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The Honda Crossroad (ホンダクロスロード, Honda Kurosurōdo) is an automobile nameplate used by two SUVs sold by Honda only in Japan. The first one is a rebadged Land Rover Discovery sold in Japan between 1993 and 1998, [1] while the second version is a more compact crossover vehicle introduced in 2007.
Formerly Honda FCX Clarity in 2007 through 2014 CR-X: 1983 1991 a.k.a. Ballade Sports CR-X or Civic CR-X CR-X del Sol: 1992 1997 CR-Z: 2011 2016 Crossroad: 1993 1998 2007 2010 Crosstour: 2010 2015 Concerto: 1988 1994 Domani: 1992 2004 Element: 2002 2011 EV Plus: 1997 1999 an electric vehicle: e: 2019 2024 an electric vehicle: FR-V/Edix: 2004 ...
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This is a list of vehicles that have been considered to be the result of badge engineering (), cloning, platform sharing, joint ventures between different car manufacturing companies, captive imports, or simply the practice of selling the same or similar cars in different markets (or even side-by-side in the same market) under different marques or model nameplates.
The Crosstour was marketed as a "hatchback"/"wagon" variation of the Accord and shared the same platform.The Crosstour was powered by a 3.5-liter V6 engine (choice of either front-wheel or all-wheel drive) or 2.4-liter 4-cylinder engine (front-wheel drive only), [4] with prices that started at $29,670, above those of the Accord sedan (which started at under $23,000). [5]
For 2007, Honda CR-V became one of the ten best selling vehicles of the year. [4] It overtook Ford Explorer, which had held the title for fifteen years (1991–2006), to be the best selling SUV in the US. [5] In Canada, the CR-V was the second best selling SUV in 2007, behind the Ford Escape. [6]
The Honda HR-V is a subcompact crossover SUV manufactured and marketed by Honda over three generations.. The first generation HR-V, based on the Honda Logo, was marketed from 1999 to 2006 in Europe, Japan and select Asia-Pacific markets, in either three-door (1999–2003) or five-door (1999–2006) configurations — internally designated GH2 and GH4 respectively.
Honda expected to sell 33,000 vehicles in the U.S. for the 2007 model year, but exceeded these expectations, and sold 40,000. Honda plans to put 70,000 Fit units on American roads for the 2008 model year. [95] In the first half of 2008, Honda and other manufacturers were surprised by the rapid shift towards smaller cars in the United States.