Mitsubishi Model A
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Mitsubishi Model A | |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Mitsubishi Shipbuilding Co., Ltd. |
Production | 1917–21 |
Assembly | Kobe |
Body style(s) | 4-door sedan |
Engine(s) | 2765 cc straight-4 |
Wheelbase | 2640 mm (103.9 in) |
Length | 3830 mm (150.8 in) |
Width | 1620 mm (63.8 in) |
Height | 2070 mm (81.5 in) |
Curb weight | 1315 kg (2899 lb) |
Fuel capacity | 30 L (6.6 Imp. gallons) (7.9 U.S. gal) |
The Mitsubishi Model A was the only car built by Mitsubishi Shipbuilding Co., Ltd., a member of the Mitsubishi keiretsu which would eventually evolve into Mitsubishi Motors, and the first series production automobile manufactured in Japan. It was the brainchild of Koyata Iwasaki, the Mitsubishi's fourth president and the nephew of founder Yataro Iwasaki, who foresaw the vast potential of motorized vehicles and the role they would play in the economic development of Japan. Envisioned as a luxury vehicle for high echelon government officials and top executives, the Model A had to be reliable, comfortable and a showcase of Japanese craftsmanship.
Based on the Fiat Tipo 3, it was a four-door seven-seat sedan powered by a front-mounted 26 kW (35 hp) 2.8 L straight-4 engine driving the rear wheels, and was capable of speeds up to 20 mph (32 km/h). 22 were built at the company's Kobe shipyard, including prototypes, between 1917 and 1921.
Because it was expensive to produce — it was built entirely by hand, with a cab made of lacquered white cypress — it could not compete with cheaper American and European competition, and Mitsubishi halted production after four years. Concentrating instead on its successful Fuso commercial vehicles, the Model A would be the company's last passenger car until the Mitsubishi 500 of 1960.
At Mitsubishi's Auto Gallery (a museum of the company's most historically significant vehicles, established at their R&D Center in Okazaki in 1989) there is a replica on display, assembled in 1972 using materials of the time. It has a slightly shorter wheelbase, and uses a water-cooled 977 cc four-cylinder OHV engine instead of the larger 2.8 L original.
[edit] References and external links
- Mitsubishi Motors Web Museum
- Model A replica at Mitsubishi Auto Gallery
- Mitsubishi Model A specifications at Carfolio.com (these differ slightly from Mitsubishi's own figures)
- "The Greatest Japanese Cars Of All Time", Michael Frank, Forbes.com, 23 April 2001