Mitsuoka Le-Seyde

The Mitsuoka Le-Seyde is a limited production car manufactured in the early 1990s, based on the Nissan Silvia S13. Only 500 units were made, and Mitsuoka claims that all were sold within four days after they went on sale.

The Le-Seyde is considered a "neoclassic" car, featuring a retro design inspired by cars of the 1920s and 1930s. The Le Seyde features a similar design to other neoclassic cars of the 1990s made by companies such as Zimmer and Excalibur.

The Le-Seyde was designed at Nissan's Kyushu plant, where the design for the centre portion and interior was based on the Silvia S13. The engine used is the same naturally aspirated 1809 cc CA18DE engine used in the Silvia S13 up until mid-1990.

Dore
Pronounced "DURA", it is a convertible version of the Le-Seyde that was produced in July 1991 as a limited production model and was based on the 1979-1993 Ford Mustang Fox body.

The centre portion and interior was similar to that of the Fox body Mustang. It uses the same 302 cuin Windsor V8 engine from the Mustang and was manufactured in left hand drive configuration as opposed to right hand drive that was the norm for many cars in Japan.

New Le-Seyde
A redesigned version of the Le-Seyde (also known as the New Le-Seyde) was introduced in late 2000, and was based on the Nissan Silvia S15. it is identical to the original Le-Seyde with only a few minor cosmetic changes, mostly in regards to the centre portion and interior, which are similar to the Silvia S15.

The engine used was the naturally aspirated 1998 cc SR20DE, the same engine featured in the Silvia S15.

In popular culture


The Mitsuoka Le-Seyde gained some significant attention when it was featured in the popular British motoring television series The Grand Tour. In the special episode titled "Eurocrash," which premiered on June 16, 2023, Jeremy Clarkson selected the Le-Seyde as his vehicle of choice for a road trip through Central Europe. This episode followed Clarkson and his co-presenters, Richard Hammond and James May, as they embarked on a journey starting in Gdańsk, Poland, and traveling through Slovakia, Hungary, and Slovenia.