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Société des Automobiles Alpine SAS, [4] commonly known as Alpine (/ ˈ æ l p ɪ n /, French:), is a French manufacturer of sports cars and racing cars established in 1955. The Alpine car marque was created in 1954.
This is a list of notable current automobile manufacturers including buses & trucks manufacturers but excluding agricultural, construction, military & motorcycle vehicles with articles on Wikipedia by region.
The Alpine A110 is a rear mid-engine, rear-wheel-drive sports car introduced by French car manufacturer Alpine (French pronunciation:) at the 87th Geneva International Motor Show in March 2017. [ 1 ] Deliveries began in late 2017 for Continental European markets and in 2018 for the UK, Japan and Australia.
The Alpine A110 is a sports car produced by French automobile manufacturer Alpine from 1963 to 1977. The car was styled as a "berlinette", which in the post-WWII era refers to a small enclosed two-door berline, better-known as a coupé. [3] The Alpine A110 succeeded the earlier A108. The car was powered by a succession of Renault engines.
Alpine Electronics, Inc. (アルパイン株式会社, Arupain Kabushiki-gaisha) is a Japanese consumer electronics subsidiary [1] of the Japanese electronics component manufacturer Alps Electric, specialising in car audio and navigation systems.
Bugatti Tourbillon Delage D12 Alpine A110 Peugeot 308 Renault 5 E-Tech DS 4. ... Genty Automotive (2004-present), ... Defunct microcar manufacturers. Acma (1957-1961)
This list of car audio manufacturers and brands comprises brand labels and manufacturers of both original equipment manufacturer (OEM) and after-market products generally related to in-car entertainment that already have articles within Wikipedia. While components sold by these companies have much in common with other audio applications or may ...
The Renault Alpine GTA and the succeeding A610 is a sports coupé automobile produced by the Renault-owned French manufacturer Alpine between late 1984 and 1995. The GTA name was an internal code name (although it was used as a model name in the British market); in Europe it was sold as the Alpine V6 GT or V6 Turbo.