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Malaysia Proton Juara (U66W) 2001–2003 5-doors Mitsubishi Town Box Wide: A 2,390 mm 1.1L 4A31 4AT Malaysia Proton RGW Pickup: Proton Arena (C97P) 2002–2010 2-doors Mitsubishi CB: C 2,600 mm 1.5L 4G15P 5MT Malaysia Proton Jumbuck Hatchbacks: Proton Suprima S (CR6L) 2013–2019 5-doors Proton P2: C 2,650 mm 1.6L S4PH CFE / Turbo CVT Malaysia ...
The Brougham was replaced in 1971 by the Statesman brand, based upon the station wagon chassis of the then new HQ series. For a complete listing of the HK–WB series Holden cars, see: list of Holden vehicles by series. A new Kingswood model was introduced at the start of the HX Holden series in mid 1976, the Kingswood panel van.
Station wagon: 1980–1989 Ended service in 1989 Special vehicles/VIP vehicles Ford Cortina Wagon K9 unit 1977–1983 Ended service in 1983 Ford Transit Minibus: Van/ambulance 1965–1990 Used as utility transport Inokom Permas: Special vehicle 2000–2018 Used by the forensic investigation agencies and mobile police stations Transport vehicles
The Volvo V60 is a compact executive station wagon (estate car) produced by Volvo Cars related to the S60 mid-size sedan. The vehicle was first released in autumn 2010, facelifted in 2014, and is in its second generation since 2018. The second generation V60 was launched in 2018 based on the Volvo Scalable Product Architecture platform. [2]
Malaysia's car industry is dominated by two local manufacturers which are heavily supported by the government through National Car Policy e.g. trade barriers. These local manufacturers are Proton and Perodua. [2] These excise duties imposed on foreign manufactured cars have made them very expensive for consumers in Malaysia.
The Mercedes-Benz W123 is a range of executive cars produced by German manufacturer Mercedes-Benz from November 1975 to January 1986. The W123 models surpassed their predecessor, the Mercedes-Benz W114, as the most successful Mercedes, selling 2.7 million units before production ended in the autumn of 1985 for the saloon/sedan versions and January 1986 for coupés and estates/station wagons.
A station wagon (US, also wagon) or estate car (UK, also estate) is an automotive body-style variant of a sedan with its roof extended rearward over a shared passenger/cargo volume with access at the back via a third or fifth door (the liftgate, or tailgate), instead of a trunk/boot lid. [1]
Station wagons were considered separate from the commercial van models in Japan. They were originally equipped with the 2-liter 1G-FE six, or as a supercharged "Royal Saloon" wagon. The 2.4 turbodiesel was also available. As of August 1990, the 2.5-liter 1JZ-FE was also made available in the station wagon lineup.