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Suzuki doesn't see any reason why they should discontinue producing the Mehran in Pakistan

I have no problem with the Pakistani public's buying habits. The numbers and prices speak for themselves, no matter what the cause. Suzuki is right here: there is no reason for them to stop building the Mehru as of yet. IF and when there is a legal bar, or if the market forces turn against it, only then would it make sense for them to stop producing it.

Ji sir jese apki farmaish amreeki baba. Ap to hamari kismet ki chaabi rakhte ho lala ji.

Birju mehran hi lega.

Jiye Mehran
Jiye Suzuki
Jiye Bhutto

Jai Maruti
Jai 800
Jai Nehru

Ffs
 
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Ji sir jese apki farmaish amreeki baba. Ap to hamari kismet ki chaabi rakhte ho lala ji.

Birju mehran hi lega.

Jiye Mehran
Jiye Suzuki
Jiye Bhutto

Jai Maruti
Jai 800
Jai Nehru

Ffs

Bhai, kismet wohee achchee jo apnee mehnat sey banay. If people want the things you mention above, they they deserve to have them. All of them, including all the Mehrus that Suzuki can put out on the market for them to buy. :D
 
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Bhai, kismet wohee achchee jo apnee mehnat sey banay. If people want the things you mention above, they they deserve to have them. All of them, including all the Mehrus that Suzuki can put out on the market for them to buy. :D

Sir ap wapis ajaen Pakistan apko mehran me bhita kar chor denge Pakistan me.

Anna hazaray ki maruti 800 revolution inshallah ap Pakistan me laenge.

Aap jese Brahmin jo hum jeson dalit pe rahem kare - me nahi maanta me nahi maanta
 
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End the Suzuki death trap! If you drive your family in a Suzuki Mehran or cutlas you are a horrible parent and putting your family's life at risk!

Safety is last thing average Pakistani think or know about Card when they buy them, majority don't know what safety features should be part of their car.
 
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Sir ap wapis ajaen Pakistan apko mehran me bhita kar chor denge Pakistan me.

Anna hazaray ki maruti 800 revolution inshallah ap Pakistan me laenge.

Aap jese Brahmin jo hum jeson dalit pe rahem kare - me nahi maanta me nahi maanta

Bhai, I drove a tired old Mehru on my last trip there. It was downright horrible, but it had a working AC and surely beat walking! :D

Safety is last thing average Pakistani think or know about Card when they buy them, majority don't know what safety features should be part of their car.

Yes, but it should be up to government to legislate what minimum safety standards cars being sold in the PDM should meet that the manufacturers can meet at a price the public can afford. Pricing safe cars out of reach will not help anyone.
 
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FAW needs to launch a version in 1000cc and 1500cc to kick the blood sucking toyota and suzuki completely . their V2 and XPV are already giving tough competition to suzuki dabba, cultus and swift.
I am using faw v2 and its a good car for the price.
 
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Sales to government are only a small part of total sales of the Mehru. The public continues to buy as many of them as Suzuki can put out on the market. Why should Suzuki stop in this case?



So what is wrong with letting rural folk buy what they can afford?
what is wrong with having a choice... and affordable alternatives?
 
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These cars from Suzuki area not safe.

They neither bring quality nor safety on the roads. With the world moving towards electric cars this enslavement of the Pakistani nation by Japanese monopoly should end.

Without investment in the country and local manufacturing these should be sent back with pearl harbor written on it.


Be careful what you wish for:

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Federal Rules Add $2100 To Cost Of New Cars
US Department of Transportation report calculates federal safety regulations increase car prices by $2100 and weight by 171 pounds.



The thousands of pages of federal rules and regulations governing the way automobiles are designed has made cars and trucks more expensive and heavier than ever. A report released last week by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) calculated that the various mandates boosted the sticker price of new cars by an average of $2100 (using 2017 dollars). Red tape also made the average car 171 pounds heavier than it would have otherwise been.

By the 2012 model year, the average automobile tipped the scales at 3380 pounds and cost $25,553 (using 2012 dollars). According to Environmental Protection Agency statistics, the combined car and truck average weight reached an all-time high in 2011, as vehicles became heavier than they were even in the 1970s.

Current federal rules require that each new vehicle be equipped with 38 specific "safety" technologies. In the early days of regulation, the burden was light. An automobile built in 1968 only had 20 pounds worth of federally mandated safety equipment at a cost of $224 (in 2012 dollars). Over the course of four decades, the mandates multiplied and the inflation-adjusted cost and total weight expanded seven-fold.

The NHTSA report calculates that the most expensive mandate is antilock brakes, which cost $387, followed by front airbags and side airbags at $337 and $270 each. Other required features are of questionable safety value, including the requirement that every car have an emergency glow-in-the-dark release latch for individuals who are locked in the trunk, as well as unremovable warning labels and door chimes.

The report excludes the cost of safety equipment that all manufacturers provided before the adoption of federal standards. It also excludes the cost of equipment for which there is no federal mandate, such as intermittent windshield wipers and rear window defoggers.

"Their development has been voluntary on the part of the industry, in response to customer demand," the report explained. "Drivers want a clear rear window, and they like a device that clears it for them automatically, so they do not have to wipe or scrape it repeatedly. NHTSA has evaluated rear-window defrosters and defoggers and was unable to conclude that they reduce police reported crashes."

The newest federal mandate requires all cars manufactured after May 2018 to have a backup camera and display unit at a cost of $163 and 5 pounds of weight.

The EPA report also noted that manual transmission production reached a peak of 31 percent of cars in the 1980 model year, falling to 3.9 percent in 2015. In trucks, the number of manual transmissions fell below one percent.

A copy of the new NHTSA report is available in a 3.6mb PDF file at the source link below.

Cost and Weight Added by The Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards (National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 11/2/2017)
 
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Suzuki doesn't see any reason why they should discontinue this rubbish mehran when they are charging Rs 700,000- 800,000 for this trash
 
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And the people are paying! :D
If government will provide them expensive garbage in the name of affordable car then they have no option but to buy this trash . Provide them many better alternative in this price range from others car manufactures and then we will see who will buy this shit. I hardly see any suzuki care in UK
 
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