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The Suzuki S-Presso is a city car produced by Maruti Suzuki, Suzuki's subsidiary in India since 2019. It slots above the Alto and below the Wagon R in the Indian market. The car is marketed as a "micro SUV" or a "mini crossover" by its rugged styling and high ground clearance of 180 mm (7.1 in). [2]
S-Presso: 2019 2019 India and other emerging markets Crossover-styled entry-level city car manufactured by Maruti Suzuki in India. Swift: 1984 (nameplate introduction) 2004 2023 Global Subcompact (B-segment) hatchback. Wagon R: 1999 2010
Suzuki S-Presso The Suzuki Karimun is a nameplate of city cars produced by the Japanese automaker Suzuki and marketed in Indonesia between September 1999 and 2021 by Suzuki Indomobil Motor , an Indonesian subsidiary of Suzuki.
The Suzuki K engine family is a series of automobile engines from Suzuki, introduced in 1994. Displacements range from 0.7 L to 1.5 L. Displacements range from 0.7 L to 1.5 L. All engines have aluminium cylinder blocks with three or four cylinders in-line.
As of April 2022, India's auto industry is worth more than US$100 billion and accounts for 8% of the country's total exports and 7.1% of India's GDP. [5] According to the 2021 National Family Health Survey, 60% of Indian households own an automobile. [6] [7] According to government statistics, India has barely 400 automobiles per 1,000 people.
Six years later Suzuki built a manufacturing facility, which is the oldest part of the Indomobil Group. Suzuki's first product was the ST20 Carry (introduced in 1978), which saw extensive use as an Angkot. [2] Nicknamed "Turungtung" (an onomatopoetic word for the sound made by the Carry's two-stroke engine), it was built until at least 1983. [3]
1963–1969 – Suzuki FE/FE2 engine – air-cooled 359 cc, FF applications; 1972–1976 – Suzuki L50 engine – water-cooled 359 cc; 1974–1976 ...
The Suzuki XL6 in India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan and Africa, Suzuki XL7 elsewhere and the Suzuki Ertiga XL7 in Mexico, is a crossover-inspired derivative of the second-generation Ertiga. Its development was led by chief engineer Masayuki Ishiwata. [72] According to Suzuki, the XL6/XL7 has over 200 component differences from the regular Ertiga ...