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Uro (Both Galician and Spanish for "aurochs") is a Spanish brand of all-wheel-drive and military trucks, based in Santiago de Compostela, Galicia. The Uro parent company, Urovesa, was started in 1981 by a group of ex-IPV employees. They quickly established themselves as a leading player in the 4x4 rural fire-fighting and construction Spanish ...
The company was founded in 1954 as "Barreiros Diesel S.A." by Eduardo Barreiros and based in Madrid.Established initially as a producer of diesel engines, at Ourense the company then expanded to make commercial vehicles, reaching licensing agreements with French Berliet (truck cabs), British AEC (buses and coaches), German Hanomag (agricultural tractors), and Vidal & Sohn Tempo-Werke GmbH ...
The final use was in the 2014 Legacy and Outback with the EZ36 engine. Usage: 2005-2014 Subaru Legacy GT, 3.0R, and 3.6R; Subaru Outback XT, 3.0R, and 3.6R; Subaru Tribeca; Subaru Forester s-edition; The Tribeca with ez-36 (3.6R) and early Outback XT used the 3.583 final drive ratio.
In spite of marketing efforts which included the SSR being used as the pace car for the 2003 Indianapolis 500, [6] it sold below expectations with under 9,000 sales at US$42,000 each. Citing a 301-day supply of SSRs, General Motors in December of that year announced five weeks of layoffs at Lansing Craft Center , the factory that made the SSR.
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Subaru Outback (5th generation) Subaru Tribeca Subaru Exiga Subaru Levorg: Powertrain; Engine: 2.5 L SOHC i-AVLS 170 hp (130 kW) H4 EJ25 (South Africa, Outback) 2.5 L DOHC DAVCS 170 hp (130 kW) H4 FB25 3.6 L DOHC DAVCS 256 hp (191 kW) H6 EZ36 2.0 L DOHC turbodiesel 148 hp (110 kW) H4 EE20: Transmission: 7-speed or 8-speed Lineartronic CVT 6 ...
The Hispano-Suiza T49 was also designed and made by the Spanish arm of the company between 1924 and 1944; it was the Spanish production version of the H6B model with a 6-cylinder engine of 8,000 cm3, 160 hp and a maximum speed of 177 km / h. [4] In 1925, Carlos Ballester obtained permission to represent Hispano-Suiza in Argentina.
Mitsubishi marketed the SUV as the Montero in North America, Spain, and Latin America (except for Brazil and Jamaica) due to the term "pajero" being derogatory (meaning "wanker") in Spanish. In the United Kingdom, it was known as the Shogun, named after the Japanese word for "General." The model was discontinued in North America in 2006.