Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In 1978, the 2-tonne Hino Ranger 2 was launched, a rebadged Toyota Dyna (also sold as the Daihatsu Delta) with Daihatsu or Toyota engines. This then spawned a 3-tonne version, called the Ranger 3. By late 1979, the Ranger KM received a name change as well becoming the Hino Ranger 3M. The Ranger also met the latest (1979) emissions regulations.
The truck adopted components from the civilian Hino Ranger series: A ladder-type frame, a four-wheel rigid leaf suspension, a combination of chassis configurations and the part-time four-wheel drive. It has the following capabilities for off-road use: Gradient 60%; Side slope 30%; Vertical step 0.5 m; Trench 0.5 m; Fording 0.8 m
Hino Motors, Ltd., commonly known as Hino, is a Japanese manufacturer of commercial vehicles and diesel engines (including those for trucks, buses and other vehicles) headquartered in Hino, Tokyo. The company was established in 1942 as a corporate spin-off from previous manufacturers.
Hinopak was formed in 1985 by Hino Motors, Toyota Tsusho, Al-Futtaim Group and Pakistan Automobile Corporation. [4] In 1988, it was listed on the Karachi Stock Exchange. [5] In 1998, Hino Motors, and Toyota Tsusho Corporation obtained majority shareholding in the company after disinvestments by the other two founding investors. [6]
Hino Motors, a Japanese truck manufacturer owned by Toyota . Hino Pakistan; Hino Station (disambiguation), railway stations in Japan: Hino Station (Nagano), a railway station Susuka, Nagano, operated by Nagano Electric Railway
A beloved National Park Service ranger died when he tripped, fell and struck his head on a rock during an annual astronomy festival in southwestern Utah, park officials said over the weekend.
In May 1950 the heavy-duty Hino TH10 truck was introduced, equipped with the all-new 7-liter DS10 diesel engine. An eight-tonner, this was considerably larger than existing Japanese trucks which had rarely been built for more than 6 tonnes (13,200 lb) payload. [ 1 ]
The Hino Briska (Japanese: 日野・ブリスカ) was a small pickup truck built by Hino Motors, adapted from the Renault-based Hino Contessa sedan. It was introduced in 1961 and remained in production until 1968, when Toyota released the Toyota Hilux .