Small car specialist Suzuki has unveiled more exciting versions of its most popular models, though we may not see them in showrooms.
At the Bharat Mobility Expo in India, Maruti Suzuki – the brand’s subcontinental subsidiary – unveiled bolder versions of the five-door Jimny XL off-roader and the Swift hatchback.
The Suzuki Jimny Conqueror Concept builds on the popularity of the boxy 4×4 in off-road communities, with sand-coloured matte paint transitioning to black and similarly finished highlights on the front bumper and wheels.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now.
Suzuki also fitted a winch, roof racks, recovery tracks, external fuel storage and a rear ladder, while the existing model’s wheels are shod in all-terrain tyres.
It’s understood there’s no change under the bonnet, which means it retains a 1.5-litre four-cylinder petrol engine, producing 75kW of power and 130Nm of torque.
While Suzuki hasn’t eked out any more power for the Jimny, last year Australian tuning specialists Harrop developed a supercharger kit for the Jimny, unlocking almost 60 per cent more power and 40 per cent more torque.
While all Jimny XLs sold in Australia are sourced from India, the three-door comes from Japan.
The second Suzuki concept is called the Swift Champions, based on the new-generation model that debuted in Australia last year.
Building on the hatchback’s new design, the Champions kit adds a front splitter, side skirts, a different rear bumper lower apron, an aggressive rear spoiler and wheel-arch extensions, underneath which sit black wheels with white tyre lettering.
This isn’t expected to preview the new-generation Suzuki Swift Sport.
Japanese outlet Best Car reported in July last year that the new Swift Sport would be revealed in September and go on sale in Japan by the end of 2024. This never came to fruition.
The Australian-delivered Swift, built in Japan, is powered by a naturally aspirated 1.2-litre three-cylinder petrol engine with 12-volt mild-hybrid assistance, producing 60kW and 110Nm.
For context, the outgoing Swift Sport – still sold in Europe – uses a turbocharged 1.4-litre four-cylinder petrol engine with 48-volt mild-hybrid assistance, developing 96kW and 234Nm. Australian versions without the mild-hybrid system made 8kW and 5Nm more.
Other concepts shown off by Maruti Suzuki included a Fronx with Turbo decals and black/red transition stripes, and other India-only models with cosmetic tweaks.
MORE: Everything Suzuki Jimny • Swift