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The Nissan Sylphy (Japanese: 日産・シルフィ, Hepburn: Nissan Shirufi) is a compact car produced by the Japanese car maker Nissan since 2000 as the successor to the Nissan Pulsar. The Sylphy has also been marketed in export markets under several other nameplates, including Pulsar , Almera , Sunny and Sentra .
The Nissan Bluebird nameplate began appearing around 1982 as the Datsun marque was phased out in favour of Nissan. From 1981 to 1985, Australia followed the Japanese convention by calling its car the Bluebird, and had a unique, facelifted rear-wheel-drive version for 1984 and 1985. That car was replaced in 1986 by the Nissan Pintara. It would ...
Station wagon commercial vehicle. Marketed as the Nissan NV150 AD between 2016 and 2021. Caravan/ Urvan: 1973 2012 2021 ... 1979–1986 Nissan Bluebird (910)
Sentra 180/200/M1 based on the Bluebird Sylphy N16 – Yulon claimed that it designed this modification of the Almera/Pulsar, and that Nissan in Japan decided to take it up. Serena Q-RV longer wheelbase and body updated by Yulon; Teana J31; Tiida C11; X-Trail T30; Cabstar F24; Teana J32; Tiida C11
Towards the end of the '80s, some car manufacturers including Mitsubishi, Nissan, and Toyota, resumed business operations in the Philippines. With the recovery of the country's economy from the 1980s until the mid-1990s, the automotive industry in the Philippines recovered with local vehicle manufacturers hitting 138,000 units in 1996.
In Sri Lanka, Nissan sold the Bluebird Sylphy G10 as the Nissan Sunny N16 in two trims: EX saloon and Super Saloon. [53] While there were differences in measurements and exteriors, the interiors were mostly the same. Nissan offered various models with different nameplates like Bluebird, Sylphy, and Cefiro, each having modified specifications.
You're theoretically getting a "carbon-neutral" car with much more range than a pure EV -- Nissan is aiming for 497 miles on a tank where even the best Tesla Model S runs out of power at 294 miles.
The design originated with Prince Motor Company, which merged with Nissan in 1966. [4] The Bluebird series had been Datsun's smaller offering, but the 1966 introduction of the 1-litre Sunny allowed Nissan to move the Bluebird up into the mid-size category. [5] The 510-series Bluebird was released in the domestic Japanese market on August 15 ...