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Nissan Altima, Nissan Quest, Nissan X-Trail, Renault Samsung SM5; Jatco JF506E/F5A5 5-speed medium/large ... Download QR code; Edit interlanguage links; Print/export
The Nissan Quest is a minivan manufactured and marketed by Nissan for model years 1993–2017 over four generations. The first two generations (internally designated V40 and V41) of the Quest were short-wheelbase models co-developed and manufactured with Ford, aside its badge engineered Mercury Villager. For model year 2004 and the third ...
Introduction (model code) Update Hatchback: Leaf: 2010 2017 2021 Global Battery ... 1993–2002, 2004–2009, 2011–2016 Nissan Quest; 1993–2006 Nissan Terrano II;
Nissan does not have a letter designation for the SOHC configuration so the camshaft configuration type is assumed as SOHC if no letter is present. Another example is the MR16DDT engine, which has feature designations that describe an engine with dual overhead camshafts, direct cylinder fuel injection and a single turbocharger.
The VQ is a family of V6 automobile petrol engines developed by Nissan and produced in displacements varying from 2.0 L to 4.0 L. Designed to replace the VG series, the all-aluminium 4-valve per cylinder DOHC design debuted with Nissan's EGI/ECCS sequential multi-point fuel injection (MPFI) system. Changes from the VG engine include switching ...
Mercury Villager (red) and Nissan Quest (blue) At the beginning of 1988, Ford and Nissan entered a joint venture to develop an all-new minivan sold by both automakers. [1] Under the terms of the agreement, the development and engineering of the vehicles was done by Nissan (in the United States); the company also supplied the engine and ...
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Nissan Quest; Nissan R'nessa; Nissan Rogue; Nissan Sentra; Nissan Serena (previous page)
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.