring, and subframe work.
Fresh underbody paint on a 35-year-old chassis covers patch panels, not bare metal. If the seller cannot show the welds, the car has been repaired and the repair is what you are buying.
Documented, rust-free S13s continue to separate from project cars at auction as the supply of straight shells contracts.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What matters most when buying an S13?
- Prioritize rust-free structure, straight rails, and clean title. Mods are secondary to shell quality.
- Are SR20DET-swapped cars worth more?
- Sometimes. Value rises with documented parts, tidy wiring, and emissions legality; hacked swaps lower value.
- Which S13 trims are most desirable?
- Kouki cars and rarer factory aero/limited trims trade higher; condition still outweighs trim.
- What are common rust areas on S13s?
- Sills/rockers, strut towers, rear quarters, floor pans, and front frame rails near tension rods.
- Is a drift-used S13 a bad buy?
- For collecting, yes: expect fatigue, repairs, and wiring hacks. For track use, inspect thoroughly.
- What’s the best spec for long-term value?
- A stock-bodied, uncut, well-documented car with OEM-style interior and minimal irreversible mods.
- How is parts availability today?
- Mechanical parts are good; OEM trim and kouki pieces are getting expensive and harder to find.
Sources & References
Sources (11)
- Nissan Silvia/180SX Factory Service Manuals — NissanVerified
- Nissan 240SX Factory Service Manual (S13) — NissanVerified
- Nissan Silvia — model history and JDM trim breakdown — WikipediaVerified
- Nissan 180SX — JDM/Europe 200SX hatchback history — WikipediaVerified
- Nissan 240SX — USDM S13 history, KA24E and KA24DE specifications — WikipediaVerified
- Nissan SR engine — SR20DE and SR20DET technical reference — WikipediaVerified
- Nissan CA engine — CA18DE and CA18DET technical reference — WikipediaVerified
- Autech — company background and S13 Silvia convertible build context — WikipediaVerified
- Bring a Trailer — Nissan 240SX auction results (S13 era) — Bring a TrailerVerified
- Cars & Bids — Silvia search (S13 and later) — Cars & BidsVerified
- Classic.com — Nissan Silvia market and price-trend data — Classic.comVerified
Sources last verified: