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Sunday 16 February 2014

maruti suzuki celerio

maruti suzuki celerio

maruti suzuki celerio logo
Logo
The Celerio is built on an all-new platform that has been in the making for close to three and a half years. A team of around 175 designers, engineers, product planners, visualisers, marketeers etc from both India and Japan have combined their efforts to this end. Except whoever came up with a name that sounds like a veggie in a salad mated to Mahindra’s favourite alphabet is anyone’s guess. According to Mayank Pareek, COO Maruti Suzuki, Celerio means a ‘celestial river’, but don’t ask me what’s the connect, I’m goas clueless as you and many Maruti Suzuki employees are!

From various angles the Celerio brings to mind the Toyota Etios Liva, especially that smiling grille with the twin smiling slats flanking the Suzuki Logo. In fact, if you took off the Suzuki logo and replaced it with a Toyota badge you could easily fool anyone into mistaking this car for the latter. As it is, driving this car on the busy roads around Jodhpur did not elicit much interest from the very people who would in the near future be buying this car, the aam janta! And let me tell you in the past there hasn’t been a single new car that hasn’t grabbed attention on these drives.
maruti suzuki celerio wallpaper
maruti suzuki celerio front view




Where dimensions are concerned, the Celerio is comfortably long and wide, though to put it in comparison, it’s shorter in length than the Hyundai Grand i10 though taller by a few inches. At 2.425 metres, however, both hatchbacks share the same wheelbase and that also means the Celerio has substantial amounts of interior space, especially knee room, just like the Grand i10.
maruti suzuki celerio loanching
maruti suzuki celerio front view
The cabin like every contemporary Maruti is outstanding. The quality levels are top notch and the design and layout is simple, effective and yet stunning to look at. The centre console is a smart-looking unit surrounded by a chrome bezel within which the music player and the air-con controls are housed. The steering wheel too looks pleasing, but it’s the top-end variant, the ZXi, that gets the audio and Bluetooth telephony controls on the steering wheel.
maruti suzuki celerio gear box
maruti suzuki celerio gear
Now for the mechanicals and the driving bit, the Celerio at present comes only with a 998cc 3-cylinder petrol engine. A diesel will follow but nothing has been set in stone yet. This petrol motor is an updated engine that uses aluminum in its construction and is named the K10B; it’s also called as the K-Next engine. Maruti has worked hard to lower the NVH levels, and while at idle this engine is impressively quiet, as speeds rise it has that typical whine I’ve heard in every small displacement Maruti as you push the engine harder and harder.
maruti suzuki celerio interior
maruti suzuki celerio interior
The 4-valve per cylinder arrangement allows it to make 68PS of max power and 90Nm of max torque. Now those figures aren’t as hearty as those pumped out by the Grand i10, which has a larger displacement engine, but it’s the transmission that makes all the difference in the Celerio.

The transmission has been big news for some time as Maruti claimed to offer a clutchless driving experience in the Celerio. I’d like to point out at this moment that it’s not because of an automatic transmission. Innovatively, Maruti is using what is called an automated manual transmission, which basically is a sort of a gadget that takes care of the duties of the clutch without there being a clutch pedal in the driver’s foot well. So instead of a manual gear shift stick you get something that looks like an automatic shifter, except if you look closely you won’t see a park mode.
maruti suzuki celerio interior
maruti suzuki celerio interior
With this technology, Maruti has achieved a fuel efficiency of nearly 23.1 kmpl which, they claim, is the same as what you get in the manual transmission, and I don’t dispute that since this is a manual transmission. On long vacant stretches of highway skirting Jodhpur, the transmission feels reasonably smooth. But in urban areas it’s jerky, and unlike a torque convertor, the shift quality isn’t seamless — you can actually feel the clutch being actuated every time a gear needs to be engaged. That also influences you to try and modulate throttle to reduce the sensation of that clutch kicking in and it could never give you that incredible efficiency figure. Nonetheless, for having taken away the effort of having to use a clutch several hundred times even over short distances is something Maruti should be applauded for.

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