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Assembles Camry, RAV4 and Lexus ES, and produces engines 7,800 Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada: Cambridge, Ontario and Woodstock, Ontario, Canada 1986 Assembles RAV4, Lexus RX and Lexus NX 9,700 Toyota Motor Manufacturing Missouri: Troy, Missouri: 1990 Produces aluminum cylinder heads 900 Toyota Motor Manufacturing Indiana: Princeton, Indiana ...
Most vehicles sold today are designed and manufactured by Toyota, while some vehicles are produced by other companies and supplied to Toyota through an OEM supply basis. Many models are limited to some regions, while some others are marketed worldwide. This list does not include vehicles from Lexus, Scion, Daihatsu or Hino brands.
This is a list of current and defunct automobile manufacturers of Japan. Major current manufacturers. Company Sub Brand Notes Honda (1946–present) Acura:
Japan 38. Autoliv: 7266 Sweden: 39. Clarios 6962 United States 40. Joyson Electronics 6338 China 41. Benteler: 6228 Austria: 42. Sumitomo Rubber Industries: 6098 Japan 43. Toyoda Gosei: 6013 Japan 44. Hella KG Hueck: 5904 Germany 45. Koito Manufacturing: 5823 Japan 46. AVIC Auto 5667 China 47. Eberspächer: 5509 Germany 48. Hanon Systems: 5460 ...
The RAV4 EV's battery system is a consumable item. Toyota reports that battery pack replacement costs are currently higher than the value of the used vehicle. [16] Toyota tested the RAV4 EV in Japan for 300,000 miles (480,000 km) over two years before introducing the vehicle in the United States.
This list displays all 45 Japanese companies that are in the Fortune Global 500, which ranks the world's largest companies by annual revenue. The figures below are given in millions of US dollars and are for the fiscal year 2021. [1] Also listed are the headquarters location, net profit, number of employees worldwide and industry sector of each ...
The first-generation RAV4, known as the XA10 series, was constructed on a unique platform that shared Carina and Corolla elements. [11] It launched in Japan in May 1994. Design and development commenced in 1989 under code-name 153T, with design approval and start of production development in the second half of 1991 on the 3-door version and in 1993 for the 5-door v
A second generation of the RAV4 EV was developed in 2010 as part of a deal with Tesla. The production version was unveiled in August 2012, using battery pack, electronics and powertrain components from Tesla. [168] [169] The RAV4 EV had a limited production run with just under 3,000 vehicles being produced, before it was discontinued in 2014.