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This is a list of current and defunct automobile manufacturers of Japan. Major current manufacturers. Company Sub Brand Notes Honda (1946–present) Acura:
Sold to Mitsubishi Motors (see below) Chrysler. Chrysler Australia Lonsdale Engine Manufacturing plant Lonsdale, South Australia: Large 6&8 cylinder vehicles 1968 1971 Sold to Mitsubishi Motors Corporation (see below). Chrysler Corporation Dodge Main Plant. Hamtramck, Michigan with parts overlapping into Detroit, Michigan: Dodge cars 1910 [8 ...
This is a list of automobiles produced for the general public in the Japanese market. They are listed in chronological order from when each model began its model year. If a model did not have continuous production, it is listed again on the model year production resumed. Concept cars and submodels are not listed unless they are themselves notable.
Toyota alone sold 2.02 million vehicles in the U.S. in 2022, according to Good Car Bad Car. That was second only to General Motors, which sold 2.27 million cars.
Nissan first showcased the Datsun Bluebird at the 1958 Los Angeles Auto Show. [13] [41] Nissan had entered the Middle East market in 1957 when it sold its first car in Saudi Arabia. [42] The company formed a US subsidiary, Nissan Motor Corporation U.S.A., in Gardena, California [43] in 1960 headed by Yutaka Katayama. [13]
This is a chronological index for the start year for motor vehicle brands (up to 1969). For manufacturers that went on to produce many models, it represents the start date of the whole brand; for the others, it usually represents the date of appearance of the main (perhaps only) model that was produced.
The P3010 is an articulated light rail car used on the Los Angeles Metro Rail system manufactured by Kinki Sharyo, operated on all of the Metro Rail light rail lines. [4] Ordered by Metro in 2012, the first train entered service in 2016. A total of 235 trains were built, making it Metro's largest rail fleet. [5]
Toyota's first hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles to be sold commercially, the Toyota Mirai (Japanese for "future"), was unveiled at the November 2014 Los Angeles Auto Show. [138] In January 2015, it was announced that production of the Mirai fuel cell vehicle would increase from 700 units in 2015 to approximately 2,000 in 2016 and 3,000 in 2017.