Engineering:Orphan (car)
From HandWiki
The term orphan car accurately applies to any marque of motor vehicle built by a manufacturer that has discontinued business entirely. The term is sometimes inaccurately applied to a discontinued marque from a still-existing vehicle manufacturer (e.g. Oldsmobile) or a sub-marque (e.g. Thunderbird). In the case of a revived marque, a discontinued one revived by a newer company (e.g. Maybach), only the original vehicles are accurately considered orphans.
Discontinued marques from existing manufacturers
Chrysler Group
Ford Motor Company
- Continental
- Edsel
- Mercury
General Motors Corporation
- Marquette
- Geo
- La Salle
- Saturn
- Oakland
- Oldsmobile
- Hummer
- Viking
- Pontiac
Volkswagen Group
- Auto Union
- DKW
- Horch
- Wanderer
- NSU Motorenwerke
Others
- Checker
- DeLorean
- Nash
- Rambler
- American Motors (AMC)
- Hudson
- Studebaker
- Pierce Arrow
- Apollo
- Hispano Suiza
- Austin-Healey
- Rover
- Triumph
- Kaiser
- Willys
- Henry J
- Crosley Motors
- Tucker
- Packard
- Tatra
- Saab
- Bricklin
Steam / Electric
- Baker
- Commuter Vehicles, Inc.
- Doble
- Edison-Ford[1]
- Sebring Vanguard
- Stanley
- White
See also
- List of automobile manufacturers
- List of car brands
References
- ↑ Strohl, Dan (June 18, 2010). "Ford, Edison and the Cheap EV That Almost Was". Wired. https://www.wired.com/autopia/2010/06/henry-ford-thomas-edison-ev/. Retrieved October 20, 2013.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orphan (car).
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