Chevrolet LUV
The Chevrolet LUV and the later Chevrolet LUV D-Max are light pickup trucks designed and manufactured by Isuzu and marketed in the Americas since 1972 by Chevrolet. The trucks, developed over four successive generations, are rebadged variants of the Isuzu Faster and D-Max. LUV is an acronym for "light utility vehicle".[1]
History
First sold in North America from 1972 as a badge engineered variant of the Japanese market Isuzu Faster, production of the first generation ended in 1980. The second generation, launched in 1980 as a 1981 model, was produced in Japan for North America and in Chile for the South American market. North American sales ended with the release of the 1982 model year Chevrolet S-10 in 1981.
Production of the second generation LUV for South America continued until 1988 when the third iteration was released, once more based on the Japanese market Faster/Rodeo pickups.
This arrangement lasted until 2005 when the fourth series was introduced, now titled Chevrolet LUV D-Max and a rebadged version of the Isuzu D-Max.
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First generation (1972–1980)
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Second generation (KB; 1980–1988)
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Third generation (TF; 1988–2005)
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Chevrolet LUV D-Max (RA; 2005–2012)
References
- ^ Dunne, Jim (November 1978). "Four-wheel-drive Chevy LUV". Popular Science: 126.