INFINITI I35 — specifikacijos ir VIN paieška
Raskite išsamias INFINITI I35 specifikacijas. Dekoduokite bet kurį INFINITI I35 VIN, kad pamatytumėte variklį, kėbulą ir saugą.
Raskite išsamias INFINITI I35 specifikacijas. Dekoduokite bet kurį INFINITI I35 VIN, kad pamatytumėte variklį, kėbulą ir saugą.
The Nissan Cefiro is a mid-size passenger car manufactured and marketed by Nissan Motors over three generations. Almost all Cefiro's were marketed as four-door sedans, though a five-door wagon body style was briefly available (1997–2000). In most cases, the Cefiro used Nissan's VQ six-cylinder engines, named Ward's 10 Best Engines more than ten years running.
The Nissan Cefiro (Japanese: 日産・セフィーロ, Hepburn: Nissan Sefīro) is a mid-size passenger car manufactured and marketed by Nissan Motors over three generations. Almost all Cefiro's were marketed as four-door sedans, though a five-door wagon body style was briefly available (1997–2000). In most cases, the Cefiro used Nissan's VQ six-cylinder engines, named Ward's 10 Best Engines more than ten years running. Nissan marketed the Cefiro in the Japanese Domestic Market (JDM) as well as worldwide, the latter under numerous badge-engineered nameplates, including as the Nissan Maxima (North America, Australia), Samsung SM5 (Korea), Infiniti I30 and Infiniti I35 (North America) and Maxima QX (Europe, Russia). Models manufactured under license were marketed in Indonesia, Malaysia and Taiwan. The first generation Cefiro (internally designated the A31, 1988–1994), used rear-wheel drive; offered four- and six-cylinder engines; and became popular in motorsport drifting. The second generation (A32, 1995–1998) and third generation (A33, 1995–2004) used exclusively a front-wheel drive and V6 engine drivetrain. After the A31, A32 and A33 generations, Nissan would also later use the Cefiro nameplate on examples of its first generation Teana (J31) sedan — exported to Asian and Latin American markets. The model codes A34, A35, and A36 later became the designations for the Maxima, which had evolved from a badge-engineered version of the Cefiro starting with the A32 generation. Nissan began using the Cefiro nameplate - derived from zephyr, the name given in Greek mythology to the god of "the wind from the west" - in 1988; the nameplate was officially retired in 2012.
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