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New for 1968 was the option of AMC's 232 cubic inch inline-six engine, rather than International's own BG-series six. [11] The Travelall was considered a version of the light-duty pickup range, rather than a separate model, until major changes to the bodywork took place in 1969 for the 1970 model year.
The Mercedes-Benz Lotec C1000 was a one-off Megacar, jointly designed, developed and built by German automotive manufacturers Lotec and Mercedes-Benz. It was originally conceived in 1994, and constructed in 1995. The 1000 in the name stood for the number of horsepower it produced. [4]
Lotec C1000, a one-off sports car built in 1995 Fitted with a Mercedes-Benz M117 V8. [10] Lotec 928 GT, a one-off sports car built in 1990 based on the Porsche 928. [11] Lotec Colani Testa D’Oro, a one-off sports car built in 1991 based on the Ferrari Testarossa. [12] Lotec TT 1000, a one-off sports car built in 1991. [13]
Dodge C500-C1000 Dodge CT series Dodge NC series Dodge NCT series Dodge PC series Dodge PD series Fargo LCF: Production: 1960–1976: Assembly: Warren, Michigan, United States (Sherwood Assembly) Bogotá, Colombia (Chrysler Colmotores: 1967–1978) Body and chassis; Class: Heavy-duty truck: Body style: 2-door truck: Layout: Front engine, rear ...
EW-10000 to EW-99999 (ex-Soviet Union registrations)EW-100AA to EW-999ZZ (aircraft in general, except those listed below) EW-200PA to EW-299PA (reserved for Boeing 737 aircraft)
The logo of the C1000 Museum. It was reported in 2014 that a 22-year-old man named Gerard Marsman, who was a collector of C1000-related items and paraphernalia, wished to establish a museum dedicated to soon to disappear supermarket formula. [10] Marsman was an employee of a C1000 since 2005, this C1000 was later rebranded as an Albert Heijn.
The Ford C series is a range of trucks that was produced by Ford between 1957 and 1990. The first cab over engine (COE) truck produced with a tilting cab by Ford, the C series replaced the C-series COE variant of the F-Series, produced since 1948.
The M1000 / C1000, later renamed Cyber 1000, was used as a message store and forward system used by the Federal Reserve System. A version of the Cyber 1000 with its hard drive removed was used by Bell Telephone. This was a RISC processor (reduced instruction set computer).