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The 2001 model Suzuki Grand Vitara comes standard as a 2.0-litre 4WD vehicle in New Zealand. This generation was also assembled in Argentina by General Motors in Alvear, Santa Fe from 2000 to 2005 along with the Chevrolet version for several countries in South American market. [21] In the Philippines, the Grand Vitara (FT) replaced the aging ET ...
Pontiac Sunrunner – Canada (Suzuki Sidekick/Vitara) Vauxhall Agila – United Kingdom (Suzuki Wagon R+ and Suzuki Splash) Vauxhall Rascal – United Kingdom (Suzuki Carry) Isuzu. Isuzu Geminett – Japan (Suzuki Cultus) Maruti. All Maruti models since the Esteem [citation needed] are referred as Maruti Suzuki. Maruti 800 – India (Suzuki Alto)
The Grand Vitara followed later on 20 July. The vehicle was developed by Suzuki using the Global C platform shared with the SX4 S-Cross and the Vitara. Production of both models started in August 2022 at Toyota Kirloskar Motor's second plant in Bidadi, while sales began in India in September. [9]
The first-generation Grand Vitara XL-7 or just XL-7 was a Suzuki design, had a body-on-frame construction, and was essentially a stretched Grand Vitara. The North American version had a Suzuki-designed 2.5- or 2.7-liter V6 engine, on a rear-wheel drive-based platform with optional four-wheel drive.
Aisin 03-72LS — 4-speed longitudinal (Suzuki Grand Vitara 5-door) Aisin TB-50LS — 5-speed longitudinal (Suzuki Grand Vitara 3.2 V6 5-door, Isuzu MU-X 2.5), also known as Toyota A750F; 450-43LE — 4-speed longitudinal (Isuzu NPR Cab-Over Truck) [3] AW-4 (Similar to the A340H) 4-speed longitudinal 1987–2001 Jeep Cherokee; 1993 Jeep Grand ...
This is a list of vehicles that have been considered to be the result of badge engineering (), cloning, platform sharing, joint ventures between different car manufacturing companies, captive imports, or simply the practice of selling the same or similar cars in different markets (or even side-by-side in the same market) under different marques or model nameplates.
The Sidekick was replaced by the Vitara and the Grand Vitara for 1999. The Grand Vitara would be Suzuki's first model with a V6-cylinder engine and available 4-wheel ABS brakes. The XL-7 was introduced in 1998 as a stretched version of the Grand Vitara. The XL-7 had a larger 2.7 liter V6-cylinder engine and 3-row seating.
In 1999, the Sidekick was discontinued, and a second generation Tracker was introduced, differing from the Sidekick's successor, the Grand Vitara. A Suzuki version of this North American-exclusive Tracker was sold in the North American market as a Suzuki Vitara, which is shorter than the Grand Vitara. In Mexico, the second-generation Tracker ...