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The Ford D series is a range of middle-weight trucks that were introduced by Ford UK in 1965. [1] It replaced the Thames Trader and appears to have been envisaged as a more modern competitor to the Bedford TK produced by General Motors ' UK truck subsidiary.
An automotive facelift, also known as mid-generational refresh, minor model change, minor model update, or life cycle impulse, comprises changes to a vehicle's styling during its production run including, to highly variable degree, new sheetmetal, interior design elements or mechanical changes, [1] allowing a carmaker to freshen a model without a complete redesign.
Dodge D series, pickup trucks; Ford D series, trucks; Group D Production Sports Cars, CAMS class of race car; Honda D engine; International D-Series, of pickup trucks; MCI D-Series, motorcoaches built by Motor Coach Industries; SJ D, locomotives used by Statens Järnvägar of Sweden; Volkswagen Group D platform, Audi, Bentley, and Volkswagen ...
The 5.0-liter Coyote engine of the pre-facelift Mustang GT (left) and the facelift model (right) The 4,951 cc (5.0 L; 302.1 cu in) Coyote V8 engine was designed for the GT model. [ 99 ] [ 100 ] The Mustang engineers set the 444-horsepower (331 kW) V8 from the low-volume Boss 302 Mustang as the performance benchmark.
The Series D engine is a liquid-cooled, 288-cubic-inch (4.7 L) 90° V8, designed and built by Chevrolet in 1917 and subsequently by General Motors Company's new Chevrolet Division after the 1918 merger of the two firms. The engine is capable of producing 36 hp (27 kW; 36 PS) at 2700 rpm. [5]
The fifth generation began with 2005 model year, and received a facelift for the 2010 model year. Originally designed by Sid Ramnarace through late 2001 and finalized in mid-2002, the fifth-generation Mustang's design was previewed by two pre-production concept cars that debuted at the 2003 North American International Auto Show .
Several changes in the industry in the late 1980s and early 1990s led to the development of the D-Series coach. First, was the growing calls to allow 45-foot (14 m) coaches (at the time prohibited by US law), second was that MCI's existing models were designed to use two-stroke engines and the company was looking to offer the new Detroit Diesel Series 60 four-stroke engines, and third was 1988 ...
The GD chassis, along with the WRX and STI, underwent two styling changes in its life cycle. The original styling applied to A and B. Initially this design proved to be rather unpopular which prompted a more conventional design for the applied C, D and E models. [citation needed] The second facelift applied to the F and G versions.