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Parts for your 1995 Suzuki Swift-Drive belt tensioner

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1995 Suzuki Swift drive-belt tensioner — is it actually there?

Short answer: a factory-fitted automatic drive-belt tensioner isn’t used on the 1995 Suzuki Swift. Accessory belt tension on these Swifts (G10 1.0L and G13 1.3L variants, including SF310/SF413) is set manually via the alternator and, where fitted, the power-steering pump or an air‑conditioning idler pulley with an adjuster screw. This is confirmed by period factory workshop manuals and parts catalogues, which outline belt adjustment at the component brackets and list belts and an A/C idler, but no spring‑loaded serpentine tensioner assembly. Aftermarket catalogues for AU/NZ likewise list belts for these models without a corresponding automatic tensioner part.

That can catch people out because the timing belt on some 1995 Swifts does use a dedicated timing-belt tensioner — but that’s a different system hidden behind the covers. The question here is about the accessory/drive belt(s) out front, and for those there’s no automatic tensioner.

Why Suzuki didn’t fit one on the 1995 Swift:

  • Simplicity and cost: small, low-load accessory drives were easy to set by moving the alternator or an A/C idler.
  • Multiple-belt layouts: many cars of this era used individual belts rather than a single long serpentine with a spring tensioner.
  • Packaging: the compact engine bay on SF-series Swifts leaves little need for an extra tensioner assembly.

What owners and techs should service instead: inspect the belts and the manual adjustment points. Look for fraying, glazing, or cracking. If the belt chirps on cold start, slips when the A/C kicks in, or there’s dimming lights at idle, check tension. To adjust, loosen the alternator (and/or power-steer) pivot and lock bolts, use the adjuster screw or lever the unit to set tension to the workshop spec, then retighten. On A/C‑equipped cars, the idler pulley has a jackscrew to fine‑tune belt tension. Don’t over‑tighten — it can chew out alternator or pump bearings. After refitting a new belt, recheck tension after a short run‑in as fresh belts bed in.

Technical sources referenced:

  • Suzuki Swift/Geo Metro Factory Service Manual (1989–1998): Maintenance and Engine sections specify alternator/pump bracket adjustments