Hafei, officially Hafei Motor Co., Ltd. (
Chinese: 哈飞汽车), is a Chinese automaker currently operating as a subsidiary of
Changan Ford, and manufacturing passenger vehicles.[2][3]
It previously independently manufactured sedans,
MPVs, mini vehicles, small trucks, and vans for commercial use.
History
Hafei centre in Chile
Hafei was formerly owned by
Aviation Industry Corporation of China.[4] The earliest Hafei products were
Suzuki Carry-based
microvans and trucks sold under the Songhuajiang brand, named after the
Songhua River, but by 2002 they were sold directly under the Hafei brand. Their vehicles have always carried the "HFJ" identity code, no matter the brand.[5]
As of 2009, the company had exported products to a total of 40 nations.[6]
In 2009 the
Chang'an Automobile Group purchased most Hafei-related assets[4] prompted by a
Chinese State policy aimed at consolidating the domestic automobile manufacturing industry.[7]
In 2015, Changan announced it would discontinue all Hafei production and convert existing lines to serve
Changan Ford.[8][2][3]
Production bases
Hafei has production facilities in Northern China.[9]
Historical Models
Hafei produced small cars and MPVs in addition to small trucks and commercial vans. These so-called
mini vehicles made up the majority of the Hafei model line. Many Hafei consumer offerings were designed by
Pininfarina.
Saima, a license-built
Mitsubishi Dingo is a small city car added to the Hafei product line in April 2001.[5][14]
Hafei Songhuajiang HFJ6350 (松花江), a license-built rebadged eighth generation
Suzuki Carry, This model had wide popularity in China during the 1990s.
Hafei Songhuajiang HFJ7080D/HFJ7130, a sedan rebadged from the Yulon Sunny 303. Assembling took place between 1992 and 1993 and was fitted with a 1.3 litre Mitsubishi engine.[15]