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Vauxhall Vivaro, a light commercial vehicle also sold as the Opel Vivaro, may refer to: The Vauxhall Vivaro 1, based on the first generation Nissan Primastar, was produced between 2001 and 2014; The Vauxhall Vivaro 2, based on the second generation Nissan NV 300, was produced between 2014 and 2018; The Vauxhall Vivaro 3, which is based on the ...
Vivaro (2001–present) See also. Vauxhall Motors; References This ... List of Vauxhall vehicles. 1 language ...
Renault released a new generation Trafic in September 2014. It was again rebadged and sold as the Opel Vivaro in Europe and Vauxhall Vivaro in the UK. Styling was updated for the 2019 model year [23] and again for the 2021 model year, [24] then in 2024 with the new Renault logo.
The Vauxhall Astra and Opel Kadett, for example, were both called Astra from 1991 onwards and the Vauxhall Nova (Opel Corsa A) assumed the Corsa name for its next generation in 1993. The change was completed in 1995 when the Vauxhall Cavalier Mk 3 (Opel Vectra A) was replaced by the Opel Vectra B, called Vauxhall Vectra .
Opel Vivaro, a light commercial vehicle, which is also sold in the United Kingdom as the Vauxhall Vivaro, may refer to: The Opel Vivaro A, based on the second-generation Renault Trafic, and was produced between 2001 and 2014; The Opel Vivaro B, based on the third-generation Renault Trafic, and was produced between 2014 and 2019
The HC 5–6 cwt van continued briefly after the war, and the JC 10–12 cwt was fitted with the column gear change; and engine from the Vauxhall L Model Wyvern in late 1948; and became the PC. 1952 saw the launch of the Bedford CA light commercial, [6] signifying the end of the road for the outmoded HC and JC models. [7]
Easytronic is the Opel tradename for a type of transaxle-based automated manual transmission, as used in some Opel/Vauxhall cars. Easytronic is not a tiptronic gearbox design; it does not have a torque converter. It is fundamentally a conventional manual transmission, with a single-plate dry clutch.
Half.com was founded in 1999 by American entrepreneur Josh Kopelman and Sunny Balijepalli. As an advertising gimmick, in December of the same year, the company paid the town of Halfway, Oregon US$100,000 and donated 20 new computers to change its name to "Half.com, Oregon" for a year.