Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Suzuki Equator was a mid-size pickup truck based on the Nissan Frontier and assembled by Nissan. [1] It was first sold in the US for the 2009 model year with MSRPs starting at $17,220, and made its debut at the 2008 Chicago Auto Show. The Equator was offered as either a four-seat Extended Cab or a five-seat Crew Cab.
Nissan Pino – Japan (Suzuki Alto) Nissan Pixo - Europe (Suzuki Alto) Nissan Roox – Japan (Suzuki Palette) Proton. Proton Ertiga – Malaysia (Suzuki Ertiga) Santana Motor. Santana 300/350 - Spain (Suzuki Grand Vitara) Subaru. Subaru Justy – Europe (Suzuki Swift and Suzuki Ignis) Toyota. Toyota Belta – India/Middle East/Africa (Suzuki ...
The automotive industry catered to 303,000 employees in South Africa in 2003, and in 2004 the country exported fully assembled motor vehicles to 53 countries including many developed countries such as Japan, the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia and Germany, with many of the manufacturers based in South Africa now making it their ...
The Nissan Frontier is a nameplate used on two different pickup truck models by Nissan: Nissan Frontier (international) , an alternative nameplate for the NP300/Navara on some markets Nissan Frontier (North America) , a rebadged NP300/Navara from 1997 to 2021, then became a separate model since 2021
Nissan Frontier: Suzuki Equator: United States Nissan Fuga: Infiniti M/Q70: North America also as: Mitsubishi Proudia (2nd gen.) Japan Nissan Maxima: Infiniti I30/I35: North America Nissan Micra: Renault Pulse [41] India Nissan Mistral: Nissan Terrano II: Europe also as: Ford Maverick: Europe Nissan Navara: Mercedes-Benz X-Class: Europe, South ...
From 1971 to 2008, the pick-up model Nissan 1400 was built exclusively in South Africa (initially as Datsun 1200, then as Datsun 120Y or 1400). [20] [21] In total, around 275,000 copies of the Nissan 1400 were sold. [20] Other models made only in South Africa were the Datsun 140Z (mid-1970s) and the Datsun 160Z (1978-1980). [22]
It was on the Ward's 10 Best Engines list from 2002 through to 2007 and again in 2016. It features forged steel connecting rods, a microfinished one-piece forged crankshaft, and Nissan's nylon intake manifold technology. It has low-friction molybdenum-coated pistons and the intake is a high-flow tuned induction system.
The Ertiga is the second made-in-India product in Suzuki South Africa's portfolio, the first one being the older Alto (A-Star). The South African market Ertiga is only available with a 1.4-litre petrol engine paired with either 5-speed manual or 4-speed automatic transmission. [citation needed]