Company:Mitsuoka

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Short description: Japanese automobile company
Mitsuoka Motor Co., Ltd.
TypePublic company
IndustryAutomobile manufacturing
Founded1 February 1968; 56 years ago (1968-02-01)
Headquarters508-3, Kakeomachi, Toyama City, Toyama Prefecture, Japan
Key people
Akio Mitsuoka, (Representative Director and President)
ProductsAutomobiles, Luxury vehicles
Revenue227,000,000 JPY
29,700,000,000 JPY
Number of employees
580 (As of March, 2008)
Websitemitsuoka-motor.com

Mitsuoka Motor (光岡自動車) is a small Japan ese automobile company. It is noted for building unique cars with unconventional styling, of which some are modern while others imitate the look of American, European and particularly British retro cars of the 1950s and 1960s.[1] Mitsuoka Motors is also the principal distributor of the retro-classic TD2000 roadster in Japan.

Mitsuoka is primarily a custom design coachbuilder, customizing production cars, e.g., the Nissan March, and replacing various aspects of the bodywork. It has also produced a sports car, the Orochi,[2] and has a special department for hearses.[3]

History

Mitsuoka was recognised in 1994[4] as the 10th Japanese auto manufacturer to be registered in Japan since Honda in 1963, basing its current cars on Nissans and other Japanese car manufacturers.

Mitsuoka Motor launched in the UK in 2015 under sole distribution of T W White & Sons and launched the Mitsuoka Roadster (Himiko) at the London Motor Show in 2016.[5]

Models

Mitsuoka Le-Seyde first generation (1990-1993)
2005 Mitsuoka Orochi Nude-Top Roadster

Current lineup

  • 1993–present Viewt
  • 1996–present Galue
  • 2008–present Himiko/Roadster
  • 2014–present Ryugi (based on the Toyota Corolla Axio and Toyota Corolla Fielder)
  • 2021–present Buddy (K5 Blazer inspiration based on the Toyota RAV4)[6]

Past vehicles

Second generation Ryoga
Second generation Galue
  • 1982 BUBU 50 Series[7]
    • 1982 BUBU 501 (a three-wheeled microcar)
    • 1985 BUBU 505-C (a Morgan 4/4 inspiration)
  • 1989-1990 BUBU 356 Speedstar[8] (a replica of the Porsche 356 Speedster)
  • 1987-1989 BUBU Classic SSK (replica of the Mercedes-Benz SSK roadster based on the Volkswagen Beetle)
  • 2008-2012 Galue 204 (based on the Toyota Corolla Axio)
  • 2010-2012 Galue Classic (based on the Toyota Corolla Axio)
  • 1991-1993 Dore (similar to the Le-Seyde, based on the Nissan Silvia S13)
  • 1990-1993, 2000-2001 Le-Seyde (a Nissan Silvia-based coupé inspired by Zimmer)
  • 2010-2012 Like (based on the Mitsubishi i-MiEV)
  • 2012–2022 Like-T3
  • 1998-2007 Mitsuoka Microcar
    • 1998-2007 Microcar K-1/MC-1
      • 1999-2007 MC-1T
    • 1998-? Microcar K-2 (based on the design of the FMR Tg500)
    • 2005-? Microcar K-3/Type F (design similar to the Zero1)
    • 2006-? Microcar K-4/Type R[9] (styling reminiscent of 1950s race cars)
    • 1999-2007 ME-1
    • 2002-2007 ME-2 (Convoy 88)
  • 2004-2012 Nouera (based on the Honda Accord and later the Toyota Corolla)
  • 2007-2014 Orochi (based on the Honda NSX)
  • 1996-2004 Ray (styling similar to the Riley Elf Mk.3, based on the Mazda Carol and later the Daihatsu Mira Gino)
  • 2018–2022 Rock Star (C2 Corvette inspiration based on the Mazda MX-5)
  • 1998-2004 Ryoga a "classically" styled sedan originally based on the Primera and later on the smaller Sunny
  • 1996-2000 Type F (a restyled Zero1)
  • 2000-2001 Yuga (a London Taxi replica based on the Nissan Cube)
  • 1994-2000 Zero1[10] (a Lotus Super Seven replica with Eunos Roadster drivetrain)

References

External links