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Mini truck, also called a micro-truck or mini-lorry, are tiny but practical light trucks, available in RWD or 4WD version, originally built to satisfy the Japanese keijidōsha (軽自動車) statutory class of light vehicles. Generally they fall under sub 1000cc engine category.
The Keyton M70 is a microvan and micro truck made by the Keyton (Qiteng) brand of Fujian Motors Group from 2014. Keyton or Qiteng is a brand under FQT Motor, making various compact MPVs, microvans, and delivery vans. [1]
The kei truck class specifies a maximum size and displacement, which has steadily increased since legislation first enabled the type in 1949. They evolved from earlier three-wheeled trucks based on motorcycles with a small load-carrying area, called san-rin (三輪), which were popular in Japan before World War II.
Tiger Star van in hotdog delivery setup. Three wheel electric Tiger Truck with logo. The Tiger Truck is a light utility truck sub-brand from Chinese manufacturer Chang'an.It belongs to a class of vehicles known as “mini-trucks,” “micro trucks,” “K trucks,” and "kei trucks”.
A truck version of the Minicab MiEV was launched in January 2013, [23] and sales totaled 536 units through October 2013. [22] In 2019, Japan Post ordered a total of 1,200 units, to be put into service by the end of March 2021. [24] While the Mitsubishi MiEV was discontinued, the Minicab MiEV remained in production as of 2021. [25]
The rear-view of a second generation truck. The redesigned Sambar debuted in January 1966 with revised styling and a truck variant. The second generation is nicknamed the "baban" Sambar. The Sambar continued to use the 356 cc EK31 engine, but now in the 20 PS (14.7 kW; 19.7 hp) iteration used in the Subaru 360 since July 1964. [3]
The Karry X6 is the gasoline powered micro truck variant of the Porpoise EV. The Karry X6 was launched in February 2022, and available as a crew cab and single cab body style. The powertrain of the Karry X6 is a 1.6 liter engine mated to a 5-speed manual transmission developing 22hp and 158N·m of torque. [9] [10]
The Toyota Pixis (Japanese: トヨタ・ピクシス, Hepburn: Toyota Pikushisu) is a series of kei cars, kei truck and microvan manufactured by Daihatsu and sold under the Toyota marque, both owned by Toyota Motor Corporation. The name "Pixis" is derived from words "pixie" or "pixy". [1] All the vehicles are rebadged variants of Daihatsu cars:
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