Class: Cars, Sedan — Model origin:
Minor action vehicle or used in only a short scene
Author | Message |
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◊ 2008-03-12 23:41 |
Since it has two doors, would this be a late model Volkswagen Voyage [Type BX]? |
◊ 2008-03-13 00:00 |
The rear looks like a Vento (Jetta 3) but they did not make that in 2-door... or did they? |
◊ 2008-03-13 00:02 |
Isnt this a Volkswagen Santana? |
◊ 2008-03-13 00:08 |
I thought that at first, but I wasn't sure if a 2 door version existed. |
◊ 2008-03-13 00:37 |
According to German Wikipedia VW do Brasil produced a 2-door Santana as well. Edit: Verified. -- Last edit: 2008-03-13 01:02:39 |
◊ 2008-03-13 03:56 |
Did other parts of the world get the 2-door gen.3? I know the U.S. didn't. |
◊ 2008-03-13 18:42 |
Among the years 80 and 90 the Brazilian consumer appreciated the cars two doors. Therefore the factories only invested in vehicles with two doors. It was common the Brazilian it to associate four-doors to a cab (happily this mentality changed today). Therefore many cars had option of two doors body. The first generation of the Gol and your version wagon, Parati, never had four doors. The sedan Voyage four-doors never made a lot of success in Brazil, unlike Argentina. Chevrolet Monza (Opel Ascona) had option of two doors that never existed in Europe. VW Santana always offered version two doors. Fiat created Tempra two doors exclusively to the Brazilian market. And there is many other example. -- Last edit: 2008-03-13 18:45:32 |
◊ 2010-07-07 13:13 |
not 32b, based on 35i |