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Chinese regional products that slots between the Fit/Life and Civic/Integra, manufactured by GAC Honda and Dongfeng Honda respectively. MPV/minivan/station wagon: Freed: 2008 2024 – Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong and Macau Two or three-row Mini MPV with sliding doors for the Japanese market. Hybrid available. Mobilio: 2001 (as a JDM MPV) 2014 ...
1998 Honda Integra Type R for the European market 1995-1997 JDM Honda Integra Type R. In 1995, Honda introduced their first Integra Type R to the Japanese Domestic Market (JDM). [1] The Integra Type R is equipped with a 1.8-liter DOHC VTEC in-line 4-cylinder (B18C) engine.
The Honda CR-X (styled in some markets as Honda CRX), originally launched as the Honda Ballade Sports CR-X in Japan, is a front-wheel-drive sport compact car manufactured by Honda from 1983 until 1991 with nearly 400,000 produced during this period. [1] The first-generation CRX was marketed in some regions outside Japan as the Honda Civic CRX ...
Concept cars and submodels are not listed unless they are themselves notable. 1907 ... Honda S500 (1963–1964) Honda T360 (1963–1967) Isuzu Bellett (1963–1973)
The Honda Civic Type R (Japanese: ホンダ・シビックタイプR, Hepburn: Honda Shibikku Taipuāru) is a series of hot hatchback and sports sedan models based on the Civic, developed and produced by Honda since September 1997. The first Civic Type R was the third model to receive Honda's Type R badge (after the NSX and Integra).
The Honda Z (marketed also as the Z600) is a two-door hatchback kei car/city car manufactured and marketed by the Honda Motor Company, from 1970 until 1974. Exports mostly ended after 1972, when the domestic market models received redesigned pillarless bodywork.
It was made from 1996 to 2001, and used the 1493 cc D15B engine. Honda's press material of the time indicated that the SJ was intended to provide a "formal sedan" for the Integra range; another reason may have been to sell Ferios using a more sporting model name at Honda Verno dealerships in Japan, as was the case with the Nissan Laurel Spirit.
Fender mirror of Toyota Celsior (UCF20 JDM) The term "Japanese domestic market" ("JDM") refers to Japan's home market for vehicles and vehicle parts. [1] Japanese owners contend with a strict motor vehicle inspection and grey markets. JDM is also incorrectly used as a term colloquially to refer to cars produced in Japan but sold in other countries.