Dongfanghong BJ760
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The Dongfanghong BJ760 () is an executive sedan produced by BAW. Development started as a licensed copy of the GAZ-21 Volga with assistance from the Soviets sharing chassis units, drawings and blueprints for reference, and was produced from 1960 to 1969 with a total of 238 units produced. It replaced the Jinggangshan sedan by BAW. During development, the car was named Xinghuo 76 (Spark 76), but was later changed to Dongfanghong for the production version. The name Dongfanghong means " The East is Red" and refers to a patriotic song of the Chinese Communist Party. The name has been used by multiple companies for branding and product names.


History

In 1958, the
Great Leap Forward The Great Leap Forward was an industrialization campaign within China from 1958 to 1962, led by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Party Chairman Mao Zedong launched the campaign to transform the country from an agrarian society into an indu ...
campaign began in China, the goal of which was to catch up with China's lagging behind Western countries. The consequences of this initiative also affected the automotive sector and since 1958, several Chinese factories began to produce passenger cars with the most well-known being the Dongfanghong BJ760 (based on the GAZ-21), Dongfeng CA71 (based on the Simca Vedette),
Hongqi CA72 The Hongqi CA72 is an automobile produced by FAW Hongqi. It was the company's first production automobile and the first representative sedan that was constructed and built in China. Produced from 1959 until 1965, the CA72 was only available to s ...
(based on the ZiL-111) and the mass-produced
Shanghai SH760 The Shanghai SH760 is a car produced in China from 1965 to 1991 primarily for government officials not important enough to warrant a FAW Hongqi and as a taxi. The design was based on the Mercedes-Benz 220S (W180) from 1954, with modified front a ...
. A lot of the models were built based on Soviet vehicles and the design of the Dongfanghong BJ760 is similar to the Soviet
GAZ-21 The GAZ M21 Volga is an automobile produced in the Soviet Union by GAZ (Gorkovsky Avtomobilniy Zavod, in English "Gorky automobile factory") from 1956 to 1970. The first car to carry the Volga name, it was developed in the early 1950s. Volgas w ...
in general yet distinctive with minor redesigns around the body. In November 1959, the State Council of China tasked the factory with imitating the Soviet GAZ-21, and provided a real car as an example, in the early 1960s, a group of five Soviet experts arrived at the factory with a set of car drawings, and then in April of the same year, the plant assembled the first three samples of the redesigned prototype, which passed 25,000 km of road tests by May 1965. At the end of 1966, the plant received an annual plan for the production of 600 cars, but at that time the deterioration of Sino-Soviet relations began, and by the time of the 106th unit, an order was received from the chairman of the Beijing Revolutionary Committee, Xie Fuzhi, to stop production in order "to prevent the bourgeois way of life." Technical support from the USSR was curtailed, but small scale production continued until the end of 1969. In total, 238 units were produced, although some sources state 600 units of the BJ760 were built.


Powertrain

The engine of the Dongfanghong BJ760 was shared with the Soviet GAZ-21 Volga which is a four-cylinder petrol engine producing about and , developed and manufactured by the Soviet Zavolzhye Motorni Zavod (ZMZ, Zavolzhye Engine Factory) and was mated to a four-speed manual transmission. The top speed of the Dongfanghong BJ769 is . Later on in the 1960's, BAW started to manufacture this engine in factories located in Beijing and in Tianjin, where it was designated 492. The engine was later shared in many other BAW products, including the
Beijing BJ212 The Chinese Beijing Automobile Works, formerly Beijing Jeep, BJ212 ( zh, s=北京212) and BAW BJ2020 is a four-wheel drive, originally a 2.4 L (2445 cc) four-cylinder gas-engine powered (four-cylinder diesel engines were added in the ...
off-roader.


References


External links

{{commons category, Dongfanghong BJ760 BAW vehicles Cars introduced in 1960 Cars of China 1960s cars