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April 13, 2004 YANMAR Co., Ltd.
Yanmar Co., Ltd.'s domestic production of air-cooled diesel engines reached
an aggregate grand total of one million units on April 13, 2004.
Yanmar has been a pioneer of compact, lightweight diesel engines ever since
its first compact model was marketed in 1933. The compact air-cooled A Engine
arrived in 1957. Yanmar had no air-cooled models for a brief period after A
production stopped, but then came the L Series in 1983, which was comparable in
size and weight to a gasoline engine. The L gave way to the versatile L-A, which
is now active in fields from agricultural equipment to generators, refrigeration
units for cool containers and motive power for micro-cars in Japan, Europe,
America and around the world.
In 1993, the L70A was the world?s first direct injection diesel engine to
clear the CARB emissions regulations of California. Yanmar?s air-cooled diesel
engines are recognized as environmental leaders worldwide, having satisfied all
the major standards.
The production of air-cooled diesel engines is now being centralized at
Yanmar Italy under Yanmar?s ongoing business restructuring plan, excluding some
units made to Japanese domestic specifications. Preparations are also moving
forward strongly to satisfy the U.S. EPA Tier 2 regulations that are scheduled
to start in 2005.
Production Totals by Series
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Total (units) |
Production Period |
A Series |
40,071 |
1957-71 |
L Series |
225,100 |
1983-89 |
L Series |
34,829 |
1989-present |
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