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  2. Nissan Maxima - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nissan_Maxima

    1990 Nissan Maxima Ti (Australia) 1993–1995 Nissan Maxima Executive (Australia) During this year, the Maxima was first introduced to the European market, replacing the Laurel. For European markets, the model range was: 3.0, 3.0 S, and 3.0 SE. The only engine was the single-cam VG30E, producing 170 PS (125 kW; 168 bhp).

  3. List of Nissan vehicles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Nissan_vehicles

    2000–2015 Nissan Xterra; 2001–2009 Nissan Platina (rebadged Renault Clio) 2001–2016 Nissan Moco (rebadged Suzuki MR Wagon, a Keicar) 2003–2008 Nissan 350Z Z33 (Fairlady Z in Japan) 2003–2020 Nissan Teana; 2003–2024 Nissan Titan; 2003–2009 Nissan Kubistar; 2004–2022 Nissan Fuga; 2004–2017 Nissan Lafesta

  4. Category:Vehicles with CVT transmission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Vehicles_with_CVT...

    Pages in category "Vehicles with CVT transmission" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 323 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .

  5. Continuously variable transmission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuously_variable...

    Toroidal CVT used in the Nissan Cedric (Y34) Toroidal CVTs, as used on the Nissan Cedric (Y34) , [ 12 ] [ 13 ] and those built by CVTCORP, [ 14 ] consist of a series of discs and rollers. The discs can be pictured as two almost-conical parts arranged point-to-point, with the sides dished such that the two parts could fit into the central hole ...

  6. Nissan Teana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nissan_Teana

    Nissan revealed the second generation, redesigned Teana at the 2008 Beijing Auto Show. The new Teana is based on the Nissan D platform also used by the new North American Nissan Maxima and Nissan Altima. Engine choices include a 3498 cc V6, a 2495 cc V6, a 2488 cc inline-four, and a 1997 cc inline-four, all with a continuously variable ...

  7. 2008–2010 automotive industry crisis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008–2010_automotive...

    Nissan, another leading Japanese car manufacturer, announced that it also would be slashing production and will reduce its output by 80,000 vehicles in the first few months of 2009. [ 18 ] In December 2008, Suzuki , Japan's fourth biggest car manufacturer, announced that it will cut production in Japan by about 30,000 units due to falling demand.

  8. JATCO - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jatco

    As of March 2015, JATCO is 75% owned by Nissan, 15% owned by Mitsubishi Motors, and 10% owned by Suzuki. [2] While it was the transmission manufacturing division of Nissan it partnered with Mazda, and thus Jatco had long been supplying Nissan, Mazda, Subaru, Isuzu, Suzuki, BMW, Volkswagen, MG Rover Group and Land Rover. However, once it was ...

  9. Nissan HR engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nissan_HR_engine

    2009–2019 Nissan NV200, [5] also rebadged as Mitsubishi Delica D:3; 2010 Nissan Juke F15 (Japan) 2011 Nissan Sunny/Latio N17; 2012 Nissan Sylphy/Sentra B17, B18; 2012–Present Nissan Versa/Almera (Americas) N17, N18; 2015 Dacia Duster HS; 2016 Nissan Kicks P15 (Global), D15 (India) 2017 Dacia Duster HM; 2019 Lada Vesta; 2019 Lada XRAY; 2020 ...