Tata Estate


The Tata Estate was a station wagon car produced by Indian car manufacturer Tata Motors between 1992 until 2000.
Tata was already a major player in the heavy vehicle segment and the Estate was the company's first attempt at building a passenger car. The car was considered fairly advanced during its production time and had many features which were not common among other Indian cars available at the same price range then. The car came with power windows, power steering and a tachometer.
The Estate's exterior is based on Mercedes-Benz station wagon design made at the time of conception, in particular the T-series estate-type cars.

History

The Tata Estate was introduced in 1992 and production ran until 2000.
The Estate was powered by a Peugeot sourced 1.9-litre diesel engine producing at 4500 rpm and torque of at 2500 rpm, mated to a 5-speed manual transmission.
The Estate followed after the production of the Tata Sierra in 1991. It was initially plagued with problems due to high fuel consumption, faulty electrical systems and suspensions before they were fixed in subsequent productions.

Variants

Tata Motors has mentioned that a bulletproof version of the Estate can be made for VIPs.

Specifications

The platform of the Estate was based on the Tata Telcoline pick-up truck, which saved the company around Rs. 10 crore in development costs.

Reception

Gaadi rated the Tata Estate as the second station wagon that should be placed back into production since it was the car that made Tata known publicly.