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  2. Mitsubishi Minicab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_Minicab

    A 1966 Mitsubishi Minicab (LT30) The Minicab cabover pickup truck was launched in 1966 to replace the 360 trucklet, which by this time had adopted the same model name as the Minica sedan. Codenamed LT30, it shared the sedan's air cooled, two-stroke, 359-cc ME24 engine, and was available with cargo gates on three sides to simplify loading and ...

  3. CMC Veryca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CMC_Veryca

    CMC Minicab van. The first generation CMC Minicab debuted in 1978, and was a locally manufactured third generation Mitsubishi Minicab. It was the first commercial vehicle product of China Motor Corporation. The Chinese name was pronounced Baili (百利), and was offered in van and pickup bodystyles.

  4. Mitsubishi Town Box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_Town_Box

    In February 2014, Mitsubishi started selling rebadged Suzuki Carry trucks and Every vans as the Mitsubishi Minicab. The passenger-oriented Every Wagon, which has a more designed rear end but shares the Carry Van's chassis code, was also included and received the Town Box badge (DS64W). As the Every only had a year of production left, Mitsubishi ...

  5. List of Mitsubishi Motors vehicles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Mitsubishi_Motors...

    Minicab EV / L100: 2011 2011 2022 (reintroduction) 2023 Japan, Indonesia Battery-electric Mid-engined cab over kei car. Formerly called Minicab MiEV. Marketed in Indonesia as the L100. [3] Minicab Van: 1966 2013 2015 Japan Kei car with sliding rear doors. Rebadged Suzuki Every. Minicab Truck: 1966 2013 — Japan Pickup version Kei car. Rebadged ...

  6. Mitsubishi Vulcan engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_Vulcan_engine

    The Mitsubishi Vulcan engine, identified by the code 2G2, is an iron-block twin cylinder engine with three main bearings, built by Mitsubishi Motors for kei car class vehicles from September 1972. It was an overhead camshaft design, and superseded the older two-stroke 2G1 series.

  7. Mitsubishi Motors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_Motors

    In 1986 Mitsubishi reached an agreement with Liuzhou Automotive to assemble their Minicab kei van and truck there, making Mitsubishi the third Japanese manufacturer (after Daihatsu and Suzuki) to begin assembly in China.