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In February 1996, Suzuki introduced the Cultus Crescent Wagon, Suzuki's first station wagon (excluding kei cars). In May 1998, the base Cultus/Swift was renamed "Cultus M Series" in Japan, and Suzuki consequently dropped the "Crescent" name on the larger model, which was now simply called Cultus, and received new front end styling.
2021 India and other emerging markets City car (A-segment) hatchback. Marketed as the Cultus in Pakistan. Ignis: 2000 2016 Global Crossover-styled city car (A-segment).: S-Presso
Suzuki restyled the Cultus Crescent and renamed it Cultus (for the Japanese market only) in mid-1998. In this year, both India and Pakistan started producing Baleno in their countries. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] Unique for Pakistan, Baleno was produced with pre-facelift front end (but facelifted in 2002 [ 6 ] ), only available as a sedan and powered with 1.3 ...
The first generation Cultus was sold in Pakistan as Suzuki Khyber, by Pak Suzuki assembly line, and produced between 1989 and 2000, only in GA trim level. It was equipped with a four-stroke engine based on G10A platform matted to a five-speed manual gearbox.
The two companies formed Chongqing Changan Suzuki Automobile Co in 1993, [33] which built licensed versions of the Suzuki Alto, Suzuki Cultus, and more recently the Swift. In parallel with its Suzuki joint venture, Changan also continued to build small trucks and vans for commercial use based on the 1999 Suzuki Carry license, but independently ...
An international arbitration court ordered Volkswagen to sell the stake back to Suzuki. ... was the 2nd generation Suzuki Cultus. The Swift was available as a GTi and ...
The petrol engine is a Suzuki K-series K10B latest revision called K-Next (not same as Wagon R K10B, because Wagon R has compression ratio of 10:1 while Celerio/Cultus has 11:1). [ 8 ] [ 9 ] The gearbox is basically a manual transmission with a transmission control unit (TCU) that actuates the hydraulics to shift the gears.
The Suzuki Mehran is a rebadged version of the second-generation Suzuki Alto CA/CC71, manufactured by Pak Suzuki Motors. It was introduced as the successor to the classic Suzuki FX, a rebadged First Generation Suzuki Alto (SS80S). Upon its introduction to the Pakistani market in 1989, the Suzuki Mehran had a retail price of PKR.90,000.