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The Toyota Granvia (Japanese: トヨタ・グランビア, Hepburn: Toyota Guranbia) is an automobile nameplate used by the Japanese automaker Toyota since 1995 for several minivan models: XH10 series Toyota Granvia , a H100 series Toyota HiAce-based semi-bonneted van sold in Japan between 1995 and 2002
Toyota Granvia / Toyota Hiace SBV (1995–2012) KCH platform (1KZ engine) 1995–present Toyota Granvia; KLH platform (2KD engine) 1995–present Toyota Granvia (Hiace SBV) LXH platform (2L engine) 1995–present Toyota Granvia (Hiace SBV) RCH platform (2RZ engine) 1995–present Toyota Granvia (Hiace SBV) VCH platform (5VZ engine)
Jinbei Granse LWB. Due to Toyota's agreement with Jinbei, from 2002, the Granvia in China was produced and sold as the Jinbei Granse or Grace in English. [1] Throughout its production run, the Jinbei Grace has had 5 available engines: the 2.0 litre V19 and 2.2-litre V22 from Jinbei, the 2.4 litre 2TZ-FZE, the 2.5 litre DK4A engine and the 2.7 litre 2TR-FE engine. 5 speed manual and 4 speed ...
The 1981 and 1982 California-spec 4K-C produced 43 kW; 59 PS (58 hp) at 5200 rpm and 90 N⋅m; 67 lbf⋅ft (9.2 kg⋅m) at 3600 rpm. Torque was up to 100 N⋅m; 74 lbf⋅ft (10.2 kg⋅m) at 3400 rpm for the fuel injected 1982 through 1984 4K-E .
The eleven character YouTube video identifier (64 possible characters used in each position), allows for a theoretical maximum of 64 11 or around 73.8 quintillion (73.8 billion billion) unique ids. YouTube announced that it would remove video responses for being an underused feature on August 27, 2013. [ 96 ]
Kuozui Motors (Chinese: 國瑞汽車; pinyin: Guóruì Qìchē) is a Taiwanese manufacturing company that builds Toyotas under license for the domestic market. It began as a co-ownership of Hino Motors and Hotai Motor.
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In November 2013, YouTube began to use the VP9 video compression standard, saying that it was more suitable for 4K than High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC). Google, which owns YouTube, developed VP9. [78] Theaters began projecting movies at 4K resolution in 2011. [80] Sony was offering 4K projectors as early as 2004. [81]