Daihatsu Mira
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| Daihatsu Mira | |
|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Daihatsu |
| Also called | Daihatsu Cuore |
| Production | 1980–present |
| Class | Kei car |
| Body style(s) | 3-door Hatchback 5-door Hatchback |
| Related | Daihatsu Leeza Daihatsu Move Daihatsu YRV Daihatsu Copen Daihatsu Terios Daihatsu Opti Daihatsu Trevis Perodua Viva |
The Daihatsu Mira (also known as the Cuore, Domino or Charade outside of Japan), is a kei car-type vehicle built by the Japanese car maker Daihatsu. It comes with a variety of options and chassis variations, with the latest variant having four models: "Mira", "Mira AVY", "Mira Gino" and "Mira VAN". The Mira is basically an upgraded and renamed version of the Daihatsu Fellow. In Australia, the two-seater version was known as a "handivan" and was later renamed as just Handi. It was sold alongside the names of Mira and Cuore. The commercial version was dropped when the Mira was released in later years as a Charade.
In July 1980[1], the Daihatsu Mira arrived to replace the Daihatsu Max Cuore. The second generation (L70) of the Mira was introduced in 1985, and the third generation (L200) in 1990. The fourth generation (L500) was introduced in 1994 and was still based on the same chassis as the L200. October 1998 saw the fifth generation (L700) introduced, 2002 the sixth generation (even though the Mira Gino (L700) was still in production until 2004), and in 2006 the seventh generation model.
The Mira Gino, with its distinct retro-style looks, is marketed as the Daihatsu Trevis in Europe. The first generation of the Daihatsu Mira Gino is based on the L700 Mira. In 2004, the second generation Mira Gino was ultimately replaced, and no longer shares the same identical body as the Mira.
The L200 variant (1990–92) had two engine sizes: a .65L 3-cylinder 660 cc engine was available in Japan, while in Australia, a more powerful variant with 847 cc and a 4-speed manual gearbox was in use from 1990–91. A 5-speed manual transmission came into force in 1992.
The 660 cc Japanese variant of the Mira had a rather unusual feature for a modern car: the rear passenger seats were designed and manufactured without rear seat-belts being fitted.
The Daihatsu Mira is one of the lightest four-seat passenger cars in the world weighing just 580 kg (1279 lb).
- Perodua Kancil - The rebadged third/fourth generation of the Mira produced by Perodua of Malaysia.
- Perodua Kelisa - The rebadged fifth generation of the Mira.
- Perodua Viva - The rebadged sixth generation of the Mira.
- There is also a version of the third generation of the Mira (known as the Daihatsu Ceria) in Indonesia.
Daihatsu catalogues (Japanese):
Other links
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| Current vehicles: | Atrai/Hijet · Be-go/Terios · Boon/Sirion · Coo/Materia · Copen · Esse · Mira/Cuore/Charade · Move · Mira Gino/Trevis · Sonica · Tanto |
| Past vehicles: | Applause · Bee · Ceria · Charade · Charmant · Compagno · Cuore · Consorte · Domino · Fellow Max · Max · Midget · Pyzar/Gran Move · Rocky/Feroza/Sportrak · Rugger/Rocky/Fourtrak · Scat · Sirion/Storia · Taft · Taruna · Valera · Xenia · YRV |