INKA Kancil
INKA Kancil is an Indonesian car produced by PT INKA. Kancil is an abbreviation of Kendaraan Niaga Cilik Irit Lincah (small, efficient, and agile commercial vehicle), also Indonesian name for chevrotain. It was expected as a replacement for auto rickshaw and bemo because they were not allowed to increase in number or be produced in the Jakarta area. As a type IV environmental transportation vehicle, the Kancil cannot develop its market because Kancil can only replace the existing auto rickshaw. A new Kancil unit can only enter the road if it replaces one auto rickshaw. This means that the buyer of Kancil must also buy 1 piece of auto rickshaw to have its operating license turned off. Because of this rule, Kancil cannot develop quickly, and business owners don't want Kancil to be sold to the public for the use of private passenger vehicles,[1] although it is reported that INKA has produced 40,000 units of this vehicle.[2]
Kancil | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Manufacturer | PT INKA |
Production | 2011 |
Assembly | Madiun, Indonesia |
Body and chassis | |
Class | micro car or quadricycle |
Body style | 4-door fastback |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 1 cylinder petrol engine, 404 cc |
Transmission | Manual |
Dimensions | |
Length | 2.800 mm |
Width | 1.385 mm |
Height | 1.720 mm |
Curb weight | 850 kg |
Design
Without pretending to be a National Car, the Kancil was planned, designed, and developed by PT Kancil. With several components developed with various domestic and foreign component industries, and the Swiss Mechanical Polytechnic (now POLMAN) Bandung for the front knuckle arm system. Drum brake and wheel hub jointly developed by PT Bakrie Tosanjaya. Verification of design, performance and dynamic analysis as well as vehicle construction fatigue tests were carried out at the Inter-University Central Dynamics Laboratory, Bandung Institute of Technology.[3]
The engine is made by Fuji Heavy Industries, the manufacturer of the Japanese automaker Subaru.[4] Rear Axle is made by Fuji Machinery, also from Japan. Automatic transmission (CVT, Torque Converter) made by Huffco-Comet, USA. While the fiberglass body panels are made by PT. Induro, Tangerang. This body panel was developed from 2 master sample bodies and the first mold made by PT AITEM, a business unit under Indonesian Aerospace. Meanwhile, the styling and master clay models for the body were made by PT Kancil.[3]
References
- "Sebenarnya Indonesia Punya Kancil, Kenapa Pilih Qute dari India". Carmudi Indonesia (in Indonesian). 2017-09-08. Retrieved 2021-09-23.
- Pusat Data dan Analisa TEMPO (2019). Mimpi Mobil Nasional : Timor. Tempo Publishing. pp. 68–69. ISBN 9786232074514.
- "Semangat Harhubnas, Bakal Meluncur Mobil Kancil Ramah Lingkungan". suara.com (in Indonesian). 2019-09-19. Retrieved 2021-09-23.
- Gunadi, Hidayat; Handoko, Dipo; Haryadi, Rohmat (25 February 2001). "Sang Kancil Lepas Kandang" [The Kancil Out of Its Cage]. Gatra.com (in Indonesian). Bandung (published 26 February 2001). Archived from the original on 29 June 2013.