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The Iveco Daily is a large light commercial van produced by the Italian automaker Iveco since 1978; it was also sold as the Fiat Daily by Fiat until 1983. Unlike the more car-like unibody Fiat Ducato , the Daily uses a separate ladder frame typical of heavier commercial vehicles.
In the early beginning there was a 2-litre (1,995 cc) four-cylinder 65 PS (48 kW), called the Sofim 8144.65. Alongside the 2.4-litre version it was used in light commercial vehicles like the Saviem SG2, OM Grinta, and the Fiat/Iveco Daily, as well as passenger cars like the Fiat 131 and 132 models.
The brand's range of products include the Daily, a vehicle that covers the 3.3 – 7.2 ton vehicle weight segment, the Eurocargo from 6 – 19 tons and, in the heavy segment above 16 tons, the Iveco Way range with the on-road Iveco S-Way, the off-road Iveco T-Way and the Iveco X-Way for light off-road missions.
Iveco Daily (Fiat 35/40 NC) The OM X-series is a light to medium-duty truck model produced by the Italian manufacturer OM in 1972. While being superficially similar to the OM Lupetto, Leoncino, Daino, and Tigrotto, it was an all-new design - except for using the same doors as the earlier "zoological" series (thus called as they were all named ...
Iveco Campagnola Alpina; a sole example built for the Italian Army's Alpine Training Center sports department. The Iveco Massif is a utility 4×4 vehicle mainly aimed at the utility services and military markets and was part of Iveco’s 4×4 and off-road range, which also includes the Trakker lorry and Daily 4×4 van.
The Iveco 3.0 L 16-valve I4 diesel JTD engine, branded as EcoDiesel by Chrysler, mated with the M40 six-speed automated manual transmission was offered in model years 2014 through 2016; however, the gasoline V6 is currently the sole engine available in the ProMaster.
An Iveco with a Club of Four cab Officially called the Société Européenne de Travaux et de Développement (ETD), the team was based in Paris. Founded to develop a shared range of light trucks, its main success was a shared cab design. [ 1 ]
The ten-cylinder 10DC engines share the dimensions of the 8DC series and were first seen in 1974, in the heavy-duty F-series trucks. 10DC6 – 18,608 cc, 375 PS (276 kW) at 2500 rpm. 10DC8 – 18,608 cc, 375–380 PS (276–279 kW), direct injection, torque is 130 kg⋅m (1,275 N⋅m; 940 lb⋅ft) for the 375PS version, Mitsubishi Fuso F-series .