Tianjin FAW Toyota Motor Co., Ltd. (30%) Tom Group(24%) Tianjin Tom Mitsubishi Fuso (36%) Mitsubishi Motors (42%) Mitsubishi Fuso Truck And Bus Corporation (50%).[2]
Tianjin FAW (officially Tianjin FAW Xiali Automobile Co., Ltd.) was an automobile company based in
Tianjin,
China and a subsidiary of
FAW Group. Its principal activity was the design, development, manufacture and distribution of automobiles sold under the Xiali, Vita and Junpai marques. It was listed on the
Shenzhen Stock Exchange.
Tianjin FAW was founded in 1965 and was originally considered one of the "three smalls" of the Chinese automotive industry, together with
Guangzhou Honda and
Beijing.[3] Tianjin FAW moved into third place in the Chinese market in 1997.[4] By 2000 they were in second place, in spite of the low quality of their products.[5] Production volumes were high due to the fact that many towns used Xiali cars as taxicabs. Many of the smaller towns in rural China had Xiali cars as taxicabs well into the second decade of the twenty-first century. Xiali parts were cheap and it was one of the cheapest cars to run in China. Due to their low running costs, Xiali cars in many towns survived as unofficial "black" taxies till well after they were replaced by other cars as legal taxies. Tianjin FAW subsequently lost market share to several new Chinese automobile manufacturers.
Amidst declining sales, the listed Tianjin FAW unit was dissolved, and its remaining assets, liabilities and employees were absorbed into various
FAW Group units.[6] The listed shell company was transferred for no consideration to
China Railway Materials to facilitate the
backdoor listing of one of its units.
Tianjin FAW operated a joint venture with
Toyota, Tianjin FAW Toyota Motor Co., Ltd., which, now under
FAW Group, produces Toyota passenger cars for the Chinese market including the
Avalon,
Corolla,
Crown,
Reiz and
Vios.[2]
History
Tianjin FAW's first product, debuting in 1965, was a copy of the famous
Beijing Jeep called the Tianjin TJ210. Between 1973 and 1979 the Toyota look-alike Tianjin TJ740 was also built, although only 63 were finished.
In the 1980s, Tianjin's directors decided to look abroad for a joint venture to enable them to build modern small cars. In 1983,
Daihatsu had been chosen as a partner, and in November 1984 the first vehicle rolled out from the works. At first, local parts content was a mere 8%, but this had jumped to 85% by the end of 1987. The first product was a locally built
Daihatsu Hijet in 1984, followed by the
Charade which began local assembly in 1986.[3]
Production began at a modest level, with 2873 automobiles (Charade) and 9329 minivans (Hijet) assembled in 1988, for a total of 12,202 vehicles. This increased rapidly, to an annual total of nearly 88,000 cars by 1996.[7]
Before the Toyota joint venture, Tianjin FAW produced the Tianjin Xiali TJ730 (based on the 1983
Daihatsu Charade) and then the TJ7100-TJ7131 hatchback and TJ7100U-TJ7131U sedan under the Xiali brand that was formed in August 1997. Xiali (夏利) is Chinese for "Charade". The TJ7100-series cars, based on the 1987 Charade. They were very popular in China as taxicabs throughout the 1980s and in the 1990s, the Chinese Volkswagen Jetta joined the taxi market followed by the
Hyundai Sonata and
Elantra in the 2000s. The Xiali taxi was retired from the taxi market in February 2006 in an effort to cut down pollution.
Production of the Daihatsu-based Xiali N3 ran from 2004 to 2012. Production at the Tianjin Xiali plant had shifted to more modern Toyota vehicles, for example the Xiali 2000 that was based on the Toyota
Platz/Vitz but the production of the much cheaper Xiali outlived the Xiali 2000. Toyota also builds and sells vehicles in China under its own brand.
The Xiali brand was discontinued in 2015 and was replaced by the new brand called Junpai.
From 1984 to 2002, Tianjin FAW manufactured
Hijet-based Daihatsu mini trucks in China rebranded as
Huali Dafa.[9] Currently Huali offers the first generation
Daihatsu Terios and second generation
Daihatsu Move.
FAW Tianjin also produced the
Miles ZX40, an electric version of the
Daihatsu Move which became the first Chinese-built vehicle sold in the United States when it was offered in mid-2006 by
Miles Automotive Group.
1984–2002:
Huali Dafa, a locally produced Daihatsu Hijet originally known as the Tianjin TJ110. Was used as a popular taxicab. Available with the 843 cc CD engine and 4-speed manual gearbox.
1997.12–1999:
Xiali TJ 7100 A, a facelifted TJ 7100 hatchback
1999–2007:
Xiali TJ 7101/TJ 7131, new name for the TJ 7100 A hatchback. Available with a 1.0 and 1.3 litre engine
1999–2003:
Xiali TJ 7101 L/TJ 7131 L, a TJ 7101 hatchback lengthened by 8 cm. Available with a 1.0 and 1.3 litre engine
2003.05–2011:
Xiali A Junya (Junior) (TJ 7101 A-TJ 7141 A), a slightly facelifted version of the existing hatchback range, new bumpers and some new engine options. 1,425 cc version since June 2005. Facelifted in March 2006, this and the Shenya were known as the "A+" until 2011[12][13][14]
1999–2004:
Xiali TJ 7101 UAL/TJ 7131 UAL, a Xiali TJ 7100 UA/TJ 7130 UA sedan lengthened by 8 cm. Available with a 1.1 and 1.3 litre engine
2001–2006:
Xiali TJ 7101 U/TJ 7131 U, new name for the TJ 7101 UA sedan. Available with a 1.0 and 1.3 litre engine[17]
2003.05–2011:
Xiali A Shenya (Senior) (TJ 7101 AU-TJ 7141 AU), a slightly facelifted version of the existing sedan range released in May 2003 with new bumpers and some new engine options. 1,425 cc version since June 2005. Facelifted in March 2006, renamed as the A+ and remained in production until 2011[12][13][14]
2004.08–2012:
Xiali N3 (B series) TJ 7101 B-TJ 7131 BU, hatchbacks and sedans based on facelifted Xiali A series, with its origins in the
Xiali N3, an updated sedan based on the previous Xiali series. This car was available in Mexico known as the F1 and was sold from 2008 to 2010. The N3 was facelifted in March 2008 and named as the N3+.[22][23][24]
2006.10–2011:
Weizhi C1 (CA 7130 /CA 7140), an independent development also marketed as the
FAW Vita launched in October 2006.[25] The car is available with the
5A-FE and
8A-FE engines from Toyota.[26]
2009.11–2014:
Xiali N5 (TJ 7103 UE/TJ 7133 UE), a sedan based on the Xiali N3
2010–2012:
Weizhi V2 (TJ 7137 E4S), a hatchback with a 1.3 litre engine.
2012–2015:
Weizhi V5 (CA 7150 BUE), a facelifted Weizhi C1.
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abKomura, Chikara (2000). Hamada, Kōichi; Matsushita, Mitsuo; Kōmura, Chikara (eds.).
"Policies towards automobile industries in Southeast Asia". Dreams and Dilemmas: Economic Friction and Dispute Resolution in the Asia-Pacific. Singapore: Seikei University Center for Asian and Pacific Studies, Japan: 187.
ISBN981-230-069-4.