How to change a wishbone of a car Suzuki Swift control arm replacement Suzuki Swift A-arm DIY

How to change a wishbone of a car Suzuki Swift control arm replacement Suzuki Swift A-arm DIY

The Suzuki Swift began in 1985 as a marketing and manufacturing rebadge of the Suzuki Cultus, a supermini (or subcompact) manufactured and marketed worldwide across three generations and four body configurations—three-door hatchback, four-door sedan, five-door hatchback and two-door convertible—and using the Suzuki G engine family.

The Swift was marketed in the Japanese domestic market (JDM) as the Cultus and elsewhere as the Suzuki Swift, Suzuki Forsa, Suzuki Jazz, Chevrolet Swift, Chevrolet Sprint and Sprint Metro, Geo and Chevrolet Metro, Pontiac Firefly, Maruti 1000, Holden Barina and Subaru Justy. Versions of the second generation Cultus were also produced until 2007 in India and the car remains in production today in Pakistan and China. For more information on the initial versions of the Swift, see: Suzuki Cultus and Geo Metro. The version of Maruti Suzuki launch in India happened in May 2017.

Source: Wikipedia

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Comments

Zadean Robinson says:

Thank you. I appreciate it

David Garside says:

Would this be similar on a 2013 Suzuki Alto, and would you use the same position for the axle stand ? Thank you.

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