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  2. Think City - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Think_City

    It is a small two-seater/2+2-seater highway capable vehicle, with a top speed of 110 kilometres per hour (68 mph), and an all-electric range of 160 kilometres (99 mi) on a full charge. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] As of early 2011, the Th!nk was one of only five crash-tested , mass-produced, and highway-certified electric cars in the world, together with the ...

  3. Daimler Conquest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daimler_Conquest

    Then a new drophead 4-seater and a drophead coupé version of the 2-seater Roadster were introduced at the 1955 Motor Show. This Mark II Conquest Roadster drophead coupé had a sideways-facing single rear seat, making the car a 2- or 3-seater and with wind-up side windows in place of the clip-on side-curtains of the continuing Mark II open 2 ...

  4. Two-seater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-seater

    an aircraft with two seats, such as many trainers, fighters, gliders, and helicopters; a coupé, an automobile with usually two seats a coupé with a 2+2 style, with two normal size seats in the front and two smaller seats in the back intended to be used occasionally or for children

  5. Pontiac Fiero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pontiac_Fiero

    The Pontiac Fiero is a rear mid-engine, light sports car manufactured and marketed by Pontiac for model years 1984 – 1988. Intended as an economical commuter car with modest performance aspirations, it was Pontiac's first two-seater since their 1926 to 1938 coupes, and the first rear mid-engine mass-produced car by any American manufacturer.

  6. Ford EXP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_EXP

    By the mid-1980s, two-seat compact sports coupes were in vogue. By 1985, the EXP found competition in the Honda CR-X, Pontiac Fiero, and Toyota MR2. While the latter two were mid-engine, rear-wheel drive vehicles, all were similar to the EXP in deriving a number of powertrain and chassis components from other production vehicles.

  7. Hooper (coachbuilder) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hooper_(coachbuilder)

    on Daimler's smallest 2½-litre chassis Touring limousine, 7 seater 1953 for The Prince Regent of Iraq. This car is 19 ft long and 6 ft 5 inches wide and was built on a Rolls-Royce Phantom IV chassis. Hooper & Co. was a British coachbuilding business for many years based in Westminster London. From 1805 to 1959 it was a notably successful maker ...

  8. Group 7 (motorsport) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_7_(motorsport)

    Group 7 cars were defined as "two-seater competition vehicles built exclusively for speed races on closed circuit". [2] There was no minimum production requirement necessary to earn homologation. As such, the regulations allowed manufacturers and teams freedom to create unique racing cars with no limitations on engines, tires, aerodynamics, or ...

  9. Multiseat configuration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiseat_configuration

    [2] In 2002 a Canadian company, Userful Corporation, released Userful Multiplier, a multiseat Linux software solution that enables up to 10 users to simultaneously share one computer. [3] Earlier they worked on a kernel-based approach to a multi-station platform computer, but abandoned the idea due to a problem with multiple video card support.