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Toyota Kirloskar investment in Karnataka cleared


Toyota Kirloskar investment in KarnKarnataka's State High Level Clearance Committee has cleared Toyota Kirloskar Auto Parts' Rs 750 crore investment proposal.

Briefing reporters after the committee's meet, Mr Murgesh R. Nirani, Minister for Large and Medium Industries said, “The SHLCC headed by Chief Minister Mr D.V. Sadananada Gowda has cleared Toyota Kirloskar Auto Parts proposal to establish casting and machining of engine parts for automobiles.”

The company is setting up the facility adjacent to their existing factory plot at Bidadi Industrial Area in Ramanagar district.

The new facility is likely to create employment to 150 people.

The senior company officials had said that Toyota Kirloskar is planning to achieve higher degree of localisation on the Etios series from the current level of 70 per cent.

TRANSMISSIONS PLANT

Toyota Kirloskar Auto Parts also has plans to expand its transmissions plant to supply Etios transmissions by next year.

At the committee, the Government also has approved nine projects in automobile sector with an investment of Rs 3,628 crore with employment potential of 7,821 people.

Mr Nirani said, “These projects are proposed in Bangalore rural, Kolar and Ramanagar districts. This shows the strength of our State in the automobile sector.”ataka cleared

Business Line : Companies News : Toyota Kirloskar investment in Karnataka cleared
 
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Maruti 800 ends production in April 2012.
End of road for car that began motoring era � Maruti 800
Published: Saturday, Apr 14, 2012, 9:15 IST
By Yuga Chaudhari | Place: Mumbai | Agency: DNA, Agencies

Maruti 800, India’s most iconic car, will soon be history.

Maruti Suzuki, which heralded a revolution of sorts with it, creating a whole new segment of cars, will stop manufacturing Maruti 800 before the month-end.

The car was launched in 1983, the year India won the World Cup. And a winner it was all the way, provoking us to ask Kitna deti hai and grossing some of the highest sales numbers ever — the car has sold more than 2.7 million units since launch.

Three decades on, it is time to bid adieu.
more:
End of road for car that began motoring era — Maruti 800 - Money - DNA

Farewell to an Icon : Maruti 800 production to end in April 2012 - Team-BHP
 
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India’s Royal Enfield roars back on quieter, sleeker bikes


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Chief Executive Officer of Royal Enfield Motors, Venki Padmanabhan, poses with newly manufactured motorcycles at its factory in the southern Indian city of Chennai.—Reuters Photo

CHENNAI: The “thump” is gone, but sales are booming.

Royal Enfield, a 119-year-old Anglo-Indian motorcycle maker with a cult following, has brought its distinctive bikes into the modern era with new and quieter engines and can’t make them fast enough to meet demand.

The once-sleepy company sold 74,600 motorcycles in 2011, a 40 per cent increase, all made at its 57-year-old factory on India’s south-eastern coast, and is spending $30 million this fiscal year in a push to double capacity and upgrade manufacturing technology.

For now, customers must wait six to nine months to get their bikes.

“Paradoxically, the more we make the more we appear to be falling behind. Only when the new plant kicks in fully next year will we be able to fully address the waiting periods,” Venki Padmanabhan, chief executive officer of Royal Enfield Motors, told Reuters.

A new engine has replaced Royal Enfield’s antiquated cast iron engine, boosting acceleration, performance, mileage and reliability, and reducing emissions.

The company is best known for the powerful Bullet model, but it is the newer Classic series that is driving growth in a crowded and fast-expanding Indian market where 10 million motorbikes were sold last year.

“They’ve finally got the markings, the logo and the colour schemes perfect,” said 35-year-old George Koshy, who works in an advertising firm and owns four Royal Enfield bikes, including a Classic 500.

Royal Enfield’s motorcycles start at 108,000 rupees in Mumbai and rise to 175,000 rupees, against 72,000 rupees for a 220 cc Bajaj Avenger, a similarly powerful bike also marketed towards enthusiasts.

Harley Davidson, whose bikes start at 560,000 rupees, is part of a slew of overseas manufacturers such as Britain’s Triumph and Japan’s Kawasaki that is ramping up activity in India to capture a growing premium motorbike market.

“If you want to ride for the heart, you ride the Bullet; if you want to ride for performance you ride the Harley,” said Koshy, who plans to add a Harley Davidson to his collection.

Transformation

Purists still come to the company looking to buy a bike with the old engine, but they have to go to the second-hand market as production ceased in 2010.

Royal Enfield originally built motorcycles to be parachuted into enemy territory by British forces during the Second World War, and the classic styling and trademark thumping of its engine at full throttle drew a legion of gear heads to the brand, including television host and motor enthusiast Jay Leno.

It rolled out its first motorised bike in 1901 and entered the Indian market in 1949, where the Bullet, now in its 80th year of manufacture, became a staple on the country’s roads.

Royal Enfield, which stopped building bikes in Britain in 1970 and was bought by India’s Eicher Motors in 1994, expects to open a new 50-acre plant in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu next year, taking capacity to 150,000 vehicles.

It is a niche manufacturer in a country where mass-market players led by Hero MotoCorp and Bajaj Auto sell cheap bikes as basic transportation and family vehicles.

The company sold just 3,200 bikes overseas last year and is looking to expand its export markets on the strength of its upgraded engines. It recently signed up dealerships in Malaysia and the Philippines, and is working to resurrect its distribution network in Germany and France.

An auto-industry veteran, the 49-year-old Padmanabhan started his career with General Motors in Michigan and took the top job at Royal Enfield in January 2011 after two years as chief operating officer.

“For many motorcycle companies, when they change engines it’s like life and death – if you don’t do it right you’re finished,” he said.

“For us we think we’ve been successful with the UCE engine, which just happened a little over a year ago, and there’s still a lot more to be done with this engine,” he said.

http://dawn.com/2012/04/20/indias-royal-enfield-roars-back-on-quieter-sleeker-bikes-fm/

Royal Enfield Bullet enjoys Indian summer - Telegraph
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FOrce One is a Shitty Vehicle.
It is a Chinese SUV , being marketed by pathetic Force Company.
It is not a joint venture, they just buy this and sell under new name.
Wonder why Amitabh Bacchan had to do advertisment for this.
This is a company with no R&D and have sunk big names with whome it made the JV before.
The latest one was MAN.
They own huge land at Pithampur ,M.P and make nothing other then Trax. Rest they assemble/buy and sell.
I don't wish company any success and hope it goes Premier Automotive way, unless it stops cheating the public.
Design is based & inspired by the Explorer III, Force One uses the same body panels as the Explorer III; they are imported directly from China for assembly in Force Motors’ Pithampur factory in Madhya Pradesh. The chassis, however, has been designed completely in-house. It is based on a sturdy-looking C-in-C ladder frame that supports an independent, coil-sprung, double-wishbone setup up in the front and a non-independent, multi-link suspension at the rear.
Force Motors roped in Lotus Engineering UK to fine-tune the chassis and even set up the vehicle specifically for the 235/70 Apollo Hawkz all-terrain tyres it comes shod with. Now thats what wiki says
 
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Vespa launches new 125cc scooter
Priced at Rs. 66,661 (ex-showroom Maharashtra), the new Vespa is equipped with 125cc, four stroke, 3-valve single cylinder air-cooled motor that delivers 10.06PS of power @ 7,500rpm and 10.6Nm of torque @ 6,000rpm. And while earlier models had manual transmission, the scooter will be mated with a CVT. It weighs 114kgs with a fuel tank capacity of 8.0 litres.
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this is the Vespa India website:
VESPA - INDIA

I wonder if LML Still sells LML Vespa 2 stroke Scooters? I've heard they do sell in Delhi.

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