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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 ...
Proton Ertiga – Malaysia (Suzuki Ertiga) Santana Motor. Santana 300/350 - Spain (Suzuki Grand Vitara) Subaru. Subaru Justy – Europe (Suzuki Swift and Suzuki Ignis) Toyota. Toyota Belta – India/Middle East/Africa (Suzuki Ciaz) Toyota Glanza – India (Suzuki Baleno) Toyota Starlet – Africa (Suzuki Baleno) Toyota Rumion – South Africa ...
The Suzuki Grand Vitara and Toyota Urban Cruiser Hyryder are subcompact crossover SUVs [4] developed by Suzuki and produced by Toyota in India since 2022. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] The Urban Cruiser Hyryder was released in July 2022 in India ahead of the Grand Vitara.
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.
1963–1969 – Suzuki FE/FE2 engine – air-cooled 359 cc, FF applications 1972–1976 – Suzuki L50 engine – water-cooled 359 cc 1974–1976 – Suzuki L60 engine – water-cooled 446 cc (export only)
Toyota Urban Cruiser (2020), a rebadged Suzuki Vitara Brezza marketed in India and Africa between 2020 and 2022; Toyota Urban Cruiser (2023), a rebadged Suzuki Grand Vitara marketed as the Urban Cruiser Hyryder in India since 2022, and as the Urban Cruiser in South Africa and the Middle East since 2023
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 the Philippines, General Motors introduced the Tracker in late 1999, sold alongside the related Suzuki Grand Vitara. Imported from Canada, it was powered by Suzuki's 2.0 L J20A four-cylinder engine coupled to a 4-speed automatic transmission.