There's a tale from the 1980s when Suzuki sent a team of engineers to investigate building cars for the Indian market, with one particular element of their subsequent report going down in legend.
"Must fit robust horns."
Because what the engineers discovered is that Indian drivers are not afraid of using their cars' horns. Suzuki could jump through all the regulatory and government hurdles it wanted to, but without reliable horns fitted to its cars, the project would flop. 'Robust horns project' duly completed, Suzuki now sells 1.62 million cars a year in India.
Sitting on Mohammed Ali Road in southern Mumbai and not having moved for 30 minutes, I can confirm that the habit is alive and well. A market of around four million new cars a year and every single one with a customer who's not afraid of a healthy toot.
We're in a Skoda Slavia and this car's story is similar to Suzuki's, in that Skoda has realised the Indian market is ripe for expansion "20 cars per 1000 people compared with 400 to 500 per 1000 in Europe", according to Piyush Arora, MD and CEO of Volkswagen Group India - and also that it requires some special engineering solutions. To that end, it launched 'India 2.0' as a €1 billion (£870 million) investment in the country, with a view to designing and developing specific cars. And what better way for us to test them than by driving across India's most congested city at rush hour, from the southern tip of Mumbai to Skoda's Pune factory 80 miles away.
First, though, our car. If you're unfamiliar with the name, the Slavia is one of the fruits of India 2.0 and is sold only in India. Along with its Kushaq SUV sibling (same platform, different looks - typical VW Group strategy), it rests on MQB-A0-ÎN underpinnings, a set-up engineered specifically for India.
Denne historien er fra May 17, 2023-utgaven av Autocar UK.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra May 17, 2023-utgaven av Autocar UK.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Poster car that went from rusty to trusty
One evening, two years ago, George Pappas was being driven down his local high street by a mate and mulling over whether to replace his Mk4 Golf diesel, a recent purchase that was boring him to death, when his girlfriend, also in the car, spotted an old BMW 3 Series at the side of the road with a 'for sale' sign in the window.
THE SEVEN-SEATER THAT VOLVO DARE NOT KILL OFF
The current-gen XC90 has been on sale since 2015 for good reason
GENESIS ELECTRIFIED G80
Where the story begins, in the Hyundai premium marque’s luxury saloon
LEXUSLBX
Can you shrink premium quality to fit an SUV this small? We now know
Rolls boss ready to 'define the next chapter'
Nine months into the job, Rolls-Royce CEO and car guy Chris Brownridge tells STEVE CROPLEY what he's learned and where the firm's heading
Once more, with feeling
AC Cars' recreation of the classic MkII Cobra is at first glance a faithful facsimile of a 1960s performance benchmark. SIMON HUCKNALL drives it
MERCEDES-BENZ CLE
Does a PHEV set-up work in a coupé that exudes such old-school vibes?
ANALOGUE SUPERSPORT
Lotus Elise specialist uprates 1990s icon with an eye on track days
ALPINE A290
The hot hatch is alive and well, and living in France. On both road and track, there's much to savour`
UK HANGS ON TO OLD CARS
Average car age climbs as high prices dampen demand for new models