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1971-1991 Mazda Savanna sports car; 1972–1997 Parkway minibus; 1973–1997 929 full-size car; 1978–2002 RX-7 sports car; 1978–2003 626, export version of the Mazda Capella; 1988–1992 Persona mid-size car; 1988–2002 121 compact car; 1988–1997 MX-6 coupé; 1988–2016 MPV/Mazda8 minivan; 1990–1998 Sentia luxury car; 1990–1998 MX-3 ...
A passenger car version called the Scrum Wagon was added for 2000, while the commercial truck and van were updated. The Mazda Scrum uses a 660-cc, three-cylinder engine in a variety of specifications including turbocharged, and is available with either four-wheel drive(4WD) or two-wheel drive (2WD). The 4WD version can also be switched between ...
In the UK, the Minivan was a small van manufactured by Austin based on the newly introduced Mini car. In the US, the term was used to differentiate the smaller passenger vehicles from full-size vans (such as the Ford E-Series, Dodge Ram Van, and Chevrolet Van), which were then called 'vans'. [9]
This page lists vans currently in production (as of 2013) as well as past models. Unlike a pickup truck, The list includes minivans, passenger vans and cargo vans.. Note: Many of the vehicles (both current and past) are related to other vehicles in the list.
Local filmmaker Michael Alderman was Donner’s guest on set while The Goonies was being filmed on location in Astoria, and describes the alternate ending in his 2010 book, Three Weeks With The ...
The Mazda MPV (Multi-Purpose Passenger Vehicle) is a minivan manufactured by Mazda. Introduced in 1988 as a rear-wheel-drive model with optional selectable four-wheel drive, this was replaced in 1999 with a front-wheel-drive version with optional all-wheel-drive in some markets. Over one million MPV models have been produced since its introduction.
A microvan is a van or minivan which is within the Japanese kei car classification or similar, and is smaller than a mini MPV. In China, these vehicles are nicknamed miàn bāo chē ("bread-loaf vehicle") because of their shape. [1] Similarly, in several Hispanic American countries, these vehicles are called pan de molde, which means "bread loaf".
The original version has round headlights, and no grille; after a January 1981 facelift the second generation Bongo/E-series had rectangular headlights, and a more traditional grille. [8] The first generation of the Bongo was the best-selling Mazda vehicle from its introduction until 1981, when it was surpassed by the front-wheel drive Mazda ...