Suzuki was onto A Good Thing in Australia back
during the late ’80s/mid ‘90s. The Suzuki Swift GTi dominated the small
performance hatch segment and emerged as a cult classic. But the successor to
the Swift, the Baleno, wasn’t so well accepted. Despite running a very similar
driveline and a larger, more useable body, the Baleno was largely a sales
flop.
But that’s not to say it’s a car with no
appeal.
Damian Robins of Sydney owns a custom turbocharged
Baleno that should invigorate some interest in the much-overlooked Suzuki. This
is Damian’s third Baleno, which was purchased after ‘stepping up’ to a European
hatch – a Peugeot 307 HDi. The oil burning Pug was plenty frugal around the
streets of Sydney but ongoing electrical problems led Damian to sell it and
revert back to ol’ faithful – the Baleno.
Damian picked up this second-hand 2000 Baleno GL
(base spec) with just 38,000km at the hands of the proverbial little old lady.
Like most secondhand Balenos, it was purchased for a song. Damian then
proceeded to unlock some of the potential that he had seen in his previous
models – his first modifications were a 2 inch cat-back exhaust, modified
airbox, different spark plugs, an underdrive crank pulley and lightened
flywheel. This gave the standard 1.6-litre DOHC engine (coded G16B) about 52kW
at wheels.
At the same time, the suspension was upgraded with
Pedders sports dampers and lowered springs and an upgrade sound system was
fitted inside. Damian had also been contemplating an extra dose of power so, in
preparation, he ripped out the original brakes and chucked in the anchors from
the sportier Baleno GTX. The GTX has larger diameter front discs and a disc
brake rear (the GL model having rear drums).
Suzuki engines were widely turbocharged back when
the Swift GTi ruled the streets and Damian knew they’re a pretty strong little
engine. So there was no hesitation in enlisting SuziTech in Thornleigh to
install a custom turbo set-up. SuziTech fabricated a tubular exhaust
manifold (using ‘steam pipe’), picked a suitably sized Garrett turbocharger,
routed the necessary oil and water lines, and whipped up a dump pipe which leads
into a high-flow cat converter and 2 ¼ inch front pipe.
The intake to the turbo comprises a UniFilter foam
pod filter and a PWR-cored air-to-air intercooler chills the compressed air. All
intake pipes are mandrel bent and feature ceramic heat coatings on the internal
and external surfaces. The throttle body is also machined from around 46 to 50mm
diameter and a plumb-back blow-off valve is installed.
With a Garrett turbo now residing in the engine
bay it was time to work out the engine management and fuelling side of things.
Interestingly, Damian’s Baleno currently survives with a stock engine management
system, injectors and fuel pump. The only changes are a Malpassi rising rate
fuel pressure regulator and a modified engine load signal into the ECU. A
pneumatic bleed valve has been adjusted to limit the amount of boost pressure
seen by the factory MAP sensor. SuziTech says the standard management system is
fine up to about 5 psi but beyond that it goes into a failsafe mode.
Damian also runs a Silicon Chip 10 LED
air-fuel ratio display to keep an eye on mixtures seen by the factory oxygen
sensor. Apparently, the engine runs lean with 6 psi boost so the wastegate
actuator is temporarily modified to deliver just 4 psi. We’re told that a
soon-to-be-installed extra injector will enable more boost along with safe
mixtures. The extra injector will be controlled by a Silicon Chip Digital
Pulse Adjuster (DPA).
Driving through an Exedy heavy-duty clutch and the
SuziTech strengthened five-speed manual, Damian’s turbo Suzuki has terrific
real-world performance. Sure, there are faster cars to be found but not many are
as enjoyable and unassuming as this! Damian says the car used to wheelspin all the way through first gear when boost was set at 6 psi but traction is
improved after the recent fitment of a DMW Motorsport Phantom front LSD. This,
combined with reduced turbo boost pressure, keeps the Baleno within its traction
limit. There’s useable performance from about 3000 rpm to the 6500 redline.
The Pedders suspension package has also
received some further tweaking. Damian has installed Whiteline front and rear
swaybars (a rear swaybar is normally reserved for the GTX model), SuperPro bushes
all round and a SuziTech front strut brace. A SuziTech engine steady connects to
the strut brace to combat engine rocking under load.
Aside from its 14 inch ROH alloy wheels,
the little red hatch can slide its way through traffic without attracting a
second glance. The only reasons for a double-take are the louder-than-standard
exhaust and a slight sneeze from the blow-off valve (which can be heard through
the exposed air filter).
The interior is similarly untouched except for the
Pioneer sound system, boost gauge, mixture meter and a dual mode temperature
display (which is currently measuring intake air temperature before the filter).
As with pretty well any project car, Damian’s Baleno
has a few tweaks left in store. There’s the extra injector set-up (which will
allow more boost), different wheels, maybe a ported head and Damian is gradually
adding stainless steel cap screws throughout the engine bay – something that, in
Damian’s words, is “being a bit obsessive”...
Let’s not get our wires crossed. This isn’t a
mega-power streeter that’ll wipe HSVs and WRXs – instead, it’s a genuinely
useable hatchback with well rounded engine, suspension and brake mods at an
affordable price.
And isn’t that what it’s all about?
Contact:
Suzitech +61 2 9484 5909
http://www.suzitech.com/
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