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The Tata Sierra, was a three-door sport utility vehicle produced by the Indian carmaker Tata Motors It was based on the Tata Telcoline.[1]
Tata Sierra | |
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Overview | |
Manufacturer | Tata Motors |
Also called | Tata Sport Tata Telcosport Tata Grand Telcosport Tata Gurkha (United Kingdom) |
Production | 1991–2003 |
Assembly | India: Pune |
Body and chassis | |
Class | Mid-Size SUV |
Body style | 3-door SUV |
Layout | Front-engine, rear-wheel-drive Front-engine four-wheel-drive |
Platform | Tata X2 |
Related | |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 2.0 L 483 DL/DLTC I4 |
Transmission | 5-speed manual |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 2,400 mm (94 in) |
Length | 4,400 mm (170 in) |
Width | 1,730 mm (68 in) |
Height | 1,770 mm (70 in) |
Chronology | |
Successor | Tata Safari |
In the export market, the Sierra was sold as Tata Sport, Tata Telcosport, Tata Grand Telcosport and Tata Gurkha.
History
editThe Tata Sierra was launched in 1991 and is the first off-road Sport Utility vehicle produced by the Indian company; and was based on the Tata Telcoline (pick-up originally launched in 1988 from which it takes the mechanical parts, the front facia, and the internal dashboard.) The differences are in the shortened wheelbase at 2.40 meters (compared to the single-cab Telcoline). The Sierra was also one of the first cars for private transport in India and, being built on the Tata ''X2 platform" with side members and crossbars, could be used on every road surface, especially the uneven ones being proposed both rear-wheel drive and four-wheel drive. Compared to the Telcoline, soundproofing has been improved, making the interior more comfortable.[2]
The body of the Sierra is three-door, the total length of the body is 4.41 meters, rear-wheel drive or 4WD full-time part-time with grafting system electrically controlled up to 60 km/h, equipped with the gearbox on all ratios, self-locking rear differential and front hubs with manual locking/unlocking; the suspensions are the same as those of the Telcoline with an oscillating double trapezoidal front axle and a rear axle with a rigid bridge layout with five pulling arms and coil springs. [citation needed]
Engine
editThe engine was the same as the Telcoline: the naturally aspirated, 2.0-liter 483 DL(DL stands for Diesel) four-cylinder diesel engine developed by Tata Motors in India. It has two valves per cylinder and indirect injection with pre-chamber and develops 63 horsepower. The gearbox is a G76 5-speed manual. The later Turbo model was powered by a 483DLTC( DLTC stands for Diesel Turbocharged) inline-four engine. Later this engine was used on the Tata Sumo, Safari, and Winger (Van).[1] Archived 2 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine
The cockpit was available only for four seats. The Sierra was available with electric windows, air conditioning, an adjustable steering wheel, and tachometer.[citation needed]
First Generation (1991)
editAt the time of launch (1991) the car came with a naturally aspirated (colloquially NA) 483 DL engine mated with a 5-speed gearbox, with power delivery to the rear wheels. Visually identical to the telcoline pickup from the front, the rear portion was a completely new design with large fixed alpine windows and entry through a front collapsible passenger seat. The rear bumper had plastic shrouds on either end and beveled lamps for illuminating the license plate located at the central recess. The car had body mounted tricolor tail lamp (clear lens-orange-red), and the headlamps came with black bezels, with amber lens turn indicators. The grill had a cheese grater appearance with the circular insignia flanked with two chrome bars. The "Tata Sierra" badge (Tata written atop sierra) adorned the front quarter panel on either side with a single Tata logo placed on the rear door, the wheel arches were very thin and installed along the contour of the arches. The spare wheel was externally mounted on the rear door and it came with a fabric cover having a stylized version of Tata Sierra written over it. [citation needed]
Second Generation (1997)
editTata Sierra DX Turbo(Second generation) | |
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Overview | |
Production | 1997–2003 |
As the emission norms became further restricted and customers expected more power, TATA launched a turbocharged version in July–August 1997. The car had the 2.0-liter diesel engine as used earlier, to which a turbocharger (single–stage) was added hence the name 483 DLTC; the new engine was rated Euro 2 and had a maximum output of 87 horsepower. There was a marked visual change on the outside with a new bonnet that was extended further downward above the grille, the grill too was revised, it had just the circular insignia (no chrome bars as earlier). The headlamps were revised too, the bezels were gone and now it became larger and visually more continuous with the indicators. At the rear too there were major revisions, and the car got heated windshields, tail lamps now become two-tone units (red-clear lens), the rear bumper became a completely wrapped-around unit(metal)reaching the rear wheel arches, the now sported additional tail lamp bars, and the registration plate was illuminated by a single bar at the top. The wheel arches were revised too and now became more prominent and large. Logos were revised too, with just "sierra" written right next to the body-mounted amber indicator on either side. Internally, the power window motor was changed and the new motor was directly linked instead of being linked via actuating cable. The wheel caps were revised, and so were the optional alloys. The steering became a 4-spoke unit, unlike the previous 2-spoke one. The car was received well by the media and saw increased demand globally. The seats were provided by Harita Grammar Ltd. and later by Tata Johnson Ltd.[citation needed]
In other countries
editIn Europe (especially in Spain, France, Germany, and Italy), the Sierra was imported in 1994 under the name Tata Sport or Tata Telcosport) in a single version with the 2.0L diesel engine Euro 2 in the rear wheel drive variant, while the 4x4 was added in April 1998 proposed with the 2.0L turbodiesel. With the introduction of the turbodiesel engine, the name was changed to Tata Grand Telcosport in more markets like Spain. In Italy the Sierra was sold as a Tata Sport in two versions: base and Orciari,[3] the latter exclusive for Italy was made by the Italian designer Orciari and featured an enriched endowment, two-tone bodywork, roof bars, and specific interior finishes.[4]
Tata Sierra EV Concept (2020)
editAt the 2020 Auto Expo,[5] Tata Motors showcased an EV concept with the same name.[6] The car features the characteristic panoramic view rear window pane (fixed) similar to the Tata sierra (generation 1 and 2), with an additional sliding door for access to the rear lounge-like seating arrangement. The car will be based on a flexible ALFA platform. As per the in-house designer (Pratap Bose), This isn't a formal program yet, but it isn't just a show car either. A more practical version with a changed seating arrangement might be a reality somewhere in 2022-2023.[7][8]
References
edit- ^ "Rebuilding success stories". Tata Motors. April 2003. Archived from the original on 11 August 2018. Retrieved 18 August 2018.
- ^ "Remembering An Indian Icon". Motorbeam.com. 25 January 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2018.
- ^ "Archivio listino auto: Tata Sport Orciari 4x4". Quattroruote. Retrieved 18 August 2018.
- ^ "Archivio listino auto: Tata Sport". Quattroruote. Retrieved 18 August 2018.
- ^ "5 Upcoming Tata Electric Car models until 2023 (#5 is special)". 29 January 2021.
- ^ "Tata Sierra EV & HBX concepts: an in-depth first look". www.autodevot.com. 21 February 2020. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
- ^ "Tata Sierra Concept could go into production". Autocar India. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
- ^ "New Tata Blackbird SUV rendering with C shaped LED DRLs". 27 May 2020.