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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 ]
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]
At the front, Suzuki revised the bumper's airdam, and inside, the interior was substantially re-designed. [24] In the Japanese market, the Cultus Esteem's carburetted 1.6-liter engine was replaced by a single-point fuel injection 1.5-liter G15A engine with 91 PS (90 hp; 67 kW), to fit a lower tax category. [25]
This was Suzuki's first station wagon (excluding kei cars), also with the same 1.6-litre, which also received the optional four-wheel drive in the wagon. In Europe, the 1.5-litre engine was not available for sale. The 1.8-litre engines was exclusively fitted to GTX sport model and was rated at 121 PS (119 hp; 89 kW) . [5]
Suzuki's Concept S2 previews design concepts for the second generation Swift at the 2003 Osaka Auto Messe. SMAC opens Suzuki's only U.S. manufacturing facility in Rome, Georgia and begins producing the Eiger series of ATVs. [137] [138] [139] 2003: Suzuki is No.1 in Kei car sales for the 30th consecutive year in Japan. [140]
The Suzuki Hustler (Japanese: スズキ・ハスラー, Suzuki Hasurā) is a crossover SUV-styled kei car produced by the Japanese automaker Suzuki since 2014. [2] The car is also sold by Mazda as the Mazda Flair Crossover ( Japanese: マツダ・フレアクロスオーバー , Matsuda Furea Kurosuōbā ) through an OEM agreement.
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 ...
1963–1969 – Suzuki FE/FE2 engine – air-cooled 359 cc, FF applications; 1972–1976 – Suzuki L50 engine – water-cooled 359 cc; 1974–1976 ...