SMALL WONDER - The making of the NANO
Authors : Philip Chacko, Christabelle Noronha, Sujata Agrawal,
Publisher
:
Westland Ltd, year 2010; Pages 149 + 8 pages of coloured photographs.
Review by Indra Mani Lal
Excerpts
:
( ) Ratan Tata thought up the Nano one
day when he was caught in traffic in Bangalore and noticed a single scooter
carrying an entire family. The
two-wheeler image is what got him thinking that we needed to create a safer
form of transport.He talked about the car as early as 2000, an year after the
company had launched the Indica, the first indigenous car to be made in India.
Getting in touch with an industry association, suggesting a joint effort with
Tata Motors for an Asian car, large volumes, the response was tepid. The
company’s chairman had his goal set at a Rs 1 lakh car, and his team a cost
cast in concrete.
( ) Everyone at Tata Motors knew their
small car would have to stand comparison with the Maruti-600, that had changed
middle India’s impression of a car. The Nano would have to be an improvement on
factors such as acceleration, drive comfort, space and looks, and had to be
managed at less than half the cost of the competitor. Ratan Tata was from day
one the force behind the small car project.
( ) The first mule had an 8.5 horsepower
engine and had inputs on styling from the Italian design house. The cheaper
frame-construction method was chosen instead of the robotics heavy monocoque
technique. The second mule by Justyne Norek; Jadhav and others creating a new
style language.
( ) By the summer of 2005, Ratan Tata
had become convinced that the project needed a fillip. The time for a decisive
shifting of gears had come. The die was cast. Kant the new Managing Director
would drive the project, Wagh would lead it and Ratan Tata would oversee it
all. The styling of the car was not yet final, but Wagh and his engineers went
ahead and started making a prototype, and by December 2005 they had a car for
Ratan Tata to try out. The Chairman thought the car lacked in acceleration. Out
went the 543cc engine to be replaced with a 586cc capacity. The prototype was a
gearless one, which did not satisfy the stickler in Tata, so a regular
four-speed manual transmission was put in. The “getting better” was about
living up to the expected demands of the Indian customer.
( ) Ratan Tata thought the front portion
of the car was too abrupt, so 50mm were added to the Nano’s nose, which
entailed adjusting the lamps, its wheel base, its entire structure. This was in
July 2006, and a computer-aided design was completed and the actual engineering
began in right earnest. This is when, typically, discoveries are made about
what is possible and what isn’t. Air-conditioning was added, bumper altered to
integrate fog lamps into it. The physical crafting of the car started in early
2007 and continued right up to the time it was unveiled at the Delhi Auto Expo
in January 2008.
( ) Cost was a constant consideration.
The dashboard designed by Tata Motor’s team was discarded in favour of IDEA’s
integrated console. Head rests, all inside trims, plastic design elements had
to serve a purpose. Nothing for fancy’s sake anywhere. Seven show cars were
made for the unveiling at the Auto Expo at the Engineering Research Centre at
Pune. Secrecy was paramount. Mobile phones and cameras were not allowed. Entry
only after signing a ledger and proving you were a part of the development
team. Often working through the night, coming back at 6am.
( ) The entire concept of what would
become the Nano got transformed over the course of its development, the forced
shift from Singur to Sanand, the political and other controversies – increased
the degree of difficulties. Cost was less of a concern than performance,
quality; integrating two, maybe three functions into one, a single casting for
the engine, combination switches, three bolts instead for four for each
tyre and the like. The rear engine
placement meant it was too close for comfort for those sitting in the back. The
team struggled for two years. Instead of adding more insulation to reduce the
heat and noise, which would increase costs, we changed the orientation of the
cylinder heads by 180 degree and other improvements. Costing played a factor at every step- for
example the cost of transporting a car is almost six times that of a
two-wheeler. A minor miracle was achieved by bringing the cost down to about
twice that of a two-wheeler. There would be people out there just waiting to
pounce on the smallest issue – once the Nano was released.. We could not afford
it.
===========
My
Take : There
was a dream – born of the vision of Ratan Tata – to enable middle-class Indians
to have a safe and affordable means of personal mobility, to create a motor car
that would be more than just another automobile. This book tells the story of
how that dream was realised. The story of the Nano, and how it came to be.
==========
Subject
type : Reminisces
of a Consumer Product in making
Narrative
Style : Excellent
Readability
: Excellent
Reader’s
Interest : Maintained
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We appreciate the gesture of Hon'ble Tata for introducing affordable car for masses but regret that it's launch took much too long for designing compact comfortable saloon.However,currently ever soaring petrol prices,relaunch of fuel efficient NANO shall pick up briskly.K B Mathur
ReplyDeleteThanks Mathur saheb. Yes the Nano if launched again shall be a boon seeing the current fuel prices. Hope for the best!
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