Mazda-Go
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The Mazda-Go (Japanese: マツダ号) is a three-wheeled truck that was first produced in 1931, being the first vehicle manufactured by Mazda. It has also been considered to be the first auto rickshaw built, although the Daihatsu HB debuted in the same year.
DesignEdit
Resembling a motorcycle with an open wagon or truck bed, the Mazda-Go is steered using handlebars and powered by an air-cooled single-cylinder engine. The in-house-developed engine displaced Template:Convert and produced Template:Convert, powering the rear wheels through a three-speed transmission. Notable refinements included a rear differential and a reverse gear.<ref name="MZhist">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The original model was designated the DA, with the "Mazda-Go" brand name being used to sell it and subsequent generations. A more powerful version called the DB soon appeared, followed by a number of other Mazda-Go models like the DC and the heavier-duty KC.<ref name="MZhist" />
The last version to appear before World War II was the 1938 GA, which re-entered production in December 1945 as Mazda's first post-war product.<ref name="mzdaa">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The GA has a Template:Convert single-cylinder sidevalve engine producing Template:Convert and a maximum cargo load of Template:Convert, while it itself weighs Template:Convert.<ref name="fuku">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
HistoryEdit
The Mazda-Go entered the market on 3 October 1931. Development had begun in 1929, a year after Mazda's first trial production run of motorcycles.<ref name="Globe">Template:Citation</ref> After a July 1931 agreement, the Mazda-Go was sold by the Mitsubishi zaibatsu in Japan and later on in export markets as well. Mitsubishi retained the distribution rights in Japan until August 1936 and for export sales until December 1937.
Over the years, the Mazda-Go range would be produced in different variants, spawning other similar designs such as the HopeStar SM and Daihatsu Midget. It was replaced in the post-war era by a new range of three-wheeled Mazda trucks, including the K360 and the T2000.
ReferencesEdit
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