The dream of recreating a sporting image for Suzuki began in 1987 and within two years the "project car" was shown for the first time at the
Tokyo Motor Show. Suzuki intentionally designed the Cappuccino just for the Japanese market, meeting the tax needs of the Kei-class: body length less than , body width not exceeding and engine size less than 0.66 L. There was originally no intention to export the Cappuccino. Production of the Cappuccino started in October 1991 at the
Kosai Plant. The car had the internal designation SX306, and the model identification (incorporated in the VIN) EA11R. The sales launch of the Cappuccino was November 1991 in Japan, with the advertising theme: "fulfilling one's dream of owning a stylish and very affordable 2 seater sportscar". The first two years (1991–92) saw 15,113 cars produced with 13,318 (or 88% of production) sold in Japan. In addition to the European export model discussed below, the Cappuccino was regularly available in Hong Kong, and there was also a rare "General Export" market model.
Revised Cappuccino (EA21R) In 1995 tougher emission controls were set by the
European Commission, which led to the unsold cars being registered by 30 September 1995; any unregistered after that date would have had to be re-homologated. Discussions took place between SMC and Suzuki distributors in Europe to assess and "value" the necessary changes for the Cappuccino to meet these new emission levels. The corporate decision was made not to proceed with a revised European version due to the vast expense involved and lack of economy of scale due to the limited production run. The later specification (EA21R), introduced in 1995, had new, lighter engine with chain-driven camshafts, slightly increased torque, lighter wheels and an optional 3-speed
automatic transmission with power steering. Both EA11R and EA21R (MT only) versions had optional "high specification" BA variants, which came with an
airbag for the driver,
ABS on all four wheels, a
limited-slip differential and (in some cases) power-operated
door mirrors. There were three limited editions of the EA11R, offering variations of colour and
trim; the later two had power steering. ==References==