Everus S1

The Everus S1 is a subcompact sedan by Everus,[3] and also the first car of the Everus brand available for sale.

Everus S1
2011–2012 Everus S1 (pre-facelift)
Overview
ManufacturerEverus (Honda)
Production2011–2014
AssemblyChina: Huangpu, Guangzhou (Guangqi Honda)
Body and chassis
ClassSubcompact car (B)
Body style4-door sedan
LayoutFront-engine, front-wheel-drive layout
RelatedHonda City (fourth generation)
Powertrain
Engine1.3 L I4
1.5 L L15A1 I4[1]
Transmission5-speed manual
5-speed automatic[2]
Dimensions
Wheelbase2,450 mm (96 in)
Length4,420 mm (174 in) (2011–2012)
4,460 mm (176 in) (2013–2014)
Width1,690 mm (67 in)
Height1,495 mm (58.9 in) (2011–2012, 2014)
1,505 mm (59.3 in) (2013)

Overview

Debuted as a concept during the 2010 Guangzhou Auto Show,[4] the Everus S1 is a badge-engineered fourth-generation Honda City/Jazz saloon and as the production version debuted during the 2011 Shanghai Auto Show,[5] the Everus S1 also went on sale in April 2011.[6] It is 4,420mm long and is available with a 1.3 L i-DSi or 1.5 L VTEC L-series petrol engine.[7] It is paired with a 5-speed manual or a 5-speed automatic. Initial planning for the price was 20% lower than the price of the Honda City at the time,[8] which is from 69,800 yuan to 99,800 yuan.[9] A facelift was revealed in 2013 during the Shanghai Auto Show,[10] and sales of the facelifted model started in May 2013.[11] It then concluded production in 2014 selling around 4,500 units. With the Everus, Honda became the first foreign automaker to develop vehicles under a brand owned by its local joint venture automaker in China.

gollark: Well, I don't, because:- things may default to HTTP, and redirecting them is good- if the user wants anything before TLS 1.2, they're wrong
gollark: My website is configured to only accept TLSv1.2 and 1.3 ~~as part of a conspiracy by computer companies selling newer hardware to run newer OSes~~ for security.
gollark: HTTPS good, however? Without it, our communications would probably all be harvested by the NSA. Thanks to HTTPS, slightly fewer are and/or it's harder.
gollark: I don't think Java has an equivalent to statically linking builtins.
gollark: It should, but mola appears to have *not* done that.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.