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− | '''Hyundai Grandeur (L). 1986–92 (prod. n/a). 4-door sedan. F/F, 1997, 2351 cm³ (I4 OHC), 2972 cm³ (V6 OHC).''' Hyundai version of the [[Mitsubishi Debonair V]], announced at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, and replacing the locally built version of the [[Ford Granada Mk II]]. Successful, especially with fighting back against the [[Daewoo Royale]], which had been doing well against the Granada. V6 added 1989, along with a revised rear-light cluster. | + | '''Hyundai Grandeur (L). 1986–92 (prod. 122,074). 4-door sedan. F/F, 1997, 2351 cm³ (I4 OHC), 2972 cm³ (V6 OHC).''' Hyundai version of the [[Mitsubishi Debonair V]], announced at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, and replacing the locally built version of the [[Ford Granada Mk II]]. Successful, with fighting back against the [[Daewoo Royale]], which had been doing well against the Granada. V6 added 1989, along with a revised rear-light cluster. ABS from 1991. |
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Revision as of 12:56, 23 July 2021
Hyundai Grandeur (L). 1986–92 (prod. 122,074). 4-door sedan. F/F, 1997, 2351 cm³ (I4 OHC), 2972 cm³ (V6 OHC). Hyundai version of the Mitsubishi Debonair V, announced at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, and replacing the locally built version of the Ford Granada Mk II. Successful, with fighting back against the Daewoo Royale, which had been doing well against the Granada. V6 added 1989, along with a revised rear-light cluster. ABS from 1991.
Manufacturing location: Ulsan, Korea
Marque: Hyundai | Model: Hyundai Grandeur | Predecessor: Ford Granada Mk II | Successor: Hyundai Grandeur (LX)