Weiwang M50F

The Weiwang M50F is a MPV produced by Weiwang, a sub-brand of BAIC.

Weiwang M50F
Overview
ManufacturerBAIC Group
Also calledWeiwang M60
Production2016present
Body and chassis
ClassMulti Purpose Vehicle (M)
Body style5-door van
LayoutMid-engine Rear wheel drive
Powertrain
Engine1.3L turbo I4
1.5L I4
1.5L turbo I4
Transmission5 speed manual
CVT
Dimensions
Wheelbase2,760 mm (108.7 in) (M50F)
Length4,724 mm (186.0 in) (M50F)
4,800 mm (189.0 in) (M60)
Width1,796 mm (70.7 in) (M50F)
1,824 mm (71.8 in) (M60)
Height1,718 mm (67.6 in)1,755 mm (69.1 in) (M50F)
1,718 mm (67.6 in)1,725 mm (67.9 in) (M60)
Curb weight1,445 kg (3,186 lb)1,465 kg (3,230 lb) (M50F)
1,445 kg (3,186 lb) (M60)

Overview

Weiwang M50F rear

The Beijing Auto Weiwang M50F was launched in November 2016 with a 7-seat 2/2/3 configuration.[1] Weiwang is a brand under the Beiqi Yinxiang Automobile, a joint venture between Beijing Auto (Beiqi) and the Yinxiang Motorcycle Group from Chongqing. This joint venture also sells the Huansu brand and the Weiwang M50F is based on the same platform as the Huansu H3.[2]

Weiwang M60

The Weiwang M60 is the more premium and crossover version of the regular Weiwang M50F featuring plastic claddings around the wheel arches, a redesigned front bumper with grilles inspired by the Lexus spindle grilles and a slightly redesigned rear bumper. The Weiwang M60 was also sold as the Changhe Freedom M60 under the Changhe brand of BAIC.

gollark: And my idea for how the buying/selling would work is that you'd create a "sell order" if you wanted to sell it, and set a price, and your share would be sold as soon as anyone created a "buy order" with that price or a higher one.
gollark: The auctioning could be done with a Vickrey auction, which apparently "gives bidders an incentive to bid their true value", which seems like a good property.
gollark: My suggested way for it to work has always been having meme shares pay dividends (based on upvotes, maybe every hour or after a fixed time or something), giving the creator some of the shares, and selling the others to "the market" (maybe via some sort of short auction mechanism?), then just letting everyone trade them freely until they pay out.
gollark: Investing is a losing proposition, or at least a breaking-even-usually one, sooo...
gollark: Yep!

References

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