Manufacturer | Hyundai Motor Company |
---|---|
Production | Worldwide |
Predecessor | Hyundai Bison |
Successor | Hyundai Mighty II |
Class | Rear wheel drive vehicles |
Body style(s) | Truck (standard cab, crew cab) |
Platform | Mitsubishi Fuso Canter |
Engine(s) | Mitsubishi 117 HP |
Transmission(s) | Hyundai/Mitsubishi (manual) |
Related | Mitsubishi Fuso Canter |
Designer | Mitsubishi Fuso |
The Hyundai Mighty (hangul:현대 마이티) is a line of light-duty commercial vehicle by Hyundai Motor Company. The range was primarily available in Korea and some other countries.
Manufactured from 1987 with the first cars going to Asia, other European and American countries which saw import or manufacture of the Mighty included Europe, Mid-east, Africa, and South America. Korea was another market until early 1987. In many markets the Mighty (after-Fordson Model TT (1917-1925), Fordson Model TT (1925-1927), Fordson Model AA (1927-1929), Fordson Model AA (1930-1931), Fordson Model BB, Fordson BBE, Fordson Thames 7V, Fordson Thames ET6/ET7, Thames Trader FC Mk1, Thames Trader FC Mk2, Ford D-series (1965-1978), and Hyundai Bison) was very expensive and was replaced by the Hyundai Truck when that model became available in 1987 to 1998.
The overseas was another important market for the Mighty - to the extent that it was manufactured there from the 1980s using many local components.
In Europe, Mid-East, Africa, South America, its principal competitors are Kia Titan, Kia Trade, Kia Frontier.
Models[]
- Hyundai Mighty 1st Generation:Mitsubishi Fuso design, Platform and Rebadged in Mitsubishi Fuso Canter, Manufacture period: 1987-1994
- Hyundai Mighty 2nd Generation:Hyundai & Mitsubishi Fuso design, Manufacture period: 1994-1998
- Standard Cab Low Long Cargo (2.5t)
- Standard Cab Shot Cargo (2.5t)
- Standard Cab Long Cargo (2.5t, 3.5t)
- Double Crew Cab Long Cargo (2.5t)
- Standard Cab Shot Dump (2.5t, 3.5t)
See also[]
This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Hyundai Mighty. 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 |
|