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The Subaru 1000 is a car produced by the Japanese company Fuji Heavy Industries from 1966 to 1969, and until 1972 as the FF-1 (also sold as the Subaru Star).It was the first front-engine, front-wheel drive Subaru, and also the first Subaru in the Japanese government "compact car" classification.
Three-row mid-size crossover SUV, Subaru's largest SUV and the successor of the Tribeca. Crosstrek: 2012 ... 1000 (1966–1969) 1500 (1954) Alcyone/SVX (1991–1996)
February 1961 – The first generation Subaru Sambar was launched. Subaru Sambar. October 21, 1965 – Subaru 1000 was shown to the press at the Tokyo Hilton Hotel (where The Beatles stayed in June and July 1966) May 14, 1966 – Subaru 1000 was launched. Subaru 1000 (A522) October 1966 – Promoted to the engineering director, Fuji Heavy ...
The Subaru Leone is a compact car produced by the Japanese car manufacturer Subaru from 1971 to 1994. [1] The word leone is Italian for lion. [2] It was released as a replacement for the Subaru 1000 and was the predecessor of the Subaru Impreza. All Leones were powered by the Subaru EA boxer engine. Most cars were equipped with optional four ...
The Subaru EA-71 engine was produced in two different designs; from 1976 to 1994, originally the first design was a redesign of the EA-63 block, known as the "Narrow Case EA71" then Subaru completely redesigned it to make the newer version known as "Fat Case EA71" which also led to a stroked version known as the EA81. The availability in USA ...
Subaru's first all-electric car, named Solterra, is the first vehicle to be based on the e-Subaru Global Platform (e-SGP) co-developed by Toyota and Subaru. The Solterra debuted at the Los Angeles Auto Show on 17 November 2021, and worldwide sales of the Solterra commenced in mid-2022.
1966–1971 Subaru 1000—one of the first Japanese built sedans using a boxer engine, front wheel drive and introducing the "double offset joint" driveshaft to the front wheels; 1967 NSU Ro 80—the basic wedge profile of this design was emulated in subsequent decades, [68] unlike its Wankel engine; late 1960s–early 1980s Gurgel BR-800
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