All new Suzuki Ciaz is officially launched

The all new Suzuki Ciaz compact sedan was formally launched at a press event this week, even while MIAS 2016 was still firmly in the news cycle.  The new model is Suzuki Philippines’ first in the compact sedan category and marks their breakout from the small car niche that made them the growth leader in 2015 with a 52% year-on-year increase attributed mostly to passenger car sales (see our commentary to their press statement on this).  Designed in Japan specifically for the Asian market, and introduced globally in 2014, the Ciaz has already made an impact in other emerging markets, particulary in India where Suzuki had dominated the market with their small car offerings as well.   The significance of the new model intro was evident from the large audience turnout, with word on the character of the Ciaz already having gotten out after Suzuki Philippines’ media preview drive last month, the carmaker’s first such organized mass driving event for a car model (see our special report on the Ciaz preview).  As promised by Suzuki Philippines at that event, after showroom displays to take in advanced orders in March, stocks are now in and April sees the full commercial launch of the all new Ciaz.

Press Statement by Suzuki Philippines Incorporated, “City Driving from A to Z: Suzuki’s latest Ciaz sedan brings innovation and next-level driving experience for Filipino drivers,” 2016:

Manila, 13 April 2016Rolling in style just got more comfortable and fuel-efficient, as Suzuki Philippines today officially launches the much-awaited Suzuki Ciaz, a sub-compact sedan ideal for the sensible Asian market. The Ciaz comes in three model variants: the GL Manual Transmission, GL Automatic Transmission, and the premium GLX.

Last March 9 to 10, 2016, 30 motoring media members experienced next-level comfort and driving with Suzuki’s newest innovation through a pre-launch 235-km round-trip drive to and from Anilao, Batangas. The media experienced first-hand the automotive innovations of the Ciaz through the test drive, with stopovers at the Suzuki Auto Sucat, Total Service Station Sucat, Nuvali, Tagaytay, and the Aiyanar Beach and Dive Resort Batangas. This test drive showcased the capabilities of the Ciaz in handling stop-and-go traffic, highway driving stability, mountain pass handling and passenger comfort.

Ciaz is more than a snazzy name for a sleek new sub-compact: it stands for “City from A to Z,” capturing the essence of Asia’s fast-growing metropolitan landscape. The latest addition to Suzuki’s stable of reliable vehicles, the Ciaz is packed with best-in-class fuel efficiency and other advanced features coupled with a sporty, elegant exterior design and redefined interiors.Ciaz-Media-Launch-Photo

Driven to excel

The new Ciaz is made for those who are driven to excel. It is developed as an “authentic sedan” which combines a roomy comfortable cabin and a great driving performance with excellent fuel efficiency. All of this comes with a stylish design that will inspire pride of ownership.

Best-in-class fuel efficiency

With recent unpredictable fluctuations in gas prices, the typical Filipino driver in the market for a new car is always on the lookout for a model that promises impressive fuel economy.

One of the features contributing to the Ciaz’s impressive performance is the integration of transmission technology used in the Suzuki Ertiga. In the GL Automatic and GLX models of the Ciaz, the four-speed automatic transmission improves fuel-efficiency and optimizes driving performance.

The car’s body is also smartly designed and shaped to facilitate smoother airflow, which in turn contributes to fuel efficiency. The front and rear bumper corners, front grills, underbody, and trunk lid-end are the product of meticulous research and development to achieve optimal results.Ciaz BS (3)

Advanced features

The Ciaz also comes with a variety of advanced features that make driving a truly easy and enjoyable experience. The multimedia integrated audio unit comes with an Android touchscreen for the GLX, complete with Bluetooth and USB connectivity for personal devices such as tablets and smartphones. This innovative multimedia unit comes with wireless connectivity and preloaded applications, such as YouTube, Gmail, Facebook, and the Filipino driver’s go-to app, Waze.

Audio and hands-free connectivity control switches are also embedded in the steering wheel, which facilitates easy access to various tasks. Add these to the keyless push start system and remote, and the Ciaz delivers a hassle-free driving experience for busy urbanites.

Roomy Luxury

Bridging the gap between Suzuki’s compact models and standard sedans, the Ciaz combines the best of both worlds: great fuel efficiency and ample space. This sub-compact sedan has bigger door cutting, which increases the amount of rear seat leg space, headroom, and shoulder room.

Rounding out the spacious interiors is the equally spacious trunk, which has a luggage capacity of 495 liters, and can be closed with an electromagnetic latch and features a convenient boot light.

Optimum safety

At the core of the Suzuki Ciaz is the patented Total Effective Control Technology (TECT), which boosts driver and passenger protection through a light yet incredibly strong impact absorption system. An Anti-Brake Locking Technology is also in place, preventing the brakes from locking during instances of sudden braking. This technology distributes braking force efficiently to the front and rear wheels to prevent accidents.Ciaz BS (6)

With all these features, the Ciaz is a surprisingly affordable option for urban drivers. The three models clock in at the following price points:

– Ciaz GL Manual Transmission at P738,000.00

– Ciaz GL Automatic Transmission at P773,000.00

– Ciaz GLX at P888,000.00

For more information  on the Suzuki Ciaz,  please visit http://suzuki.com.ph/auto/ and like it on www.facebook.com/SuzukiAutoPH, https://twitter.com/SuzukiAutoPH and follow on Instagram at @suzukiautoph.

Special Report: The all-new Suzuki Ciaz

Suzuki is a brand to watch this year. Last month, they reported record sales for 2015, delivering top year-on-year growth numbers of 52% that they’ve attributed mainly to their passenger car segments, particularly that of their recently up-sized Celerio hatchback. Now, after teasing it since last December with official statements and prime rush-hour billboards aimed at media and motorists alike, they’ve unveiled the Ciaz, their first sub-compact sedan for this market, with a first-ever mass test-drive event for the motoring press.

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Introduced globally in 2014, the Ciaz is a new model line, a sub-compact sedan meant to fill that wide gap between their small car Alto, Celerio and Swift offerings, and the much larger, far more premium 2.4L Kizashi mid-size sedan they had fielded in the past. Although there was the SX4 sub-compact sedan that they introduced in other markets (the platform of the CX4 crossover being offered here), the EU-sourced design (developed by Suzuki in partnership with Fiat) imposed cost penalties that had boxed it out of this region’s markets.

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On Suzuki’s first-ever mass test-drive event for the press

Enter the Ciaz, unveiled here with Suzuki’s first-ever press drive event held last week.  It’s configured into two trim levels, the standard GL and the premium GLX, with GL’s coming with either a 5-speed manual transmission or a 4-speed automatic, and GLX’s just with the AT gearbox.  It’ll be hitting showrooms this month for taking early reservations, with first deliveries happening in April.

The name standing for “[the] City, from A to Z,” Suzuki asserts the Ciaz to be their first sedan designed specifically for Asia.  And the press drive (a 235km round-trip to and from Anilao, Batangas with the top-spec Ciaz 1.4L GLX AT) revealed the new model to be deliberately engineered for what apparently, in Suzuki’s estimation, is a very sensible Asian market.

Asian specifics

IMG20160309102248For several years now, the Maruti-Suzuki partnership has held onto its huge share (46% in 2015) of India’s 2.6M-vehicles passenger car market. They’ve been unassailable, although mainly just in the small passenger car segments. When the Ciaz was introduced there first, the response was so good that it picked up some windfall demand from the long waiting lists of buyers grown impatient with slow delivery of other, already popular sedans. If not for anything else, the Ciaz’s entry did benefit the Indian market by forcing competitors to ramp up production and get their cars to market faster—free-market competition at its best.

And the Ciaz’s features, its engineering, promises to cause more of the same even here, in the much smaller but disproportionately complex Philippine market. Here, with sedans that are anything but crossover in a market gone crossover-crazy, where that classic three-box form has been stretched in other ways for multi-role-utility and bad-roads-durability, the new Ciaz appears to hit all the new, sensible sweet-spots.

Multi-role and modern

With prices at P738K for its standard GL trim with manual gearbox, P773K for the GL with automatic gearbox, and P888K for the top spec GLX AT, is Suzuki positioning the Ciaz as an Uber or Grab car candidate (to rival the Toyota Vios, Hyundai Accent and Kia Rio)? That would be a big “YES” says Shuzo Hoshikura, General Manager for Automobile Suzuki Philippines.

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Lunch stop at Tagaytay on the Suzuki Ciaz media drive to Anilao Batangas

Uber and Grab pitches have spurred buyers into becoming sedan owners, to have these become family cars in more ways than one. That old impulse buy no-no has been usurped by boilerplate business plans promising car ownership that pays for itself. Of course it’s a pipe dream that takes much driver-hours and risk-management to make happen, but it’s been compelling enough to force carmakers to informally screen their buyers, in a sense making them pause for some much needed introspection. In any case, the trend has resurged demand for sleek new sedans.

High off the ground

With road conditions being unreliable the further you go out of town or, ironically, deeper into the inner-city, the ownership math has become more complicated with climate change now the new reality. New vehicles are seen through a filter of foreboding, visualizing how these would fare on roads disappearing under floodwaters that eventually retreat but then leave potholes in their wake. It may ring paranoid but it’s something that car builders seem to pay attention too these days.

2T5C0551Things underneath have gotten bigger, all the better for handling distressed and distressing road conditions. Ground clearance numbers have gone back up to 1950’s levels; the Ciaz’s minimum ground clearance of 160mm appears to subscribe to hard earned doctrine (particularly from India) that specifies this as the minimum number for clearing rough-road hazards.

If they had gone up to 170 or 180mm, they’d be in high-rider country, even better for soft-roading jaunts, not so good, though, for keeping the car’s center of gravity low and for retaining a sedan’s trademark handling. That 160mm seems just right to keep the undercarriage clear of obstacles while staying low enough to also keep the wind from getting under its skirts. As it is, that gap under the front bumper is small enough not to defeat the aerodynamic down-force of the Ciaz’s sloped hood when the the everyday commuter is kicked up into a fast-mover.

Big rollers

Sub-compact-sedans-on-the-sThe Ciaz has wheel options, depending on variant, for either 195/55R16 or 185/65R15 tires, yielding overall diameters of 621 and 622mm, respectively. This gives it wheel diameters second only to the 622 or 628mm available on the Mazda 2.

Final gear ratios on current-model drivetrains are being specified to accommodate wheel and tire combinations for diameters of at least 600mm. Besides the effect of making vehicles look more muscular, large wheels make for gentler transitions, call ’em steps, onto and back down from bumps, or down into and back on up from holes.

Driving over grossly misaligned seams in concrete slab roads, the Ciaz seems to shrug off the affront, emitting no more than a low dull thud where other cars had complained with reverberations that drummed on through the hood.   The Ciaz’s aloofness should be credited as much to those big wheels  as to its plush insulation.

Biggest, but also the lightest

At 4.49m long and 1.73m wide, the Ciaz has the biggest footprint in the sub-compact sedan category, a class it shares with the likes of the Toyota Vios and the Hyundai Accent.   So it’s big on the inside because it’s big on the outside, no surprises there. And yet, the Ciaz being the largest in the bunch seems to not come with any penalties. It manages to remain the lightest with 1,010 to 1,040kg of curb weight, depending on the variant. This means it’s lighter though better powered than the mainstay Toyota Vios’ 1.3L variants.

To somewhat test the notion that maybe the Ciaz’s weight is the result of some creative cut-backs in metallurgy, I popped and tried to lift the hood with as few fingers as possible. Going by number of fingers to measure the density of the metal, two fingers being the least I’ve ever needed, the Ciaz’s bonnet took all five fingers on my right hand, needing my good arm to swing it up and fully open. The Ciaz, at least its hood, is into heavy metal.

Long, all-important wheelbase

2T5C0595What really takes the cake is that the Ciaz has the longest wheelbase among them all with 2.65m between front and rear axle centers (5cm longer than on its closest rival, 10cm longer than on the market leading Toyota Vios). That long span between front and rear axles means generous people space between intruding wheel shrouds. So, even with front seats slid back fully, legroom in back is generous enough to swallow up both grown ups and overgrown adults. Its turning radius, although enlarged by the long wheelbase, remains within city tolerances at 5.4m … sedan-like and still smaller than on minivans and SUVs.

Turning to things sporty, that long wheelbase translates into better stability in fast turns. Observe what Porsche has done with its active steering innovation. The automated system turns the rear wheels a few degrees into a turn at over 50mph, this to lengthen the wheelbase virtually. The result on their active-steering-equipped 911 GT3 is to shorten its best lap time by half a second. That’s how important a long wheelbase can be even when pushing back the limits under race conditions.

A common enough powertrain

In other markets, the Ciaz’s specs include options for 1.2L and 1.6L gasoline engines as well as a 1.3L Fiat-sourced turbodiesel, and for a modern CVT transmission.  But here, Suzuki Philippines opted just for the 1.4 liter K14B inline 4 VVT gasoline engine with manual or automatic gearbox options.  It simplifies matters, specifying a powertrain that’s already been proven both by their popular Swift hatchback and their award winning Ertiga MPV.

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The Ciaz’s K14B delivers 92hp at 6000rpm and 96lb-ft at 4000rpm. Suzuki global says this engine version has a new cylinder head and piston crowns for better thermal efficiency to achieve an 11:1 compression ratio. Nonetheless, this new K14B shares a majority of its crankshaft and cylinder block parts with same-series engines in other Suzuki models. The same could be said of the manual or automatic transmissions mated to the engine. Same as in other models but with gear ratios specially tuned to the Ciaz’s power and mass mix.

2T5C0716All told, this would simplify the replacement parts inventories that Suzuki or third party vendors would be investing in, and would actually leverage the technical skills that Suzuki or other service providers already have to provide essential maintenance for the new sedan’s powertrain. This brings Suzuki closer to the long game of the big brands in the Philippine market, closer to marques like Toyota, Mitsubishi and Nissan.

Smooth and smart

These said about the Ciaz’s engine and transmission options being prudent choices for the logistics of keeping the new sedan in good repair, about these being common and therefore easily maintained components, I’d point out (and very quickly, too) that the powertrain has some exceptional attributes as well. For one, the torque converter on the Ciaz’s transmission has the smoothest uptake I’ve ever felt on an AT gearbox.

2T5C0562After popping the selector from D to N whenever I stop in inchworm traffic, I always step on the brake before putting it back into D in order to catch and dampen that trademark jerk of the torque converter engaging. On a whim, though, I tried the sequence on the Ciaz without stepping on the brakes and, well, there was no jerk. There was this gentle tug that quickly built up only after the sedan started to roll. It’s the kind of drive onset I’d credit to an auto-clutch set up, like with an AMT or on a DCT gearbox.

What’s more, I don’t think it’s because the torque converter has a high stall threshold that permits significant slippage as some form of fluid gear reduction.   Rolling out and keeping revs pegged at 2000rpm will accelerate the Ciaz smartly up to an 80km/h cruise. No need for a rev surge to first bring revs up to something like 2500rpm before gradually bringing it down to 2000rpm as the car nears cruise. So, no, Suzuki doesn’t seem to have taken shortcuts with the AT gearbox, no exploitation of excessive slippage to gain more torque.

2T5C0639And the upshifts or kickdowns? Real smooth. The powertrain is demonstrably well matched to the Ciaz’s mass (this, even with a 4-speed automatic gearbox that any old-school stick guy would think a concession for convenience). She isn’t a sport anything, nope, but she’s a right smart mover. First and second gears on the AT gearbox felt conventional, not too short at all but rather, if anything, a little tall. Third and fourth? Yes, most definitely tall. The top gear has a seriously tall overdrive ratio that requires and triggers a kickdown if you stomp on the gas at speeds below 100km/h.

Path of least resistance

The Ciaz makes the most of a sedan’s long sleek silhouette, with lines blending gently upwards and down again to encompass the cabin bubble. Wind noise is minimal at 100km/h and air resistance seems to be well managed with the mediocre 1.4L power-plant turning at an acceptable 2250rpm with three people and luggage on board.

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I got back-handed confirmation of the Ciaz’s sleek aerodynamics when we cracked open a rear window while we were at fast cruise. The break in the Ciaz’s otherwise smooth aerofoil shape caused significant turbulence, manifesting in this pulsating concussive force you could feel through your ear-drums, rhythmic percussion apparently being hammered in by shockwaves forming around the open window on the trailing end of the cabin. Open window, thrumming eardrums; closed window, not a peep. That’s how much wind resistance the Ciaz manages to slip blithely through when it’s all buttoned up.

2T5C0656About styling, I’d say the Ciaz is handsome, and elegant. She isn’t overwrought with flourishes that have no apparent function, but instead has the lightest of touches to soften its edges, yet also has fun with false vents that give it a sporty air, making its business ends, both of them, edgy. It’s like being asked what the weather is like, on air, on Good Morning Vietnam: open a window and see for yourself, why dontcha. Just take a look at her in the pics. She’s a proper looking sedan, svelte and smooth on the necessary angles, no pointless features that’ll make her cloying and insipid after a few months, simple enough to eventually become a classic. And that alone could spell success in terms of resale value.

With this new model, Suzuki starts down a path that could make it as big and as mainstream as the popular, everyday sedans that the Ciaz now competes with. If Suzuki’s competitors don’t pay attention, the Ciaz’s pitch could be as frictionless as its aerodynamic body, slipping in and hitting the spots where the competition have left themselves exposed with design, engineering and business choices that are off the mark in today’s complex market.

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