Tata_Winger

Tata Winger

Tata Winger

Motor vehicle


The Tata Winger is a light commercial van produced by the Indian automaker Tata Motors since 2007.[1] It is a rebadged version of the Renault Trafic Mk1 Phase 3 van,[2] but fitted with Tata's own diesel four-cylinder engines.

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First Generation (2007–2019)

Tata Winger used as an ambulance (Bangladesh)

The Winger is offered in six variants and two seating configurations: long or short wheelbase, high and low roof versions and also specialised ambulance and school bus versions, as well as the plain panel van. The top of the range is a flat roof, the air-conditioned variant is a ten-seater, while the remaining five versions are offered as either 13- or 14-seaters, taking the total number of variants to eleven.

The Winger is powered by a modified version of the 2.0-litre diesel engine that is currently offered on the Tata Sumo. This 1948 cc engine comes with a turbo-charged, inter-cooled (TCIC) version in all the variants, except in the smaller length, entry-level Winger van.

The non-turbo-charged version of the engine develops a peak power of 68 PS (50 kW) compared to the 90 PS (66 kW) that the TCIC version puts out. The Winger meets Bharat Stage VI emission standards, except for the base variant, which is BS-VI compliant. The ambulance model was certified to meet BS-IV standards.[3]

Second Generation (2020–present)

Second generation Tata Winger is offered with three wheelbases (2800, 3200, and 3488 mm), two roof heights and four use cases. Both air-conditioned and non-air-conditioned variants are available. Seating capacities range from 9 to 20. Winger is powered by a BS-VI (Euro 6) compliant 2.2-litre turbo diesel engine producing 99 PS (73 kW) and 200 N-m of torque.[4] It uses a semi-hydraulic actuated dry clutch.

Transmission and suspension

The Winger van is front-wheel-drive with a longitudinally mounted engine, coupled to a five-speed transmission. The Winger's suspension is MacPherson strut up front with a beam axle with parabolic leaf springs at the rear.


References

  1. "Renault Master Based Next-Gen Tata Winger Spy Pics, Details". 29 January 2014.
  2. "De Tweeling: Renault Trafic - Tata Winger". MSN. Archived from the original on 10 January 2019. Retrieved 10 January 2019.

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