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The 2023 V8 SuperUte Series was an Australian motor racing competition for V8 SuperUtes. It was the fifth running of the SuperUtes Series . The series was won by Aaron Borg [ 1 ] driving an Isuzu D-Max .
The V8 Ute Racing Series, which ran from 2001 to 2017, used utility vehicles based on the Ford Falcon Ute and Holden Ute models. However, with production of the two models finishing in 2016 and 2017 respectively, utility vehicles were no longer being mass produced in Australia, which led to investigations into a new platform for the Utes series ...
However, the Ford Australia engine and vehicle plants closed in October 2016 and the Holden and Toyota Australia factories closed in late 2017. [3] [4] [5] Only Ford's design and development facilities remain in operation, leaving Australia as one of 13 countries with the capabilities to design and develop mass market cars from scratch.
The Australian delivered models also come with a 5-year, 130,000-kilometre (81,000 mi) warranty including roadside assistance. [22] [23] In March 2022 it was announced an electric model, known as the LDV eT60, would be released in Australia by the end of the year. [24] In November 2022, the LDV eT60 and LDV eDeliver 9 were launched in Australia ...
Ford Motor Company of Australia Limited (known by its trading name Ford Australia) is the Australian subsidiary of United States–based automaker Ford Motor Company. It was founded in 1925 as an Australian outpost of Ford Motor Company of Canada. At that time, Ford Canada was a separate company from Ford in the US.
Sales during the first quarter of 2014 totaled 42 units, representing a 0.015% market share of new car sales, [65] and during the first half of 2014 sales reached 114 units. [ 66 ] Deliveries of the Tesla Model S in Australia began in late 2014. [ 67 ]
In October 2020, GWM Australia announced that a version of the Pao badged as the GWM Ute would be launched in the country as a replacement for the Great Wall Steed. [8] [9] [10] The pick-up/ute will be their first vehicle sold under the re-branded GWM name and will be sold in three dual-cab versions: the Cannon, Cannon-L and top-of-the-range Cannon-X.
in February 2014, Toyota Australia announced its decision to close its manufacturing plant by the end of 2017 and become a national sales and distribution company. Toyota vehicles built in Australia: Toyota Tiara: 1963–1965; Toyota Crown: 1966–1980; Toyota Corona: 1965–1987; Toyota Camry: 1987–2017; Toyota Corolla: 1968–1999