Type |
Public Joint-Stock Company (RTS:AVAZ MICEX:AVAZ) |
---|---|
Founded | 1966 |
Headquarters | Tolyatti, Russia |
Key people | Igor Komarov (President) |
Industry | Automotive |
Products | Cars |
Revenue (turnover) | US$ 6.2 Billion (2008) |
Employees | 130.698 |
Website | lada-auto.ru |
AvtoVAZ (RTS:AVAZ, MICEX:AVAZ) (Russian: АвтоВАЗ) is the Russian automobile manufacturer formerly known as VAZ: Volzhsky Avtomobilny Zavod (ВАЗ, Во́лжский автомоби́льный заво́д), but better known to the world under the trade name Lada. The company was established in the late 1960s in collaboration with Fiat. The current company name contains abnormal semantic pleonasm: «AvtoVAZ» literally stands for «Avtomobilniy Volzhsky Avtomobilny Zavod» («English: Automobile Volga Automobile Plant»). AvtoVAZ is the largest company in the Russian automotive industry. It is 25% owned by French carmaker Renault.
It produces nearly one million cars a year, including the Kalina, Lada 110 and the Niva off-road vehicle. However, the original Fiat 124-based vehicle, the VAZ-2101 and its derivatives, remain the models most associated with its Lada brand.
The VAZ factory is one of the biggest in the world, with over 90 miles (140 km) of production lines, and is unique in that most of the components for the cars are made in-house.
The original Lada was intended as a "people's car" for consumers of the Eastern Bloc - lacking in most luxuries expected in Western-made cars of its era. Ladas were sold as a budget 'no-frills' vehicle in several Western nations during the 1970s and 1980s, including Canada, the United Kingdom, France, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands, though trade sanctions banned their export to the United States. Sales to Italy were forbidden by the agreement between the Soviet government and Fiat, to protect Fiat from cheap imports in its home market.
Origins[]
The plant was set up as a collaboration between Italy and the Soviet Union and built on the banks of the Volga River in 1966. A new town, Tolyatti, named after the Italian Communist Party leader Palmiro Togliatti, was built around the factory. The Lada was envisaged as a "people's car" like the Citroën 2CV or the VW Beetle.
The lightweight Italian Fiat 124 was adapted in order to survive treacherous Russian driving conditions. Among many changes, aluminium brake drums were added to the rear, and the original Fiat engine was dropped in favour of a newer design also purchased from Fiat. This new engine had a modern overhead camshaft design but was never used in Fiat cars. The suspension was raised to clear rough Russian roads and the bodyshell was made from thicker, heavier steel. The first Lada models were equipped with a starting handle in case the battery went flat in Siberian conditions, though this was later dropped. Another feature specifically intended to help out in cold conditions was a manual auxiliary fuel pump.
Exports to the West began in 1974; under the original agreement with Fiat, the car could not be sold in competition with the 124 until its replacement (the Fiat 131 Mirafiori) had been released and all Fiat production of the 124 had ceased.
Engines fitted to the original Ladas start with the 1.2 L carburetor in the original and go up to the 1.7 L export model set up with a General Motors single point fuel injection system. Diesel engines were later fitted for the domestic market only. The drivetrain is a simple rear-wheel drive setup with a live rear axle. The engine is an inline four with two valves per cylinder and a single overhead camshaft.
The Fiat-based Ladas feature various headlight, trim and body styles. The original, Fiat style models included VAZ-2101 sedan and VAZ-2102 station wagon. 1972 saw the introduction of a deluxe version of the sedan, VAZ-2103, which was based on Fiat 124 Special 1968 and featured a new 1.5 L engine and twin headlights. In 1974, the original VAZ-2101 was updated with new engines and interiors; VAZ-2102 underwent the same improvements in 1976. The body style with two round headlights was manufactured until 1988; all others remain in production in slightly updated form.
The VAZ-2106 introduced in December 1975 was an updated version of VAZ-2103, really which was based on Fiat 124 Special T 1972, featuring different interiors and new 1.6 L engine. 2106 is the oldest and the most popular rear-drive model of AvtoVAZ; its production ended in 2001 from Tolyatti was postponed to Izhavto (Izhevsk), which was completed in December 2005.
VAZ-2105, still based on the 2101 but updated to 80s styling, was introduced in 1980 and was marketed outside the Soviet Union under the Riva or Laika names, depending on country. Square headlights and new body panels distinguish this style from the old models. A deluxe version, VAZ-2107, was out in 1982; it featured a better engine, refined interiors and a Mercedes-like radiator grille. In 1984, the VAZ-2104 station wagon completed the line-up. In 2002 station wagon 2104 production was transferred to IzhAvto. Production of the sedan in 2105 completed 30 December 2010, and production of deluxe sedan 2107 to March 2011 will be transferred to IzhAvto.
In the domestic market, these classic models were called Zhiguli (Жигули). The Lada name was used for exports only, but a large share of Ladas was reexported from Eastern bloc countries, so the brand was well-known in the domestic market as well.
Non-Fiat models[]
AvtoVAZ designers proved that they had some original ideas when the VAZ-2121 Niva was introduced in 1978. This highly popular car was made with off-road use in mind, featuring a gearbox with a four-wheel-drive selector lever as well as a low- and high- range selector lever. It has an original body style and the most powerful 1.7 L engine in the VAZ range. The Niva has also been available with 1.9 L Peugeot sourced diesel engine. The Niva is still in production.
Based on the success of the Niva, the design department prepared a new family of front-wheel drive models by 1984, which was of a completely domestic design. Production started with the VAZ-21083 Sputnik 3-door hatchback; the series was later renamed Samara. The Samara engine was mostly designed and produced in-house, had a new single overhead cam design and was driven by a more modern rubber belt. The combustion chambers were developed in collaboration with Porsche. The line-up features a completely new body and interiors, front McPherson suspension and rear torsion bar, rack and pinion steering and an updated 5-speed gearshift. The 5-door VAZ-21093 hatchback followed in 1987, and the 4-door 1.5 L sedan, VAZ-21099, was introduced in 1990. The same year, the front sides and radiator grille were restyled on the whole Samara range.
The 2108-2109 models were in production until 2001, when they were restyled with new side panels, interiors and 1.5 L fuel injection engines (though fuel injection was available as early as 1995). The Lada 2109 hatchback was rebadged as Lada 2114, and Lada 21099 sedan was rebadged as the Lada 2115. The 2104-21099 model range was transferred to IzhMash and ZAZ and is still being manufactured. In 2004 VAZ also introduced Lada 2113, a restyled version of Lada 2108, but this car has never used much popularity, as the Lada 2108 was only popular for a short time.
The VAZ-1111 Oka micro-car, which resembles the Fiat Panda (though has no relation to it), was introduced in 1988, and in 1991 the production was transferred to the KamAZ and SeAZ factories.
The VAZ-2120 Nadezhda minivan is based on the original Niva and has been in low-volume production since 1998. A five-door version of the Niva, the VAZ-2131, has been in production since 1995.
The break-up of the USSR delayed the production of new 110-series by a couple of years. The VAZ-2110 sedan was introduced in 1996, the 2111 station wagon followed in 1998 and the 2112 hatchback completed the range in 2001. These models are basically based on Samara technology with a new body and fuel injection engines as standard features, though carburated versions have also been available up until 2001. The 110-series remains in production and has been continually updated over the years. For example, engines used to be 1.5 L units with either 8 or 16 valves, but these have now been upgraded to 1.6 L units that meet stricter emissions rules.
[]
Tightening emissions and safety legislation meant that AvtoVAZ withdrew from most Western markets by the late 1997; often, there were also problems with spare parts. In the USA they were never sold due to the cold war, but they were available in Canada (where the Niva was quite popular). However, Canadians travelling to the USA in a Lada found that some gas stations refused to sell fuel to them due to anti-Soviet sentiment. The rise in popularity of Far Eastern imports from newly established manufacturers such as Daewoo, Proton, Kia and Hyundai contributed to Lada's demise in the West. These Korean and Malaysian-manufactured vehicles offered modern, Japanese developed technology and levels of build quality and standard equipment which Lada could not compete with, and by the turn of the millennium, had completely taken over the market niche that Lada had survived in for over 20 years.
Though the original Lada, and as of the early part of the new millennium, the Samara, have now been withdrawn, the Lada 110 and the Niva are still sold in certain Western European markets, as are the more modern models. The Lada is widely available in many Central and South American countries as well as in Africa, the Middle East and in all of the former Soviet Union and Communist Bloc nations.
Recent developments[]
As AvtoVAZ was allowed to sell cars to private dealers in late 1980s, Boris Berezovsky arranged to resell the cars to the public through his LogoVAZ dealerships. In 1993 he started a campaign to collect funds for the "people's automobile" and created the AVVA venture, which stands for All-Russian Automobile Alliance; the AvtoVAZ held a major share in the venture. The plans were to build a completely new plant for production of the VAZ-1116 supermini. However, the financial crisis of 1998 put these plans to an end. The development concepts of 1116 instead became the foundation of the Lada Kalina range.
GM-AvtoVAZ, a joint-venture with General Motors, adopted an updated version of the Niva, VAZ-2123, that was considered for production since the 1990s. Named Chevrolet Niva, it's being built on the venture's plant since 2001 and is exported to Europe and Latin America. In 2004, the Chevrolet Viva, a four-door version of the Opel Astra G, was introduced.
VAZ has also tried to get into the sportier markets: several Ladas were factory-tuned and given a Momo steering wheel. A convertible was also produced. In 2003, VAZ presented the concept car Lada Revolution, an open single seater sports car powered by a 1.6 L engine producing 215 hp (160 kW). There are other experimental cars, such as the VAZ-210834 Tarzan SUV concept, VAZ-1922 monster truck and VAZ-2359 pick-up, all based on Niva. The VAZ-211223 110-series coupe, with the sister models 111 and 112 have been developed with a modern and luxurious look and feel, have been mass produced, and are popular in Russia today.
Some models (mostly the police version) have a Wankel-type engine (like the Mazda RX-7), though development of this engine has since stopped. The main causes are special requirements for service and repair (mostly available only in Moscow & Toliatti) and very high fuel & lubricating oil consumption.
2005 saw the introduction of the new Kalina supermini lineup to the market. AvtoVAZ has built a new modern plant for this model and is hoping to sell some 200,000 cars annually. Test production of the Lada 1118 sedan started in November 2004 and full-scale assembly was launched in May 2005. The Lada 1119 hatchback and Lada 1117 station wagon with updated DOHC 1.6L engines followed in 2006.
The restyled 110-series model, Lada 2170 Priora, is produced since March 2007.
Project C, which has come to be known as the Lada 2116 or Lada Silhouette, is a family car jointly developed with input from both Porsche and Renault, is intended to finally replace the Classic models. Spy shots of the car appeared in 2007, suggesting a 2008 launch however contradicting reports have shown that the car will now not be ready until 2011. AvtoVAZ however began to move production of the Classic models (which were still selling strongly in Russia) out of Togliatti at the end of 2010 - fuelling further speculation that this is to free up production capacity for the 2116.
AvtoVAZ was considering the local production of Ecotec Family 1 (FAM-1) engines using the equipment transferred from Szentgotthard, Hungary plant. A transmissions plant was to be bought from Daewoo Moto India, a former Daewoo Motors subsidiary that was not sold to GM. The engines and transmissions were to be used in both GM-AvtoVAZ and Lada cars. As of Summer 2005, these plans are cancelled and VAZ is seeking another way to acquire some modern powerplant technology.
After some shakeups in the management caused by a recent acquisition from Rosoboronexport, AvtoVAZ is currently in talks with Renault to negotiate a CKD assembly of the Renault Logan. They have also contracted Magna International to design a new car platform and equip a new plant for its production.[1]
AvtoVAZ suffered considerably in the 2008-2009 world economic crisis. In October 2008, the company was reported to possess over 100,000 unsold units, and desperately needed money to repay short-term debts. On March 31, the value of AvtoVAZ shares jumped by almost 30 percent, due to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's proclaimed determination to support the auto giant. Putin paid a visit to Togliatti, expressed his approval of the management for not initiating massive layoffs, and promised more than $1 billion in loans, cash, and guarantees.[2] In May, 2009, Putin bought an AvtoVAZ Niva SUV to show his support for the hard-pressed domestic producer.[3]
Models[]
- See also: Automobile model numbering system in USSR and Russia
Each model has an internal index that reflects the level of modifications, based on the engine and other options installed. For example, the VAZ-21103 variant has the 1.5 L 16V engine, while the VAZ-21104 uses the latest 1.6 L 16V fuel injection engine. Since 2001, trim levels are also indicated by including a number after the main index: '-00' means base trim level, '-01' means standard trim and '-02' designates deluxe version; for example, VAZ-21121-02 means Lada 112 hatchback with an 1.6L SOHC engine and deluxe trim.
The car's name is formed from 'VAZ-index model name. The classic Fiat 124-derived models were known on the domestic market as Zhiguli (Жигули) until late-1990s, when the name was dropped; thus, the 2104-2107 range, as well as 110-series, actually lack a model name. The restyled Sputnik range was renamed Samara, but the Niva and the Oka retained their names. By first decade of the 21st century, the VAZ designation was dropped from market names in favour of Lada and simplified export naming conventions were adopted, so VAZ-2104 effectively became Lada 2104, VAZ-2110 became Lada 110, VAZ-2114 became Lada Samara hatchback or Lada 114 and so on, though model indices continue to be used in both technical and marketing materials.
The model names varied from market to market and as such should not be used except to indicate a certain export market. Instead, it is advisable to refer solely to the model number as these are the same for all markets.
Classic Zhiguli[]
- 2101 Sedan
Index Name | Engine | Export Name | Production Years | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2101 | 1.2L | Lada 1200 | 1970–1982 | Left-hand drive |
21011 | 1.3L | Lada 1300 | 1974–1981 | Left-hand drive |
21012 | 1.2L | - | - | Right-hand drive |
21013 | 1.2L | Lada 1200 L | 1977–1983 | Left-hand drive |
21016 | 1.5L | - | - | Police version |
21018 | 1.3L | - | - | Wankel engine |
21019 | 2.3L | - | - | Wankel engine |
- 2102 Station Wagon
Index Name | Engine | Export Name | Production Years | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2102 | 1.2L | Lada 1200 Combi | 1972–1986 | Left-hand drive |
21021 | 1.3L | Lada 1300 Combi | 1978–1981 | Left-hand drive |
21022 | 1.2L | - | - | Right-hand drive |
21024 | 1.3L | - | - | Right-hand drive |
21023 | 1.5L | Lada 1500 Combi | 1977–1984 | Left-hand drive |
21026 | 1.5L | - | - | Right-hand drive |
- 2103 Sedan
Index Name | Engine | Export Name | Production Years | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2103 | 1.5L | Lada 1500 | 1972–1984 | Left-hand drive |
21033 | 1.3L | Lada 1300 S | 1977–1983 | Export only |
21035 | 1.2L | Lada 1200SL | 1972–1981 | Export only |
- 2106 Sedan
Index Name | Engine | Export Name | Production Years | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2106 | 1.6L | Lada 1600 | 1976–2001/2005 | Left-hand drive |
21061 | 1.5L | Lada 1500 DL | 1976–1988 | Left-hand drive, export for Canada only |
21062 | 1.6L | Lada 1600 | 1976–2001 | Right-hand drive, export only |
21063 | 1.3L | Lada 1300 SL | 1976–1988 | Left-hand drive, budget version |
21064 | 1.6L | Lada 1600 SL | - | Deluxe version, export only, 5-speed gearshift |
21065 | 1.6L | - | 1990–2001 | Deluxe version, export only, 5-speed gearshift |
- 2104 Station Wagon
Index Name | Engine | Export Name | Production Years | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2104 | 1.3L | Lada Nova 1300 Break Lada Nova 1300 Estate Lada Nova 1300 Family |
1984–1994 | |
21041 | 1.6L | Lada Laika | 2000–2004 | 5-speed gearshift |
21043 | 1.5L | Lada Nova 1500 Break Lada Nova 1500 Estate Lada Nova 1500 Family |
1984–2004 | 5-speed gearshift |
21044 | 1.7L | Lada Nova 1700 Break Lada Nova 1700 Estate Lada Nova 1700 Family |
- | Export only; CPI fuel injection from GM |
21045 | 1.5L Diesel | - | - | Export only; licensed diesel engine |
21046 | 1.3L | - | - | Right-hand drive |
21047 | 1.5L | - | - | Luxury version of 21043, right-hand drive |
- 2105 Sedan
Index Name | Engine | Export Name | Production Years | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2105 | 1.3L | Lada Nova Lada 1300 L |
1979–1995 | |
21051 | 1.2L | Lada Junior Lada 1200 S |
1979–1995 | |
21053 | 1.5L | Lada Nova Lada Laika |
1979–2004 | |
21054 | 1.6L | - | - | Police version; additional fuel tank and battery |
21056 | 1.3L | Lada Riva | 1983–1997 | Right-hand drive |
21057 | 1.5L | Lada Riva | 1983–1997 | Right-hand drive |
21058 | 1.2L | Lada Riva | 1983–1997 | Right-hand drive |
21059 | - | - | - | Police version; comes with VAZ-4132 Wankel engine |
2105 VFTS | 1.6L | - | 1982 | High performance version with 160 hp (119 kW) engine (1.8l with 240 hp turbocharged) |
- 2107 Sedan
Index Name | Engine | Export Name | Production Years | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2107 | 1.5L | Lada 1500 SL Lada Riva Lada Laika |
1982–2004 | |
21072 | 1.3L | - | 1982–1995 | |
21073 | 1.7L | Lada Riva Lada Laika |
1991–2001 | Export only; CPI fuel injection from GM |
21074 | 1.6L | - | - | Police version; additional fuel tank and battery |
21079 | 2.6L | - | - | Police version; comes with VAZ-4132 Wankel engine |
Original[]
Index | Engine | Export name | Production | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2121 Niva off-roader | ||||
2121 | 1.6L | Lada Niva | 1977–1993 | four-wheel drive |
21213 | 1.7L | Lada Niva | 1993 | four-wheel drive; restyled rear door |
21214 | 1.7L | Lada Niva | 1993 | four-wheel drive; restyled rear door; CPI fuel injection from GM |
2131 Niva off-roader | ||||
2131 | 1.7L | Lada Niva | 1995 | extended 5-door version of 2121 |
2108 Sputnik 3-door hatchback | ||||
2108 | 1.3L | Lada Samara 1300 | 1984–2001 | |
21081 | 1.2L | Lada Samara 1100 | 1984–1996 | Export only |
21083 | 1.5L | Lada Samara 1500 | 1984–2001 | |
21083i | 1.5L | Lada Samara 1500i | 1993–2001 | Multi-point fuel injection |
21086 | 1.3L | Lada Samara 1300 | 1990–1996 | Export only; right-hand drive for United Kingdom |
21087 | 1.2L | Lada Samara 1100 | 1990–1996 | Export only; right-hand drive for United Kingdom |
21088 | 1.5L | Lada Samara 1500 | 1990–1996 | Export only; right-hand drive for United Kingdom |
1706 | 1.5L | Lada Chelnok | 1990 | Pickup truck version of 2108 |
2108-91 | Police version; comes with VAZ-415 Wankel engine | |||
2109 Sputnik 5-door hatchback | ||||
2109 | 1.3L | Lada Samara L 1300 | 1987–1997 | |
21091 | 1.2L | Lada Samara L 1100 | 1987–1996 | Export only |
21093 | 1.5L | Lada Samara L 1500 | 1990–2001 | |
21093i | 1.5L | Lada Samara L 1500i | 1993–2001 | Multi-point fuel injection |
21096 | 1.3L | Lada Samara L 1300 | 1990–1996 | Export only; right-hand drive for United Kingdom |
21098 | 1.5L | Lada Samara L 1500 | 1990–1996 | Export only; right-hand drive for the United Kingdom |
2109-90 | Police version; comes with VAZ-415 Wankel engine | |||
21099 Sputnik sedan | ||||
21099 | 1.5L | Lada Samara Forma 1500 | 1990–2001 | |
21099i | 1.5L | Lada Samara Forma 1500i | 1993–2001 | Multi-point fuel injection |
210993 | 1.3L | Lada Samara Forma 1300 | 1990–2001 | |
1111 Oka micro-car | ||||
1111 | 0.7L | 1988–1990 | Licensed to SeAZ and KamAZ | |
11113 | 0.8L | 1990 | Kama, produced at KamAZ | |
2123 Niva | ||||
2123 | 1.7L | Chevrolet Niva | 2001 | Never appeared under Lada/VAZ brand; produced by GM-AvtoVAZ; multi-point fuel injection |
2120 Nadezhda minivan | ||||
2120 | 1.8L | 1998 | Based on 2131; carburetor | |
21204 | 1.7L | 1998 | CPI fuel injection from GM | |
2110 sedan | ||||
2110 | 1.5L | 1996–2001 | carburetor | |
21102 | 1.5L | Lada 110 | 1998–2004 | 8V i |
21103 | 1.5L | Lada 110 | 1998–2004 | 16V i |
21101 | 1.6L | Lada 110 | 2004 | 8V i |
21104 | 1.6L | Lada 110 | 2004 | 16V i |
21105 | 1.7L | 1996-?? | carburetor | |
21106 | 2.0L | Opel C20XE Ecotec engine (by external car tuner) | ||
21108 | 1.8L | Lada Premier | A "limousine" with increased wheelbase and up-stroked engine (by external car tuner) | |
2111 station wagon | ||||
21110 | 1.5L | Lada 111 | 1998–2004 | 8V i |
21111 | 1.5L | 1998–2001 | carburetor | |
21113 | 1.5L | Lada 111 | 2000–2004 | 16V i |
21114 | 1.6L | Lada 111 | 2004 | 16V, i |
2112 hatchback | ||||
21120 | 1.5L | Lada 112 | 2000–2004 | 16V, i |
21122 | 1.5L | Lada 112 | 2000–2004 | 8V i |
21121 | 1.6L | Lada 112 | 2004 | 8V i |
21124 | 1.6L | Lada 112 | 2004 | 16V i |
2113 Samara 3-door hatchback | ||||
21130 | 1.5L | Lada Samara | 2004 | Restyled 21083; 8V i |
2114 Samara 5-door hatchback | ||||
21140 | 1.5L | Lada Samara | 2001 | Restyled 21093; 8V i |
2115 Samara sedan | ||||
21150 | 1.5L | Lada Samara | 2001 | Restyled 210993; 8V i |
1118 Kalina sedan | ||||
11170 | 1.6L | Lada Kalina | 2004 | 8V i |
1119 Kalina hatchback | ||||
11190 | 1.6L | Lada Kalina | 2005 | 16V i |
1117 Kalina station wagon | ||||
11170 | 1.6L | Lada Kalina | 2006 | 16V i |
2170 Priora sedan | ||||
21701 | 1.6L | Lada Priora | 2008 | 8V i |
21703 | 1.6L | Lada Priora | 2007 | 16V i |
2172 Priora hatchback | ||||
21721 | 1.6L | Lada Priora | 2008 | 8V i |
21723 | 1.6L | Lada Priora | 2008 | 16V i |
2171 Priora station wagon | ||||
21713 | 1.6L | Lada Priora | 2009 | 16V i |
21728 Priora Coupe 3-door | ||||
21728 | 1.6L | Lada Priora | 2010 | 16V i |
Oka[]
The Oka is a Russian city car designed by AvtoVAZ and sometimes branded as a Lada. This model is built in Russia by SeverstalAvto and SeAZ (the Serpuhov Car Factory), as well as in Azerbaijan by the Gyandzha Auto Plant.
See also[]
- Automotive industry in Russia
- Automobile model numbering system in USSR and Russia
- List of automobile manufacturers
References[]
- ↑ "ОАО "АВТОВАЗ". Официальный сайт" (in (Russian)). Lada-auto.ru. Retrieved on 2009-05-02.
- ↑ Aervitz, Irina (2009-04-08). "AvtoVAZ: a New Beginning or a Dead End?". Russia Profile. Retrieved on 2009-06-13.
- ↑ Putin buys Russian in boost to carmaker, Russia Today TV, May 16, 2009.Retrieved 2009-11-25.
External links[]
This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at AvtoVAZ. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons by Attribution License and/or GNU Free Documentation License. Please check page history for when the original article was copied to Wikia |
- Lada official site (in Russian)
- Lada at the Open Directory Project
- Official history of Lada line-up (in Russian)
- Lada unofficial site, includes pictures (in Russian)
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