Keicar

Keicars (K-cars), also called keijidousha (in Japanese: 軽自動車), are small passenger cars as well as trucks. They are mainly sold in Japan, because there are some tax and insurance relaxations and an exemption from the usual requirement of certification of park space that one has adequate parking space at his or her home or has contract with a parking spot. These relatively relaxed standards came from the post-WWII days when most Japanese were too poor to buy a full sized car, yet had more than enough money to buy a motorcycle. To promote the growth of car industry as well as to offer an alternative delivery method to small business and shop owners, Keicar standards were created. In Japan, the cars feature yellow licence plates, earning them the name "yellow-plate cars" - black numbers on yellow ground for private use and yellow numbers on black ground for commercial use - in English-speaking circles. The keicar field is very competitive, so that manufacturers are in a constant race to provide better performance, utility, and fun within the keicar regulations, driving the pace of technological innovation, which then spreads to the rest of their automobile line. As a result, keicars are available with turbo-charged engines, automatic transmission, continuously variable transmission, 4-Wheel-Drive, Hybrid Gasoline-Electric engines, air condition systems as well as car navigation systems.

History and regulations

  • 1949 July 8 first regulations
  • 1950 July 26 major changes
    • length: up to 3 m
    • width: up to 1.3 m
    • displacement: up to 300 cm³ (4 stroke), up to 200 cm³ (2 stroke)
  • 1951 August 16 minor changes
    • displacement up to 360 cm³ (4 stroke), up to 240 cm³ (2 stroke)
  • 1955 April 4 minor changes
    • no further differentiation between 2 stroke and 4 stroke: all up to 360 cm³
  • 1976 January 1 major changes
    • length: up to 3.2 m
    • width: up to 1.4 m
    • displacement: up to 550 cm³
  • 1984 January 1 medium changes
    • length: up to 3.4 m
    • displacement: up to 660 cm³
  • 1998 October 1 today's regulations
    • length: 3.4 m or less
    • width: 1.48 m or less
    • height: 2 m or less
    • displacement: 660 cm³ or less

Manufacturers of keicars

Famous example cars

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
allocation
john lennard jones
julie clary
optimization of java
pickpocketing
world economy
gabriel dumont
etobicoke, ontario
alvin schwartz
pretty hate machine
the fragile
hasty generalization
kim swales
photic sneeze reflex
solar collector
philippine peso
charismatic authority
vascular cambium
cork cambium
sanyo shinkansen
osaka loop line
june carter cash
meristem
lennard jones potential
christian science monitor
davy crockett (nuclear device)
george francis (suspected mobster)
luciano pavarotti
briartite
apical meristem
richard stanley
transpirational pull
rik van steenbergen
meniscus
fire ring
anthony hancock paintings and sculptures: a retrospective exhibition
dry as a bone
battle of agnadello
rockefeller foundation
gisela of burgundy
giselle of bavaria
humerus
indian cuisine
henry ii, duke of bavaria