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Vauxhall Vivaro, a light commercial vehicle also sold as the Opel Vivaro, may refer to: The Vauxhall Vivaro 1, based on the first generation Nissan Primastar, was produced between 2001 and 2014; The Vauxhall Vivaro 2, based on the second generation Nissan NV 300, was produced between 2014 and 2018; The Vauxhall Vivaro 3, which is based on the ...
From 2016, Vauxhall Vivaro models gained a Made In Britain badge at the rear. [26] The Opel/Vauxhall Vivaro went out of production in 2019, when Opel/Vauxhall was acquired by Groupe PSA; it was replaced by a new generation Vivaro which was a rebadged Citroën Jumpy for the model year of 2019.
A motor vehicle service or tune-up is a series of maintenance procedures carried out at a set time interval or after the vehicle has traveled a certain distance. The service intervals are specified by the vehicle manufacturer in a service schedule and some modern cars display the due date for the next service electronically on the instrument panel.
Vauxhall-branded vehicles are also manufactured in Opel factories in Germany, Spain, and Poland. The current car range includes the Astra (small family car), Corsa , Crossland (subcompact crossover SUV), Mokka (subcompact SUV), and Grandland (compact SUV). Vauxhall sells high-performance versions of some of its models under the GSe sub-brand.
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Opel Vivaro, a light commercial vehicle, which is also sold in the United Kingdom as the Vauxhall Vivaro, may refer to: The Opel Vivaro A, based on the second-generation Renault Trafic, and was produced between 2001 and 2014; The Opel Vivaro B, based on the third-generation Renault Trafic, and was produced between 2014 and 2019
GMM Luton produced the Opel/Vauxhall Vivaro A, Renault Trafic II and Nissan Primastar from 2001 to 2014. The Hi-top roof versions were built in Barcelona, Spain by Renault at the former Nissan Plant because the Luton IBC building was not high enough to accommodate the Hi-top vehicles. [4]
Opel and Vauxhall had loosely collaborated before, but serious efforts to merge the two companies' operations and product families into one did not start until the 1970s – which had Vauxhall's complete product line replaced by vehicles built on Opel-based platforms – the only exception to the rule being the Bedford CF panel van. This only ...