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The Nissan Terrano II (known as the Nissan Mistral (Japanese: 日産・ミストラル, Nissan Misutoraru) in Japan) is a compact SUV manufactured by the Japanese automaker Nissan from 1993 to 2005.
1939–1941 Nissan Type 50; 1941 Nissan Type 30; 1941 Nissan Type 53; 1941–1952 Nissan 180 Truck (based on the 1937–1941 Chevrolet 133/158 trucks) 1941–1949 Nissan 190 Bus; 1949-1951 Nissan 290 Bus; 1952–1953 Nissan 380 Truck 1952-1953 Nissan 390 Bus; 1953–1955 Nissan 480 Truck 1955 Nissan 482 Truck; 1953–1955 Nissan 490 Bus 1955 ...
The Nissan QD engine, successor to the Nissan TD engine, was an inline four-cylinder overhead valve diesel produced from the mid-1990s through 2000, with a turbocharger used on three variants, the QD32ETi(Elgrand and Terrano) QD32T and Qd32Ti(intercooled) in Chinese Markets (Nissan Cabstar) . It was replaced by the Nissan ZD engine.
Terrano may refer to: Nissan Frontier, a pickup truck; Nissan Terrano, a sport utility vehicle; Nissan Terrano, a restyled Dacia Duster sold in India and CIS countries; Nissan Mistral (Terrano II), a sport utility vehicle; Nissan Pathfinder, a sport utility vehicle; Terrano or Teran, a Croatian, Italian and Slovenian dark-skinned wine grape variety
Rolling stock of Sri Lanka (2 C) S. Ships of Sri Lanka (4 C, 1 P) Pages in category "Vehicles of Sri Lanka" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total.
Nissan revealed the second generation, redesigned Teana at the 2008 Beijing Auto Show. The new Teana is based on the Nissan D platform also used by the new North American Nissan Maxima and Nissan Altima. Engine choices include a 3498 cc V6, a 2495 cc V6, a 2488 cc inline-four, and a 1997 cc inline-four, all with a continuously variable ...
The Panda is assembled in Sri Lanka by Micro Cars from complete knock down kits. It is a small city car sold with a choice of 1.0 or 1.3 L (0.22 or 0.29 imp gal; 0.26 or 0.34 US gal) petrol engines.
A year later, in line with consumer needs, a cargo van and a passenger van were added to the line-up. The passenger van, discontinued in 1976, was called the 'Delica Coach' and could seat nine people in three rows of seats. The engine was upgraded to 62 PS (46 kW) in 1969. In March 1971, a slightly facelifted version, called the Delica 75, arrived.