Suzuki 1.6 8 Valve Performance Build
There have been a few different motors used in these Suzuki vehicles. The smallest being a 1.3L inline 4 engine and was only found in some of the earliest 1989 models. Most of the early Suzukis had a 1.6 litre 8 valve SOHC engine. Eventually the optional 16 valve version of this motor replaced it's predecessor. There have been a few different motors used in these Suzuki vehicles. The smallest being a 1.3L inline 4 engine and was only found in some of the earliest 1989 models. Most of the early Suzukis had a 1.6 litre 8 valve SOHC engine. Eventually the optional 16 valve version of this motor replaced it's predecessor. Performance Engines & Parts Complete Machine Shop. Shop by Vendor. Online Specials. 1.6 Suzuki 8 Valve: Performance.
This is a list of automobile engines developed and sold by the Suzuki Motor Corporation. Suzuki is unusual in never having made a pushrod automobile engine, and in having depended on two-strokes for longer than most. Their first four-stroke engine was the SOHCF8A, which appeared in 1977. Suzuki continued to offer a two-stroke engine in an automotive application for a considerably longer time than any other Japanese manufacturer.
- 2Straight-threes
- 3Inline-fours
Straight-twins[edit]
Suzulight SF Series — 360.88 cc (22.022 cu in) air-cooled 2-stroke, 59 mm × 66 mm (2.32 in × 2.60 in) bore/stroke (downsleeved copy of Lloyd LP400 engine)
- 1955–1959 Suzulight SF
- 1959–1963 Suzulight 360TL / Van 360 (TL)
- 1962–1963 Suzulight FronteTLA
FB Series — 359 cc (21.9 cu in) 2-stroke, 61 mm × 61.5 mm (2.40 in × 2.42 in) bore/stroke. A reed valve system was introduced with the L40 version of this engine.[1]
- Suzuki FB engine — air-cooled
- Suzuki FE/FE2 engine — air-cooled, FF applications
- Suzuki L50 engine — water-cooled
- Suzuki L60 engine — water-cooled 446 cc (27.2 cu in) 2-stroke, 68 mm × 61.5 mm (2.68 in × 2.42 in) bore/stroke (export only)
Suzuki 1.6 8 Valve Performance Build Up Kit
FA/FC (prototype) — 360 cc (22 cu in) 2-stroke, 64 mm × 56 mm (2.52 in × 2.20 in) bore/stroke
- This prototype produced 25 bhp (19 kW) at 6000 rpm. It was fitted to a rear-engined prototype (also named FC) in 1961, as part of the development work for the LC10 Fronte.
Suzuki also briefly installed Daihatsu's 547 cc (33.4 cu in) two-cylinder AB10 OHC engine in SS11 Frontes built in 1977 and '78, as an interim measure while work was progressing on their own four-stroke engine.[2]
64 3.2.2 Bank Transfer. 44 2.4 Salary Details Setup.47Lesson 3: Processing Payroll in Tally.ERP 9 3.1 Attendance Vouchers.56 3.2 Payroll Vouchers.64 3.2.1 Cash Remittance.
Straight-threes[edit]
LC engine[edit]
- Suzuki LC engine — 2-stroke
- LC10 — 356 cc (21.7 cu in) air-cooled 52 mm × 56 mm (2.05 in × 2.20 in)
- LC10W/LC20 — 356 cc (21.7 cu in) water-cooled
- LC50 — 475 cc (29.0 cu in) air-cooled 60 mm × 56 mm (2.36 in × 2.20 in)
- T4A engine — 443 cc (27.0 cu in) 2-stroke 58 mm × 56 mm (2.28 in × 2.20 in). In spite of the name change, this was simply a bored out version of the LC10W.
FB engine[edit]
- Suzuki T5/LJ50 engine — 539 cc (32.9 cu in) 2-stroke 61 mm × 61.5 mm (2.40 in × 2.42 in). T5A engines were meant for RR applications, T5B for FF cars. The detuned engines used in the Carry and Jimny were called LJ50. Rather than being a newly developed engine, the T5 series is essentially an FB/L50 2-cylinder with a third cylinder added, its origins thus dating back to 1961.
F engine[edit]
- Suzuki F engine — 0.5–0.8 L
- F5A — 543 cc (33.1 cu in) 62 mm × 60 mm (2.44 in × 2.36 in); The F5A was a three-cylinder version of the F8A 'four'.
- 1980–1984 Suzuki Alto/Fronte SS40S/V
- 1984.09–1988.09 Suzuki Alto CA/CC71, CA/CC72
- 1980.09–1989.10 Suzuki Carry/Every ST40/41, DA/DB71
- 1982–1988 Suzuki Cervo SS40C
- 1984.09–1988.09 Suzuki Fronte CB71, CB/CD72
- 1986.01–1990.03 Suzuki Jimny JA71
- 1983–1988 Suzuki Mighty Boy SS40T
- F5B — 547 cc (33.4 cu in) 65 mm × 55 mm (2.56 in × 2.17 in). Bore pitch is 72 mm (2.83 in).
- 1988.02–1990.05 Suzuki Cervo
- 1988.10–1990.03 Suzuki Alto CL/CM/CN/CP11
- 1988.10–1989.04 Suzuki Fronte CN/CP11
- 1989.05–1990.03 Suzuki Carry/Every DA/DB41 (also labelled Autozam Scrum DG/DH41)
- 1989.10–1990.02 Autozam Carol AA5PA/AA5RA
- F6A — 657 cc (40.1 cu in) 65 mm × 66 mm (2.56 in × 2.60 in). A four-cylinder version (the F6B) was also developed.
- Max.power (Net): 60 PS (44 kW) at 6000 rpm
- 1990.03–1994.11 Suzuki Alto / Alto Hustle
- 1994.11–1998.10 Suzuki Alto HA/HB/HC/HD11
- 1998.10–2000.12 Suzuki Alto HA12 / Mazda Carol
- Suzuki Cappuccino EA11R
- 1990.07–1998.10 Suzuki Cervo Mode CN/CP21S, CN/CP22S
- 1995–1998 Suzuki Jimny JA12
- F8B — 796 cc (48.6 cu in) 68.5 mm × 72 mm (2.70 in × 2.83 in)
- Max. Power Output: 39.5 bhp (29 kW) at 5500 rpm
- 1981.07–1984 Suzuki Alto SS80
- 1984–1994 Suzuki Alto SB308 (also by Chang'an, Jiangbei, Jiangnan and Xian)
- Daewoo Tico/Fino (also by Anchi)
- 1984–present Maruti Omni
- 1983–2009 Suzuki Bolan ST308 (Pakistani Carry)
- F8C — 796 cc (48.6 cu in) 68.5 mm × 72 mm (2.70 in × 2.83 in)
- 1991–present Daewoo Damas/Labo/Attivo (also labelled Chevrolet CMV/CMP)
- F8D — 796 cc (48.6 cu in) SOHC 12-valve 68.5 mm × 72 mm (2.70 in × 2.83 in)
- Maruti 800, Maruti Alto
- F5A — 543 cc (33.1 cu in) 62 mm × 60 mm (2.44 in × 2.36 in); The F5A was a three-cylinder version of the F8A 'four'.
C engine[edit]
- Suzuki C engine — 2-stroke
- C10 785 cc (47.9 cu in) 70 mm × 68 mm (2.76 in × 2.68 in)
- 1965.12–1969.10 Suzuki Fronte 800
- C20 1,100 cc (67.1 cu in) – 80 PS (59 kW) prototype engine for intended Suzuki Fronte 1100
- C10 785 cc (47.9 cu in) 70 mm × 68 mm (2.76 in × 2.68 in)
G engine[edit]
- Suzuki G engine — 993 cc (60.6 cu in) 74 mm × 77 mm (2.91 in × 3.03 in)
- G10T — turbocharged
- Suzuki Cultus/Forsa / Chevrolet Turbo Sprint / Pontiac Firefly
- G10T — turbocharged
K engine[edit]
- Suzuki K engine — 0.7–1.0 L
- K6A — 658 cc (40.2 cu in) 68 mm × 60.4 mm (2.68 in × 2.38 in)
- 1994.11–1998.10 Suzuki Alto Works HA21/HB21
- 1998.10–2005.01 Suzuki Alto HA22/23 / Mazda Carol
- 2001.10–2002.06 Suzuki Kei HN11S/HN12S/HN21S/HN22S / Type E
- 2004.09–2009.12 Suzuki Alto HA24
- 2009.12–present Suzuki Alto HA25
- Suzuki Cappuccino EA21R
- 1995–1998 Suzuki Jimny JA22
- 1998–present Suzuki Jimny JB23
- 1997–2001 Suzuki Wagon R
- K6A — 658 cc (40.2 cu in) 68 mm × 60.4 mm (2.68 in × 2.38 in)
- 2013–2017 Caterham 7
- K10B — 1.0 L; 60.9 cu in (998 cc) DOHC12-valve (Increased compression from 9.0:1 to 10.0:1 and reduced frictional losses) 73 mm × 79.5 mm (2.87 in × 3.13 in)
- 2009–present Suzuki Alto/A-Star/Suzuki Splash[3]
- 2009–present Nissan Pixo
- 2010–present Maruti Suzuki Wagon R in India/PakSuzuki WagonR in Pakistan
- Suzuki K-Next engine — 1.0 L; 60.9 cu in (998 cc) DOHC 12-valve, Refined K10B engine, further increased compression from 10.0:1 to 11.0:1 & reduced frictional losses, Increased petrol mileage over 23 km/L (65 mpg‑imp; 54 mpg‑US).
- 2014 – present Suzuki Celerio / 2017 – present Suzuki Cultus in Pakistan.
- K10C — 1.0 L; 60.9 cu in (998 cc) DOHC 12-valve VVT DualJet Increased compression from 11.0:1 to 12.0:1 for more thermal efficiency, reduced frictional losses, Exhaust Gas Re-circulation, Engine Auto-Start-Stop, Increased mileage over 27 km/L (76 mpg‑imp; 64 mpg‑US)
- 2017 – present Suzuki Swift[4]
R engine[edit]
- R engine
- R06A — 658 cc (40.2 cu in) 64 mm × 68.2 mm (2.52 in × 2.69 in)
Power output: 54 PS (40 kW) and 64 PS (47 kW) for turbocharged.
Inline-fours[edit]
F engine[edit]
- Suzuki F engine — 0.7–1.1 L I4
- F6B — 0.7 L (658 cc) DOHC 16-valve 65 mm × 49.6 mm (2.56 in × 1.95 in). This shares the bore spacing of the three-cylinder F6A, although the stroke was shortened considerably to keep the displacement nearly the same.[5]
- January 1990–May 1997
- Suzuki Cervo Mode CN31S/CP31S/CN32S/CP32S
- F8A — 0.8 L (797 cc), 62 mm × 66 mm (2.4 in × 2.6 in) SOHC - this was Suzuki's first four-stroke car engine.
- 1977–1981 Suzuki Jimny 8 (SJ20), aka LJ80/81
- 1977– Suzuki Carry ST80
- 1983– Suzuki Carry ST90
- Suzuki Carry SK408
- Suzuki Cervo SC80 (Chile)
- 1991–present Daewoo Damas/Lobo
- F10A — Displacement 1.0 L; 59.2 cu in (970 cc), 65.5 mm × 72 mm (2.58 in × 2.83 in)
- Net power 34 kW (46 hp)(5500±50rpm)
- Max. torque 70 N⋅m (52 lbf⋅ft) (3000 rpm ~4000rpm)
- 1979–1982 Suzuki SC100
- 1982–1985 Suzuki Jimny 1000/SJ410/Samurai 1.0 (India: Maruti Gypsy, Pakistan: Suzuki Potohar)
- January 1983– Suzuki Carry ST100
- Suzuki Super Carry aka Bedford Rascal, Vauxhall Rascal, Ford Pronto, and Holden Scurry.
- Suzuki Cultus/Swift/Forsa SF410 (only offered in certain developing markets)
- 2000–2012 Suzuki Alto RA410 (Pakistan)
- Maruti 1000 (India)
- F6B — 0.7 L (658 cc) DOHC 16-valve 65 mm × 49.6 mm (2.56 in × 1.95 in). This shares the bore spacing of the three-cylinder F6A, although the stroke was shortened considerably to keep the displacement nearly the same.[5]
- The 1.0 L; 59.2 cu in (970 cc) F10A engine as well as 0.9 L; 53.1 cu in (870 cc) 62 mm × 72 mm (2.4 in × 2.8 in), LJ462Q) and 1.1 L; 64.1 cu in (1,051 cc) 65.5 mm × 78 mm (2.58 in × 3.07 in), LJ465Q) versions thereof are still produced in China and see use in a wide number of vehicles.
- F10D — 1.1 L (1,061 cc), 68.5 mm × 72 mm (2.70 in × 2.83 in). This is a four-cylinder version of the 0.8 L (796 cc) F8D.
- Maruti Wagon R, Maruti Zen Estilo (India)
- F10D — 1.1 L (1,061 cc), 68.5 mm × 72 mm (2.70 in × 2.83 in). This is a four-cylinder version of the 0.8 L (796 cc) F8D.
G engine[edit]
- Suzuki G engine — 1.0–1.8 L I4
- G10B — 1.0 L (993 cc), 72 mm × 61 mm (2.8 in × 2.4 in) SOHC 16-valve
- Maruti Zen (sold as Suzuki Alto in Europe, Australia)
- G12B — 1.2 L (1,196 cc), 71 mm × 75.5 mm (2.80 in × 2.97 in) SOHC 16-valve
- Maruti Eeco Euro-4 compliant
- G13A — 1.3 L (1,324 cc), 74 mm × 77 mm (2.9 in × 3.0 in) SOHC 8-valve
- G13B or G13K — 1.3 L (1,298 cc), 74.5 mm × 74 mm (2.93 in × 2.91 in) DOHC 16-valve
- G13BA __ 1.3 L (1,298 cc), 74.5 mm × 74 mm (2.93 in × 2.91 in) SOHC 8-valve
- G13BB — 1.3 L (1,298 cc), 74.5 mm × 74 mm (2.93 in × 2.91 in) SOHC 16-valve
- G15A — 1.5 L (1,493 cc), 75 mm × 84.5 mm (2.95 in × 3.33 in) SOHC 16-valve
- G16A — 1.6 L (1,590 cc), 75 mm × 90 mm (3.0 in × 3.5 in) SOHC
- G16B — 1.6 L (1,590 cc), 75 mm × 90 mm (3.0 in × 3.5 in) SOHC 16-valve
- G16ID — 1.6 L (1,590 cc), 75 mm × 90 mm (3.0 in × 3.5 in) DOHC Multi-Point Injection
- 2005 Suzuki APV
- G18K — 1.8 L DOHC 16-valve
- G10B — 1.0 L (993 cc), 72 mm × 61 mm (2.8 in × 2.4 in) SOHC 16-valve
- GM DaewooD-TEC — 2.0 L (1,998 cc) DOHC 16-valve
J engine[edit]
- J18 — 1.8 L DOHC 16-valve FI
- 1.8 L; 112.3 cu in (1,840 cc) [6]
- 119 bhp (89 kW) at 6,200 rpm
- 112 lb⋅ft (152 N⋅m) at 3,400 rpm
- bore and stroke: 84 mm × 83 mm (3.3 in × 3.3 in)
- 1998–2002 Suzuki Esteem
- 1998–2000 Suzuki Escudo aka Vitara, 'Sidekick (Sport 1996-98 J18 only)'
- J20 — 2.0 L DOHC 16-valve FI
- 2.0 L; 121.7 cu in (1,995 cc) DOHC 16-valve[7]
- bore and stroke: 84 mm × 90 mm (3.3 in × 3.5 in)
- 9.7:1 compression ratio
- 127 hp (95 kW) at 6000 rpm
- 134 lb⋅ft (182 N⋅m) at 3000 rpm
- Aluminum cylinder head and engine block
- Emissions: catalytic converter, exhaust gas recirculation, EVAP, PCV
- 1999–2002 [Chevrolet Tracker[8][Suzuki Escudo]] aka Vitara, Sidekick
- J20A
- 2.0 L; 121.7 cu in (1,995 cc)
- Coil on plug ignition
- approximately 143 hp (107 kW) at 5,870 rpm - minor variations in reported power 141 to 145 hp (105 to 108 kW) depending on year and market
- 189 N⋅m (139 lbf⋅ft) of torque at 3,500 rpm
- Suzuki SX4 (up to 2009)
- J20B
- 2.0 L; 121.7 cu in (1,995 cc)
- Coil on plug ignition
- VVT
- 150 hp (152 PS; 112 kW) at 6200 rpm (With manual transmission, 148 hp (150 PS; 110 kW) with CVT)
- 190 N⋅m (140 lbf⋅ft) at 4000 rpm
- Suzuki SX4 (2010-)
- J23 — 2.3 L (2,290 cc) DOHC 16-valve FI
- Bore and stroke: 90 mm × 90 mm (3.5 in × 3.5 in)
- 9.3:1 compression ratio
- 155 hp (116 kW) at 5400 rpm
- 152 lb⋅ft (206 N⋅m) at 3000 rpm
- 2004–2007 Suzuki Aerio[9]
- J24B — 2.4 L (2,393 cc) DOHC 16-valve
- Bore and stroke: 92 mm × 90 mm (3.6 in × 3.5 in)
- 166 bhp (124 kW) at 6,000 rpm
- 167 lb⋅ft (226 N⋅m) at 3,800 rpm
- 2006–Present Grand Vitara III Also the Grand Vitara in Caribbean
- 180 bhp (134 kW) at 6,000 rpm - 185 bhp (138 kW) at 6,500 rpm
- 170 lb⋅ft (230 N⋅m) at 4,000 rpm
- 2010–Present Suzuki Kizashi
K engine[edit]
- Suzuki K engine — 1.0–1.2–1.4–1.5 L I4
- K10A — 996 cc (60.8 cu in) 68 mm × 68.6 mm (2.68 in × 2.70 in) DOHC 16-valve, later with VVT and available with turbocharging. - The K10A has variable inlet cam timing and an 8.4:1 static compression ratio. Maximum output of the turbo version is 74 kW (99 hp) at 6,500 rpm and 122 N⋅m (90 lbf⋅ft) at 3,000 rpm. In naturally aspirated form it produces 51 kW (68 hp).[10] This engine is popular with hobbyist aircraft and hovercraft builders due to its light weight, torque and top-end power potential.
- 1997-2000 Suzuki Wagon R Wide (naturally aspirated for the EU market).
- K12M — 1.2 L (1,197 cc) DOHC 16-valve VVT, 84.3 PS (62 kW) (Indian market)
- 2009-2016; Maruti Ritz
- 2010-present; Maruti Swift
- 2010-present; Maruti Suzuki Dzire
- 2017-present; Maruti Suzuki Ignis
- 2019-present; Maruti Suzuki Wagon R
- K12A — 1.2 L DOHC 16-valve, 69 PS (51 kW)
- 1998– Suzuki Wagon R+
- K12B — 1.2 L (1,242 cc) DOHC 16-valve VVT 90 PS (66 kW)
- 2009– Suzuki Splash[3]
- 2010– Suzuki Swift
- 2014– Suzuki Ciaz
- K14B — 1.4 L (1,373 cc) 73 mm × 82 mm (2.9 in × 3.2 in) DOHC 16-valve VVT 70 kW (95 PS).
- Changhe Landy (Suzuki Carry based minivan)
- Suzuki Liana a+ (Changhe built, Chinese market only)
- Changhe Big Dipper - a facelifted license builtSuzuki Wagon R Wide of the first generation.[11]
- 2012– Suzuki/Proton Ertiga
- 2010– Suzuki Swift (3rd generation)
- 2014– Suzuki Ciaz
- 2017– Suzuki Baleno (Indonesia)
- K14C — 1.4 L (1,373 cc) 73 mm × 82 mm (2.9 in × 3.2 in) DOHC 16-valve VVT turbo, 140 PS (103 kW)
- 2015– Suzuki Vitara
- 2016– Suzuki SX4 S-Cross (facelift)
- 2018– Suzuki Swift Sport[12]
- K15B — 1.5 L (1,462 cc) 74 mm × 85 mm (2.9 in × 3.3 in) DOHC 16-valve VVT 105 PS (77 kW)
- 2018– Suzuki Ciaz (facelift)
- 2018– Suzuki Ertiga[13]
- 2018– Suzuki Jimny Sierra (4th generation)[14]
- K15B-C — 1.5 L (1,462 cc) 74 mm × 85 mm (2.9 in × 3.3 in) DOHC 16-valve 97 PS (71 kW)
- 2019– Suzuki Carry (eleventh generation, international)[15]
- K10A — 996 cc (60.8 cu in) 68 mm × 68.6 mm (2.68 in × 2.70 in) DOHC 16-valve, later with VVT and available with turbocharging. - The K10A has variable inlet cam timing and an 8.4:1 static compression ratio. Maximum output of the turbo version is 74 kW (99 hp) at 6,500 rpm and 122 N⋅m (90 lbf⋅ft) at 3,000 rpm. In naturally aspirated form it produces 51 kW (68 hp).[10] This engine is popular with hobbyist aircraft and hovercraft builders due to its light weight, torque and top-end power potential.
M engine[edit]
- Suzuki M engine —1.3–1.8 L I4
- M13A — 1.3 L (1,328 cc) DOHC 16-valve VVT
- 2000– Suzuki Jimny Wide/Sierra
- Suzuki Swift (2nd generation)
- M15A — 1.5 L (1,490 cc) DOHC 16-valve VVT
- Suzuki Ignis 99 bhp (74 kW)
- Suzuki Swift - 2nd generation 101 bhp (75 kW)
- Suzuki SX4 2007-2012
- Suzuki SX4 S-Cross 2016- (Indonesia)
- Suzuki Ignis Sport 2003 109 bhp (81 kW)
- M16A — 1.6 L (1,586 cc) DOHC 16-valve VVT
- Suzuki Liana 109 bhp (81 kW)
- Suzuki Swift Sport - 2nd generation 125 bhp (93 kW)
- Suzuki SX4 106 / 118 bhp (79 / 88 kW)
- Suzuki Vitara (Type LY)
- 2010– Suzuki Swift Sport - 3rd generation 136 bhp (101 kW)
- M18A — 1.8 L (1,796 cc) DOHC 16-valve VVT
- Suzuki Liana GS 2004 (Australia) 125 bhp (93 kW)
- Suzuki SX4 2009-2012 (China) 131 bhp (98 kW)
- M13A — 1.3 L (1,328 cc) DOHC 16-valve VVT
Inline-sixes[edit]
- GMDAT — 2.5 L (2,492 cc) DOHC 24-valve
V6 engines[edit]
- Suzuki H engine — 2.0–2.7 L 60° 24-valve V6
- H20A — 2.0 L (1,998 cc)
- H25A — 2.5 L (2,495 cc)
- H27A — 2.7 L (2,736 cc)
- HFV6 — 60° DOHC 24-valve V6
- 3.6 L (3,564 cc)
- 2007– Suzuki XL7
- 3.2 L (3,195 cc)
- 3.6 L (3,564 cc)
References[edit]
- 'How-to identify YOUR car, and where to find info on it'. Team Swift. Retrieved April 14, 2006.[dead link]
- 'Suzuki Engines'. Brisbane, Australia: Suzi Auto Services. Archived from the original on 2009-09-11.
- ^Suzuki Service Manual: Carry L40/L41/L40V (manual), Hamamatsu, Japan: Suzuki Motor Co. Ltd., p. 26
- ^Ozeki, Kazuo (2007). Suzuki Story: Small Cars, Big Ambitions. Tokyo: Miki Press. pp. 66–67. ISBN978-4-89522-503-8.
- ^ ab'Suzuki Global. Splash Specifications'. Archived from the original on 2013-08-18. Retrieved 2014-05-26.
- ^'K10C engine specs'. Motorparks.uk.
- ^'軽自動車用の4気筒エンジン' [Kei four-cylinder engines]. a-design-for-life (in Japanese). 2014-09-27. Retrieved 2015-06-04.
- ^Nötzli, Max, ed. (7 March 2002). Automobil Revue 2002 (in German and French). 97. Berne, Switzerland: Büchler Grafino AG. p. 551. ISBN3-905386-02-X.
- ^'J20 engine specs'. media.gm. Retrieved 16 April 2014.
- ^1999 Tracker Service Manual GMT/99-JE-1
- ^http://www.aeriostyle.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=9447
- ^Nötzli, Max, ed. (7 March 2002). Automobil Revue 2002 (in German and French). 97. Berne, Switzerland: Büchler Grafino AG. p. 550. ISBN3-905386-02-X.
- ^'K14B发动机: 图片展示' [K14B engine: photo gallery] (in Chinese). China Chang'an Automobile Group. Archived from the original on 2011-09-12. Retrieved 2011-05-26.
- ^http://www.suzuki.com.au/vehicles/hatch/swift-sport
- ^http://www.globalsuzuki.com/automobile/lineup/ertiga/index.html
- ^http://www.globalsuzuki.com/globalnews/2018/0705.html
- ^https://www.globalsuzuki.com/automobile/lineup/carry/