News

Road & Track · Jan 9
News
This Suzuki Twin 'Pocket Bunny' Widebody Kit Turns the Kei Car Into a Bite-Sized R32 GT-R

Pandem Rocket Bunny Turns Suzuki Twin into R32 GT-R Homage—Widebody Kei Car Done Right

Takahashi Ju and Pandem Rocket Bunny took a Suzuki Twin and wrapped it in a full widebody kit that reads like a shrunken, turbo-hungry R32 GT-R. The setup includes a genuine aero package with functional ducting, not the usual mall-crawler bolt-ons. This is what happens when builders respect scale and proportion instead of just bolting parts on.

Kei car modding has gone from joke to craft—when Rocket Bunny touches something, the execution matters more than the engine size.

by bringatrailer · Bring a Trailer · Jan 8
News
1973 Suzuki TC-100 at No Reserve

1973 Suzuki TC-100: Two-Stroke Simplicity Before Bean Counters Killed It

This neglected 97cc two-stroke single spent decades in Ohio storage before finding new hands in 2025. Numbers matching, dual-range four-speed, and that metallic dark red finish that screams mid-70s Japanese pragmatism. The TC-100 is where Suzuki proved you didn't need displacement to make something worth owning.

The TC-100 is what happens when manufacturers actually built motorcycles for riders instead of quarterly projections.

Team-BHP · Jan 8
News
BHPians share their favourite OEM wheels; What are your picks?

OEM Wheels That Actually Mattered: What BHPians Are Running

Wheel design separates the thoughtful builds from the poseurs. Team-BHP dove into factory alloys across platforms—Golf GTI's Spielvogel designs, IS300's BBS-adjacent work, Camry's overlooked restraint—and the discussion reveals how OEM engineers understood proportion in ways modern trend-chasing rarely does. Clean examples are getting harder to source.

Factory wheels are the last place manufacturers were allowed to take risks. Everything else got focus-grouped into beige.

by Editorial Team · India Car News · Jan 8
News
Toyota Urban Cruiser EV India Launch on Jan 19 – Price Expectations

Toyota Urban Cruiser EV arrives January 19—it's a rebadged Maruti e Vitara

Toyota's playing the badge-engineering game in India with the Urban Cruiser EV, a cosmetically tweaked version of the Maruti Suzuki e Vitara hitting dealers next month. It's a midsize electric SUV that'll compete directly against Mahindra's offerings in a market where platform-sharing is the only way to move volume. Same bones, different grille—the OEM playbook nobody asked for.

Badge engineering in EVs is just admission that platform development costs are crushing profit margins.

Why are you reporting this ?

Tell us more (optional)

Thanks for letting us know

Your feedback helps keep our community safe.

Would you like to take additional action?