Manufacturer | Mitsubishi Fuso |
---|---|
Production | 1982-present |
Class | Rear wheel drive vehicles |
Body style(s) | Bus |
Engine(s) | 8DC8, 8DC9, 8DC10, 8DC11, 8M20, 6M70 |
Transmission(s) |
6-speed manual INOMAT 6-speed automatic |
Wheelbase | 6.5 meter (MS7), 6.15 meter(MS8), 6.0 meter(PJ-MS86 and MS9) |
Fuel capacity | 400 liter |
The Mitsubishi Fuso Aero Bus (kana:三菱ふそう・エアロバス) is a series of heavy-duty tourist coach by Mitsubishi Fuso.
In Japan, Asia-Pacific, Mid-East, Africa, South America, its principal competitors are Isuzu Gala, Nissan Diesel Space Arrow, Hino S'elega.
Fuso tourist buses (predecessors of Aero Bus)
Aero Bus/Aero Queen
Aero Bus/Super Aero (MS)
Aero Queen W (MU)
Chassies based Aero King, 8DC9T engine equipped ("T"=turbocharged, maximum output: 380PS).
- P-MU525TA (1985)
- U-MU525TA (1990)
Aero Queen M/MV (MS)
8DC11 Engine equipped.
- P-MS729S (1988)
- U-MS729S (1990)
New Aero Bus/New Aero Queen
- U-MS821/826 (1992)
- 8M20 Engine equipped, and wheelbase reduced to 6.15 meter.
- Jake brake equipped (named "Powertard", except low-end model)
- KC-MS822/829 (1995)
- 8M21 Engine equipped.
- Front bumper design changed (Aero Bus and Queen-I).
- KL-MS86 (2000)
- All model equipped wedge air-brake and driver's airbag.
- HID headlight equipped.
- PJ-MS86 (2005)
- Engine changed to 6M70 (turbocharged), and wheelbase reduced to 6.0 meter.
- Queen-II and -III deleted from line-up.
- Tail light design changed (minor).
Aero Ace/Aero Queen
- BKG-MS96JP (2007)
- Urea selective catalytic reduction system equipped. (AdBlue needed)
Model lineup
- Aero Ace 12m (Hi-decker)
- Aero Queen 12m (Super hi-decker)
Logistical lineup
- Hi-decker
- Aero Queen I:12m
- Aero Queen II:12m
- Aero Queen III:12m
- Super hi-decker
- Aero Bus MS EX:12m
- Aero Bus MS SA:12m
- Aero Bus MS SX:12m
- Aero Bus MS SD:12m
- Aero Bus MS EX:11m
- Aero Bus MS SX:11m
- Aero Bus MS SD:11m
- Aero Bus MM EX:9m
- Aero Bus MM SD:9m
See also
- Mitsubishi Fuso Truck & Bus Corporation
- Mitsubishi Fuso Aero King - Double-decker coach
External links
This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Mitsubishi Fuso Aero Bus. 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 |
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