So my question is WHY are there so few late 1st Generation Nissan Frontier truck builds????
Somehow just stumbled about this post, and I realize it's quite an old thread. BUT, if anyone is still curious...
I bought my 2000 Frontier in 2016. Dealer maintained, 160k miles, 5 speed, V6, 4x4, 4-door, short bed, 2 owner (basically 1 owner), for $5000 I think.
I bought the truck partially for a reliable, fun vehicle, and partially as a work truck at the time (the company I worked for at the time only supplied us with 2wd trucks. And I live in Colorado... Yeah, winters were bad and I wanted a 4x4 anways).
I have a few theories - I saw these trucks beat to pieces on job sites all the time. Rarely saw beat up Toyotas though. Why? The msrp on the Frontier vs Tacoma was actually pretty comparable. But by year, Nissan continued to sell only about 1/4 as many Frontiers as Toyota sold Tacomas. So from the beginning, there were a lot less of them being used for 4x4 and adventure, simply because there were so few of them to begin with. Simple supply and demand problem. Small market, small demand. So not many companies made parts because not many people wanted them. (Again, this is my conjecture based on stats).
Since the Tacoma was more popular, it's resale is and was more popular too, making them too expensive to end up in the hands of people who wanted a work truck to beat on (I was one of those people who couldn't afford a Tacoma - but I also take care of my stuff). Frontiers went the other way - unpopular to begin with, even less popular with resale, driving price down, meaning a lot of them have been used and abused to the point that they're nearly extinct because the resale on them makes them more prone to being totaled and disposed of. They don't hold their value.
Anyways, I love my 2000 Frontier. No platform is perfect, so I don't mind some of the so-called "pitfalls" - that's part of building any rig. Different hurdles for different rigs.
That said, I think the truck is actually a great platform for what I do. I have 4.36:1 diff gears from the factory. It's also nearly a 9" ring gear in the rear. I see Tacoma guys wreck diffs all the time. I've put mine through a lot and it's still tight and solid. So it's a super sturdy, well geared rear end, something most Tacoma owners are "upgrading" too, since a lot of them were 3.55:1 or something like that. The average owner takes a hit on mpg owning a Frontier with lower diff gears (as mentioned before), but the owners wanting to use them for 4x4 didn't need to upgrade gears. Paired with a solid frame, and very reliable engines (again, not perfect, but a good strong starting place for 4x4 use). The trucks also had some cool goodies like LSD rear diff (mine still kinda works with 280k miles on it) and factory leaf spring mount skids.
Now adays, they're so uncommonly used off-road, it isn't financial feasible for a lot of companies to make parts for them. No customer base (that's a fact, not conjecture). Add in the fact that the average consumer wants bolt on mods, means most people don't want to have to cut/drill/weld everything from scratch with no instructions and nobody who has done it before. Being in the Nissan world still, everyone I've met who still runs 1st gen Frontier or Xterra has done a ton of custom work. I've know guys running, for example, a 2002 Frontier with completely custom SAS, 38" tires, hydro assist steering; 2000 Xterra with lockers, low range transfer case gears, and a custom, turbo setup built from scratch using some 300ZX parts, including ECU harness split/mesh with the factory Xterra harness, water-meth injection, etc; and a 2001 custom SAS'd Xterra running 35's, custom self-built skids/sliders/bumpers. It is definitely an uphill battle for us to be in the offroad game - I guess we enjoy the challenge (none of this meant to bash on, nor assume Toyota/Jeep/etc owners can't do this stuff - seen a lot of awesome custom XJ/Wrangler/Tacoma/4Runner/LC builds as well - it's just not MANDATORY for those those guys like it is for us).
Anyways, there's a few more thoughts on the matter, FWIW. You can check out my build if you want - I'm keeping it going on here.