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A five-door wagon released in 1983 which was based on the Honda Civic (third generation) hatchback automobile. The vehicle is known as the Wagon and Wagovan in the US, and the Shuttle in the rest of the world. Honda Fit Shuttle – A five-door wagon released in 2011 which was based on the Fit/Jazz hatchback automobile.
The third-generation Honda Civic is an automobile which was produced by Honda from 1983 until 1987. It was introduced in September 1983 for the 1984 model year. The Civic's wheelbase was increased by 2–5 inches (5.1–12.7 cm) to 93.7 inches (238 cm) for the hatchback or 96.5 inches (245 cm) for the sedan.
Best-selling car in any category in Japan. N-One: 2012 2020 – Japan Retro-styled low-roof hatchback kei car with hinged rear doors. N-Van: 2018 2018 - Japan Kei commercial microvan with rear sliding doors with the emphasis on rear cargo space. N-WGN: 2013 2019 2022 Japan Semi-tall height wagon kei car with hinged rear doors. Pickup truck ...
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It was marketed at a Japanese dealership sales channel called Honda Verno along with the Honda Ballade, a high-luxury model based on the Civic sedan. Also introduced was a new highly fuel efficient I4 model, the five-speed "FE" (Fuel Economy) which was rated at 41 mpg ‑US (5.7 L/100 km; 49 mpg ‑imp ) in the city and 55 mpg ‑US (4.3 L/100 ...
The Honda CR-X (styled in some markets as Honda CRX), originally launched as the Honda Ballade Sports CR-X in Japan, is a front-wheel-drive sport compact car manufactured by Honda from 1983 until 1991 with nearly 400,000 produced during this period. [1] The first-generation CRX was marketed in some regions outside Japan as the Honda Civic CRX ...
Cars introduced in 1983 (55 P) L. Railway locomotives introduced in 1983 (17 P) M. Motorcycles introduced in 1983 (22 P) S. 1983 ships (130 P) Pages in category ...
Impressed, Honda took Hirotoshi's idea and made a production version, introduced in September 1982. A few months earlier, Honda staffers took two City Turbos on a gruelling 10,000-kilometre (6,200 mi) round trip of Europe, all the way from Sicily to Karasjok in the Arctic north. In November 1983, the intercooled Turbo II joined the lineup ...