[custom_adv] The Paykan between 1967 and 2005. The car was very popular in from its introduction until its discontinuation. It is often colloquially referred as the Iranian chariot. [custom_adv] The Paykan was a Hillman Hunter built under license, but had some unique body work and locally-developed variants (most notably, the pickup, which used a different body shell from the one sold elsewhere). [custom_adv] The design was introduced to by Mahmoud Khayami, co-founder and, by then, owner of the Khodro (formerly called "National") company and factory, who accurately predicted that was in need of a simple "no-frills" automobile within the price range of ordinary people. [custom_adv] In 1967, Rootes began exporting Hillman Hunters to Khodro in "complete knock down" (CKD) kit form, for assembly. By the mid-1970s, full-scale manufacturing of the car (minus the engine) had started. [custom_adv] In 1978, Peugeot took over the Rootes company after it collapsed under the ownership of Chrysler Europe; a year later, Peugeot ended Hillman Hunter production in Ireland. Following this, the Paykan's engine production tooling was moved to and was in full-scale manufacturing under Peugeot license. This ended in 2005 with the final Paykan leaving the assembly line. [custom_adv] Irankhodro tried to replace Paykan with a so called "New Paykan" but Peugeot did not agree with the naming. This revealed the fact that the intellectual ownership of the Paykan brand and logo still belongs to the PSA (Peugeot Société Anonyme) as a legacy of the demise of Rootes group. [custom_adv] In 1977, Roy Axe designed a new Paykan facelift model using many interior and exterior parts from the Chrysler Alpine.