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Dongfeng Motor Group official website Dongfeng Motor Corporation Limited is a significant backbone of China's automotive industry Its predecessor, the Second Automobile Manufacturing Plant, was established in 1969
Dongfeng Motor Corporation - Wikipedia The company develops and markets vehicles under its own branding, such as M-Hero, Voyah, Aeolus, Nammi, Forthing, as well as under foreign-branded joint ventures such as Dongfeng Honda, Dongfeng Nissan and Dongfeng Peugeot-Citroën (all via subsidiary Dongfeng Motor Group)
Chinas Dongfeng Motor soars 69% on restructuring plans . . . Shares of China's Dongfeng Motor Group skyrocketed after its parent company announced on Friday plans to take the automaker private The Wuhan-based company is also preparing to spin off and list
Dongfengs new solid-state battery promises 1,000-kilometer . . . Chinese automaker Dongfeng plans to mass-produce a 350 Wh kg solid-state battery by September 2026, promising to deliver {{1,000-km}} range EVs that can add {{450 km}} of charge in just five minutes
Dongfeng Motor Corporation: The Backbone of China’s . . . Dongfeng Motor Corporation (DFMC), one of China’s “Big Four” automotive giants, traces its roots to 1969 when it was established as the Second Automobile Works (SAW) in Shiyan, Hubei Province
Dongfeng (missile) - Wikipedia Dongfeng 1 (SS-2) The first of the Dongfeng missiles, the DF-1, was a licensed copy of the Soviet R-2 (SS-2 Sibling) short-range ballistic missile (SRBM), based on the German V-2 rocket [1] In November 1960, the Chinese launched their first ballistic missile, which was a DF-1 fitted with a dummy warhead