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The Mitsubishi i-MiEV (MiEV is an acronym for Mitsubishi innovative Electric Vehicle [4]) is a five-door electric city car produced in the 2010s by Mitsubishi Motors, and is the electric version of the Mitsubishi i. Rebadged variants of the i-MiEV are also sold by PSA as the Peugeot iOn and Citroën C-Zero, mainly in Europe.
The Mitsuoka Like (雷駆) is a five-door hatchback electric car produced by the Japanese automaker Mitsuoka Motors between 2010 and 2012. [citation needed] It is based on the Mitsubishi i MiEV.
The vehicle rides on wider Dunlop 330/680-18 tyres, and dimensions are Length x Width x Height 5,190mm×2,000mm×1,485mm, an increase over previous years. Without providing detailed data on the overall vehicle weight, Mitsubishi has confirmed [11] that the MiEV Evolution III is lighter than the previous generations, i.e. under 1400 kg. [12]
Subsequent electrically powered vehicles have included a 200 kW Lancer Evolution, [5] and a battery-equipped Mitsubishi i kei car (i-MIEV). [1] [6] The i-MiEV was launched for fleet customers in Japan in July 2009, [7] and on April 1, 2010 sales to the public began in the Japanese market at a price of 4 million yen (~USD43,000). [8]
Mitsubishi i-MiEV recharging from an on-street charging station in Japan. Mitsubishi has given the i a prominent role in the company's alternative propulsion research projects, developing a version using their MiEV (Mitsubishi innovative Electric Vehicle) technology in 2006 and exhibited at the 22nd International Battery, Hybrid and Fuel Cell ...
A battery electric model of the Minicab, called the Minicab MiEV, is sold in the Japanese market since December 2011. [2] Since February 2014, the Mitsubishi Minicab is a rebadged Suzuki Carry, except for the Minicab MiEV.
Battery-electric variant of eK X kei car. Jointly developed with Nissan through NMKV. Town Box: 1999 2014 — Japan Tall height kei car with rear sliding doors. Rebadged Suzuki Every Wagon. Pickup trucks: L200/Triton: 1978 (L200 nameplate) 2005 (Triton nameplate) 2023 — Global (except North America) Mid-size pickup truck.
Leclanché is a Swiss battery manufacturer founded in 1909. In 2006, it acquired Bullith AG (Germany) to establish a Li-Ion manufacturing line in Germany. In 2014, their product "TiBox" entered the market. The energy content of the TiBox is 3.2 kWh, with an expected 15,000 cycle life span. [26]