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Nissan Atlas

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Nissan Atlas
Overview
ManufacturerNissan Shatai
UD Trucks
Isuzu
Also called
  • Nissan Cabstar
  • Nissan Homer (Turkey)
  • UD 1200/1300/1400 (North America)
  • UD Condor (Japan)
  • UD Kazet (H44)
  • Ashok Leyland Partner (India)
  • Ashok Leyland Garuda (India, military variants)
  • Dong Feng Captain N300 (China)
  • Isuzu Elf (H41/H42/H43)
  • Mazda Titan (H41/H42/H43)
  • Mitsubishi Fuso Canter (H44)
  • Renault Maxity (Europe)
  • Samsung SV110/Yamuzin (South Korea)
  • Yue Loong Homer (ROC)
Production1982-present
Body and chassis
ClassTruck
Body styleTruck (standard cab, crew cab)
Powertrain
TransmissionNissan (manual)
Aisin (automatic)
Chronology
PredecessorNissan Cabstar, Homer (light)
Nissan C80 (medium)
Nissan Caball, Clipper (heavy)

The Nissan Atlas (Template:Lang-ja) is a series of pickup trucks and light commercial vehicles manufactured by Nissan. It is built by UD Trucks for the Japanese market, and by the Renault-Nissan Alliance for the European market. The lighter range vehicles, weighing from 1 to 1.5 tons, replaced the earlier Cabstar and Homer (F20), while the heavier Caball and Clipper (C340) were replaced by the 2-to-4 ton range Atlas. The Atlas nameplate was first introduced in December 1981, available at Nissan Bluebird Store locations.

The Atlas is known also as the Nissan Cabstar, Renault Maxity, Samsung SV110/Yamuzin and Ashok Leyland Partner depending on the location. The range has been sold around the world.

F22/H40

Japan

Nissan Atlas (F22)

Manufacturing of the heavier range (H40-series) began in December 1981, while the lighter series Atlas (F22) was introduced in February 1982.[1] The first generation Atlas was available with a wide range of petrol and diesel engines: The Z16 and Z20 (as well as the LPG-powered Z20D) were petrol units, while diesels included the TD23, TD27, ED33, FD35, and the turbodiesel FD35T.[2]

Europe

The Atlas F22 was sold in Europe as the Nissan Cabstar and proved a popular truck in the UK market due to its reliability and ability to carry weight.[citation needed] The F22 Cabstar was available in the British market with the 1,952 cc Z20S OHC petrol engine.[3] From 1990 the range widened and was sold as the Cabstar E.[4] In Taiwan, the F22 continued to be sold as the "Yue Loong Homer".

It was also used as recreational truck (motorhome conversions). It proved to be serious competition for the dated Bedford CF and Ford Transit which were its main competitors. The trucks popularity in the African market saw vast majority of the remaining early UK F22 models being exported to Africa.[citation needed]

Australia

Australia was another important market for the Atlas, where it took over after the previous Nissan Caball which was sold there from 1970 to 1981. It was later marketed as the Nissan Cabstar (1984–1992). It was built in Australia using many local components.[citation needed]

F23/H41

Nissan Atlas 10
UD YU41 (Nissan Atlas H41 in Malaysia)
Nissan Atlas H41 Face-lifted

The F23 was launched in 1992 with the heavy duty H41 launched in 1991. The H42 followed in 1995.

North America

The UD 1400 was similar to the Atlas F23 featuring a 4.7 L turbo diesel 175 hp[5] and was available until 2010.

South Africa

The Atlas F23 is sold as the UD 35 and UD 40 Series and features a 4.2 L 6-cylinder turbo diesel engine producing 87 kW[6]

South Korea

In South Korea, the locally built version was launched in 1998 as Samsung SV110. It later changed its name to Yamuzin (Hangul:야무진). South Korean truck drivers, however, expect to be able to overload their vehicles, which the Atlas could not handle very well. Unlike the Hyundai Porter and Kia Bongo, the Yamuzin's cargo space can't hold the overload.[citation needed] In 2000 Samsung commercial vehicles discontinued their lineup due to bankruptcy.

H42

Nissan Atlas Double-Cab (H42)

The H42 (or UD20/30/35) was a rebadged Isuzu Elf truck sold from 1995 through 2007.

F24/H43

Nissan Atlas F24
Nissan Atlas H43

Japan

The Atlas is available in two versions: the F24 and H43. The F24 is known as the Atlas 10 and is available with a 2.0 L petrol and 3.0 L turbo diesel engines with a range of payloads from 1.15 to 2 tons[7] and was launched in June 2007.[8] The H43 Atlas 20 (January 2007) comes in a wide range of versions with a choice of 3.0 L or 5.2 L diesel and a payload from 1.65 to 4.5 tons in rear wheel drive and four wheel drive options. The H43 is also marketed as the UD Condor (light-duty). The H43 is a rebadged Isuzu Elf.

From January 2011, production of the F24 transferred from UD to Nissan Shatai.[9]

China

The Dongfeng Captain N300 was publicly released in 2011, which uses a Nissan ZD30 engine.[10]

India

The F24 is also marketed in India as of 2014 as the Ashok Leyland Partner (used for the Civilian variants)[11][12] and the Ashok Leyland Garuda (used for the Military variants).[13]

Europe

Since 2007 the Atlas F24 continued to be sold as the Nissan Cabstar, replacing the F23 in Europe. Built on the same Spanish Renault-Nissan Alliance production line as the Renault Maxity, the Cabstar uses the same Nissan YD25DDTi 2.5 L Turbo diesel engine in a choice of 110 hp or 130 hp versions and a Nissan ZD30DDTi 3.0 Turbo Diesel engine producing 150 hp.

North America

UD Trucks did not import the new F24 to the United States but in 2008 exports to Mexico from the new San Yi, Taiwan factory commenced, using the Nissan Cabstar name.[14]

Malaysia

The F24 is marketed in Malaysia as Nissan Atlas by Combine Motor Sdn Bhd in 2016, Nissan Atlas is available in two variants, single cab and double cab. All are fully imported from Japan.

H44

Nissan NT450 Atlas (H44)

The NT450 Atlas remained supplied by OEM manufacturers, but the basis was changed from the Isuzu Elf to the Mitsubishi Fuso Canter for this generation.

References

  1. ^ "Nissan Fact File 2004-2005" (PDF). Nissan. 2005. pp. 26–27. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-01-08. Retrieved 2011-06-10.
  2. ^ Data File 1987, Tokyo, Japan: Nissan Motor Co., Ltd., April 1987, p. 9
  3. ^ Nissan Commercial Vehicle Range 1984 (brochure), Worthing, UK: Nissan UK Limited, July 1984, pp. 7–8, S24.25m.F923.7.84
  4. ^ Road Transport Road Test Archived 2008-12-04 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-25. Retrieved 2011-06-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^ "South Africa UD 35 data sheet" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-25. Retrieved 2011-06-12.
  7. ^ Nissan Japan website Archived 2011-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ "Nissan press release 14 June 2007". Archived from the original on 3 April 2012. Retrieved 12 June 2011.
  9. ^ "Nissan press release 24 September 2010". Archived from the original on 25 June 2011. Retrieved 12 June 2011.
  10. ^ "DongFeng 凯普特 (Captain) N300 (Commercial vehicles) - Trucksplanet".
  11. ^ "Archived copy". www.ashokleyland.com. Archived from the original on 2 July 2020. Retrieved 11 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. ^ "Atlas F24 emerges as Partner, MiTR from ALL-Nissan JV". 31 January 2014.
  13. ^ "Ashok Leyland might look into Nissan JV for defense products". 13 February 2014.
  14. ^ Automotive World 16 January 2008