Hindustan Ambassador Classic | |
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Overview | |
Manufacturer | Hindustan Motors |
Production | 1958–2014 |
Assembly | Uttarpara, Hooghly, West Bengal, India |
Body and chassis | |
Class | Compact car |
Body style | 4-door saloon |
Layout | FR layout |
Related | Morris Oxford series III |
Powertrain | |
Transmission | 5-speed manual |
Chronology | |
Predecessor | Hindustan Landmaster |
Mark I (First generation) | |
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Overview | |
Production | 1957-1962 |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 1,489 cc (1.5 L) I4 |
Mark II (Second generation) | |
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Overview | |
Production | 1962-1975 |
Mark III (Third generation) | |
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Overview | |
Production | 1975-1979 |
Mark IV (Fourth generation) | |
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Overview | |
Production | 1979-1990 |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 1,489 cc (1.5 L) I4 1,760 cc (1.8 L) I4 |
Nova (Fifth generation) | |
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Overview | |
Production | 1990-1999 |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 1.5L I4 1.8L I4 2.0L Diesel I4 |
Hindustan Motors Avigo | |
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Overview | |
Manufacturer | Hindustan Motors |
Also called | Hindustan Avigo |
Production | 2004–2010 |
Body and chassis | |
Body style | 4-door saloon |
Layout | FR layout |
Related | Morris Oxford series III |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 2,000 cc (2.0 L) I4,1,800 cc (1.8 L) I4 |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 2,464 mm (97.0 in) |
Length | 4,325 mm (170.3 in) |
Width | 1,662 mm (65.4 in) |
Height | 1,593 mm (62.7 in) |
Chronology | |
Predecessor | Hindustan Ambassador |
The Hindustan Ambassador was an automobile manufactured by Hindustan Motors of India. It was in production from 1958 to 2014 with few improvements and changes over its production lifetime. The Ambassador is based on the Morris Oxford series III model, first made by Morris Motors Limited at Cowley, Oxford in the United Kingdom from 1956 to 1959.
Modelled after the British Morris Oxford, the Ambassador was the first car to be made in India and was once a status symbol, but began losing its dominance in the mid-1980s when Maruti Suzuki introduced its low-priced 800 hatchback. It lost further cachet and market share when global automakers began setting up shop in India in the mid-1990s, offering models with contemporary designs and technology. The Ambassador has remained the choice of a dwindling share of bureaucrats and politicians, usually in white with a red beacon on top and a chauffeur at the wheel. It is also still in use as a taxi in some Indian cities.
Despite its British origins, the Ambassador is considered as a definitive Indian car and is fondly called the "king of Indian roads". The automobile was manufactured by Hindustan Motors at its Uttarpara plant near Kolkata, West Bengal.
When the Birlas wanted a new model to replace their already old Hindustan models based on the Morris Oxford Series Il (Hindustan Landmaster), they scouted for the new Morris Oxford Series III. The car initially came with a side-valve engine but was later improved to an overhead-valve engine. Also the car at that point was quite an innovation with a fully enclosed monocoque chassis, which is why it is spacious inside.
Hindustan Motors Limited (HM), India's pioneering automobile manufacturing company and flagship company of the C.K. Birla Group, was established just before Indian independence, in 1942 by B.M. Birla. They began operations in a small assembly plant in Port Okha near Gujarat by assembling the then Morris 10 as the Hindustan 10. The Morris MO Series models (the earlier one and its next model with a new front grille) were by 1949 introduced, as the Hindustan 14. The production continued till 1954, after which the Landmaster based on the Morris Oxford Series II was introduced, with the same 1476 cc side valve engine, drawn from the earlier Hindustan 14.The same engine was used for the older Ambassadors Mark I from 1958 till 1960.