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From its beginning, the name of Alvis has connoted high quality, long life and better-than-average performance. The first production Alvis set the trend. Those responsible for it were T.G. John, formerly of Siddeley-Deasy, and G.P.H. de Freville, who had worked for D.F.P. and had designed aluminium pistons bearing the name of Alvis for them. Their 10/30hp light car, current until 1922, used an extremely efficient 4-cylinder sv engine of 1.460cc made by Alvis, a 4-speed gearbox and attractive aluminium bodies by Morgan or Charlesworth. It was available in two-seater, four-seater or Super Sports form. The last-named as the first Alvis to have the famous ‘duck’s back’ body. Though noisy and expensive, the aLVIS ‘10/30’ was immensely popular among sporting motorists. In 1921, 322 examples were sold and by the following year the Alvis company employed 350 people. At the end of 1919, the new-born company had undertaken to deliver 1.000 cars, but the moulders’ strike which a brief spell during this period, the company made the Buckingham cyclecar.
In 1922, an engine of 1.598cc with a bigger bore and rated at 12/40hp was introduced in Alvis cars designed more for touring. Captain G.T. Smith-Clarke became chief engineer in 1923. He was responsible for the push-rod ohv 12/50hp engine, which was quieter and more powerful than its predecessors and at the same time extremely strong and long-lasting. It was first seen, in modified form, in the Alvis that won the Brooklands 200-Mile Race of 1923. The touring Alvis models were provided with 1.598cc engines, but the Alvis Super Sports had a shorter stroke giving 1.496cc and was more highly-tuned. The former were usually capable of about 60-65mph, but the latter would exceed 70mph comfortably. Handling qualities of all Alvis models were excellent, while bodies were by Cross & Ellis. During 1924 all Alvis cars went over to the new engine. At first, the Alvis firm’s survival was doubtful. Although 963 units of the older Alvis models had been sold in 1923, a receiver had to be appointed in the following year, because of lack of the capital needed for production on a scale to meet demand. More money was forthcoming, however, and the new Alvis 12/50hp restored the company’s fortunes. Prices were reduced for 1926, and all Alvis models were given front-wheel brakes. The chassis was stiffened by doing away with the separate subframe that had carried the engine and gearbox, and the engine was rubber-mounted. The downward-sloping ‘beetle-back’ tail was now the Super Sports style. By 1928, 6000 Alvises were on the road, and production was running at about 900 chassis per annum.
In that year, Alvis introduced a new type that was also to be a great success. Following fashion, it was a small six of 1.870cc. Similar in design to the old four, this Alvis was smoother, more flexible and quieter. Bodies were roomier and gearing was lower. This Alvis 14.75hp was superseded by the Alvis Silver Eagle in 1929, a car with a bigger bore that gave a mistake. They put into production a Alvis sports machine that had front-wheel-drive (Alvis FWD) – the first instance of this type of drive in a catalogued car – and independent suspension by four quarter-elliptic springs at the front and swing axles with quarter-elliptics at the rear. The 4-cylinder, 1.482cc, single ohc engine utilized many Alvis 12/50 parts, and could be had with a Roots-type supercharger. Helped by a low centre of gravity, the roadholding was very fine, and so were the brakes. During 1928 this Alvis model finished 6th and 9th at Le Mans, and 2nd in the Ulster Tourist Trophy race. In the following year an 8-cylinder version, still of 1½-litres was added. Unfortunately, the Alvis fwd had a very specialized, limited appeal, being complicated, unconventional, temperamental and hard to work on. However, Alvis were so confident in them and in the new six that they announced suspension of the production of the Alvis 12/50 in 1929. It was hurriedly reinstated when the six, popular though it was, proved insufficient to keep the Alvis company going alone. It was for sale until 1932, alongside a new sporting variant, the Alvis 12/60hp.
This was the Alvis company’s last out and out sports car, but its reputation for high-performance vehicles was sustained by the introduction of another new line for sale in 1932. The Alvis Speed Twenty was an exceptionally low-built, handsome fast tourer of modern appearance that combined the refinement of a medium-sized (2.511cc) six with speed, excellent roadholding and brakes, stamina and a reasonable sales-price. The car, and the types which succeeded it were a great success. The engine was a slightly tuned version of the largest option available in the Alvis Silver Eagle, and the chassis, too, was basically similar to that of the earlier Alvis model, which was retained. The power output was about 87bhp, permitting the better examples of the Vanden Plas open tourer to attain 90mph, in spite of the car’s weight, which was an equally traditional Alvis feature. The bodies were all coachbuilt.
With the introduction of this Alvis, the character of Alvis policy in the 1930s was set: the Alvis Speed Twenty and its developments provided the glamour, while an assortment of ‘bread-and-butter’ fours and sixes backed it up. All had push-rod ohv engines. The old Alvis ‘12/50’ and Alvis ‘12/60’ were replaced for 1933 by the sale of the heavier Alvis Firefly in the 1½-litre, 4-cylinder range. Much of the extra weight was added by the optional Wilson pre-selector gearbox, which could also be had on its development, the Alvis Firebird of 1935. This car, however, had an 1.842cc engine, in an attempt to cope with the avoirdupois. The Alvis Silver Eagle was joined early in 1933 by the 2.511cc Alvis Crested Eagle, which also had a Wilson gearbox. This was a chassis intended to carry heavier boddies, and was important because it was the first Alvis touring car to have independent front suspension, which was by a single transverse leaf. This feature, together with an all-synchromesh gearbox, was seen on the 1934 Alvis Speed Twenty. The latter model for sale, which was also growing heavier with increasing public demand for comfort rather than sporting pretensions, was given a bigger engine of 2.762cc in 1935 by lengthening the stroke.
For the same reason, the Alvis 3½-litre also made its bow. It was basically similar to the Alvis Speed Twenty, which it supplemented, but had a smoother, quieter engine with a bigger bore, providing 3.571cc and was designed to accommodate more comfortable, less sporting bodies. The Alvis 3½-litre was, however, a more powerful car than the Alvis Speed Twenty, with 110bhp. It was a short and logical step to replace the Alvis Speed Twenty with a new car for sale for 1936 that combined the virtues of both models. This was the fine Alvis Speed Twenty-five, which used the 3.571cc engine. Capable of a smooth and silent 95mph in saloon form, it was what many people still regard as the best Alvis ever built. At the same time, a car that was originally envisaged as a replacement for the short-lived Alvis 3½-litre was announced. This Alvis 4.3-litre had the same engine, bored out to a capacity of 4.387cc and providing 123bhp. With the introduction of the short-chassis sports tourer version for 1938, the Alvis 4.3-litre became the most exciting Alvis in the range, for it could easily exceed 100mph, with acceleration to match. Some consider that it was not quite as good-looking as the Alvis Speed Twenty-five, nor equally refined.
A new four for sale to replace the Alvis Firebird was listed for 1938. This was the Alvis 12/70hp, a George Lanchester design, with an 80mph performance in spite of its weight. The engine size was unaltered. The Alvis Silver Eagle had been dropped in 1936, but the Alvis Crested Eagle became for sale in a number of versions with the 2.762cc and 3.571cc engines as they appeared, in less highly-tuned forms. The Alvis Silver Crest, another Alvis car in which George Lanchester had a hand, was also brought in for sale in 1938 alongside the 12/70hp. It was intented to carry bodies of the more formal sort, and was powered by the 2.762cc engine, among others. It, too, had independent front suspension.
An aero engine works had been opened as early as 1937. The Alvis car factory at Holyhead Road, Coventry was completely destroyed by bombing in 1940, but the company continued to make aero engines – Rolls-Royce Merlins – at eighteen shadow factories. After World War 2, Alvis made their own Leonides unit and Alvis car production was restarted in 1946. A one-model policy, tailored to meet conditions of austerity, was adopted. Quality was still the main characteristic of the new Alvis TA14 for sale, which, in Alvis tradition, used a 4-cylinder push-rod ohv engine, now of 1.892cc.This Alvis TA14 car was the direct descendant of the 12/70hp. An ugly sporting model appeared briefly for sale in 1948. The Alvis TA14 was dropped during 1950 and the Alvis TA21, a big six, substituted. This was the first entirely new post-war Alvis. Its 2.993cc engine developed 90bhp, and this Alvis car – though not its sports roadster variant the Alvis TB21 – was as slower car than the Alvis Speed Twenty-five. Not so its development, the Alvis TC21/100, for sale in 1954 and 1955. This, after attention from Alec Issigonis, had a tuned engine providing 100bhp and a higher axle ratio, and carried a 100mph guarantee. The Alvis TC21/100 did not last long, for in 1955 there appeared one of the handsomest cars Alvis ever made, the Graber-designed Alvis saloon on what was virtually the Alvis TC21/100 chassis. Few were built until 1959, when this car was given a modified engine delivering 120bhp and renamed the Alvis TD21. It acquired disc brakes as standard fittings on all four wheels for 1962. For 1964, it was replaced by Alvis TE21, with 130bhp and five forward speeds. Automatic transmission was optional. In 1965 Rover acquired a controlling interest in the firm; production of private ceased in the summer of 1967.
Source: Georgano, encyclopedia of motorcar; TRN
The information is written with the greatest of care. However, if you have any suggested amendments please contact us at office@prewarcar.com
Fiat is an industrial colossus whose ramifications include commcerical vehicles (since 1903), ball bearings (Giovanni Agnelli of FIAT founded the RIV concern in 1905), ship-building (since 1905), aero engines (since 1908), large marine engines (since 1910), complete aircraft (since 1915) and railway rolling stock. Other car makers have been absorbed by Fiat: S.P.A. in the mid 1920s, Ansaldo in 1929 and O.M. in 1933, while Fiat has a controlling interest in Autobianchi and has helped finance Ferrari’s Grand Prix endeavours. The Fiat company’s share of the Italian private-car market fluctuates between 70 and 90 percent, and in 1962 795.504 of the 946.743 motor vehicles produced in Italy came from factories under the Fiat company’s control.
The founders of the Fiat company were Giovanni Agnelli, di Bricherasio and Count Carlo Biscaretti Di Ruffia, who took over the small Ceirano factory, inheriting with it the services of two great future racing drivers, Felice Nazzaro and Vincenzo Lancia, and the Faccioli patents under which Fiat’s first car was made. This Fiat was a 679cc flat-twin with rear engine, cone clutch and chain drive, rated at 3½hp, but by 1901 the Fiat company were making a front-engined 1.2-litre vertical twin with central chain drive. An aiv 4-cylinder, the work of Ing. Enrico, appeared in 1902 and the Fiat firm soon came under the influence of Mércèdes, with pair-cast cylinders, mechanically-operated sv in a T-head, low-tension magneto ignition, gate gear change and honeycomb radiator. Though the 4.2-litre ‘Fiat 16’ and its companion 6.3-litre model still used armoured wood frames in 1903, the Fiat company adopted the pressed-steel type in 1904, as well as scroll instead of cone clutches and belt-driven lubcricators. Water-cooled transmission brakes made their appearance in 1905, when the biggest Fiat model was a 10.2-litre ‘Fiat 60’. 1907 novelties were the Fiat company’s first six, a chain-driven 11-litre available with compressed-air starter, and the first shaft-driven Fiat (the full stops had been dropped at the end of 1906), a modest Fiat 14/16hp with the differential mounted directly behind the gearbox. In this year licence-production was also started in Vienna; the independently-designed Austro-Fiats did not make their appearance until 1921.
Meanwhile Fiat has been making its name in racing. A team of Mercedes-like racers ran in the 1904 Gordon Bennett Cup, but far more successful were the Fiat’s 16.3-litre successors of 1905 with full ohv, Fiat had to be content with second places in the Grand Prix and the Vanderbilt Cup in 1906, but 1907 was a great year for the Fiat company and Nazzaro alike, since he won the Kaiserpreis, the Targa Florio and the Grand Prix. Both ohv and ioe configurations of the Fiat car were raced in 1908, in which year the formidable 18.2-litre Mephistopheles performed at Brooklands, while an even larger car, the mighty Fiat S76 (nicknamed ‘the Beast of Turin’) was produced in 1911. It used a 28.3-litre 4-cylinder bibloc dirigible engine and the Beast was timed at 132.37mph at Ostend in 1913; the S76 was also the first Fiat to have the pear-shaped radiator. Overhead camshafts were also found on the 10.5-litre Fiat S61 of 1911 and the 14½-litre Fiat cars which contested the 1912 Grand Prix – virtually the last of the chain-driven giants. Fiat entered a team of 4½-litre 135bhp cars with front-wheel brakes for the 1914 Grand Prix, but these Fiat cars met with no success.
1908 saw the beginning of a new era in Fiat’s touring-car design with the 10/14hp cab chassis, a real breakaway from Mercedes ideas. It had a 2-litre 4-cylinder L-head monobloc engine, high-tension magneto ignition, pump and fan cooling, a 3-speed gearbox, multi-plate clutch and bevel drive; 4-speed gearboxes were available on the Fiat by 1909, in which year the older designs also appeared with shaft drive. More important, the ‘Fiat 10/14’ formula had been extended right down the range by 1913. Models available were the Fiat TIpo Zero and Fiat Tipo 1 with 1.8-litre engines, the 2.8-litre Fiat Tipo 2, the 4.4-litre Fiat Tipo 3, the 5.7-litre Fiat Tipo 4 and the enormous 9-litre Fiat Tipo 5 with its chain drive counterpart the Fiat Tipo 6, all fours with 4-speed gearboxes. The larger ones had vaned flywheels to assist cooling and watercooled transmission brakes, There was also a 3.9-litre 6-cylinder Fiat Tipo 57 version made only in 1911 and 1912. An independent Fiat Motor Co was formed in the USA in 1910 to build and market this range. Chain-driven Fiat sports cars were still made in limited numbers, a 10.1-litre ohc Fiat 75/90hp being introduced in 1911, while there was also a 4.8-litre (95x170mm) variants with shaft drive. The pear-shaped radiator was available on Fiat cars by 1914, as were (on the larger Fiat models) wire wheels, and electric lighting and starting. During World War 1 the 15/20hp Fiat Tipo 2B was made in large numbers as a staff car.
In 1919 FIAT emerges as mass-producers with the sv 1½-litre Fiat Tipo 501, a car of great smoothness and durability which featured a detachable head, full electrics and all brakes on the rear wheels – a suprising deviation from a firm who were still using a transmission parking brake on some models in the middle 1960s. The Fiat 501 could be bought in England for £340 in 1925, when front-wheel brakes were optional and there were companion 2.3-litre 4-cylinder and 3.4-litre 6-cylinder derivatives. The old tradition of luxury was carried on by Fiat by a vast 6.8-litre ohv V12 with front-wheel brakes, of which fewer than 10 Fiat cars were made in 1921 – 1922, and by the smaller 4.8-litre Fiat Tipo 519, a 6-cylinder car with hydro-mechanical servo braks which could be bought for less than £1.000 and was still catalogued by Fiat in 1929. Racing acitivites were resumed in 1921 with a Fiat 3-litre dohc straight-8, followed by the Bertarione-designed 2-litre 6-cylinder Fiat machine which won the French and Italian Grands Prix in 1922 and inspired the later 2-litre Sunbeams. The Fiat firm had supercharged racing cars – a 1½-litre 4-cylinder and a 2-litre 130bhp straight-8 – in 1923, and won the European GP with the latter. After 1924 Fiat dropped out of the grandes épreuves, though they were experimented with an opposed-piston 2-stroke engine and made a 175bhp 1½-litre twin-6 with crankshafts geared together which won its only race – the 1927 Milan GP. The old chain-driven Fiat Mephistopheles was re-engined by E.A.D. Eldridge in 1923 with a 21.7-litre 6-cylinder Fiat airship engine and Fiat took the World Land Speed Record in 1924 at 146.01mph.
Fiat radiators, already found on the V12 and the ‘Fiat 519’, were seen on the advanced 990cc ‘Fiat 509’ of 1925, with an ohc engine, low-pressure tyres, fwb, thermos-syphon cooling and single-plate clutch. This Fiat was a best-seller (over 90.000 sold between 1925 and 1929, at a time when only 172.000 private cars were registered in Italy) and could be bought in England for £195 in later years. Fiat-radiator, Ricardo-headed versions of the 1919 sv designs came in 1926, and a year later the Fiat Tipo 520 marked the beginning of a long series of American-styled sv long –stroke 6-cylinder Fiat cars with coil ignition. Bigger models (the 2.5-litre ‘Fiat 521’ and the 3.7-litre ‘Fiat 525’) joined the range in 1928, the latter being the first Fiat to be fitted with hydraulic brakes, late in 1930. A companion straight-8 Fiat never went into production, while the 1.4-litre 4-cylinder ‘Fiat 514’ which replaced the Fiat 509A in 1929 was a dull car and the nearest thing to a failure that Fiat has ever produced in series. Nonetheless, it marked the beginning of NSU’s switch from their own designs to licence-produced Fiat cars, their staple car products until 1957. By 1931 the 6-cylinder Fiat 522 offered a cruciform-braced frame and hydraulic brakes for only £335, and a year later came an advanced small car, the Fiat Tipo 508 Balilla with a 3-bearing, short stroke (65x75mm) 995cc engine and hydraulic brakes. This Fiat had acquired synchromesh, a 4-speed gearbox and 4-door pillarless saloon bodywork by 1934, when a brace of bigger short-stroke fours, the 1.7-litre and 1.9-litre ‘Fiat 518’ models, were also available. The ohv sports Fiat Balilla had a 36bhp engine and dominated the 1100cc class in sports-car events for the next two years, though only a few (about 1.000 out of 113.000 ordinary Fiat Balillas) were produced. It formed the basis for French licence-production of Fiat cars by Simca which started in 1935 and also for the Polski-Fiat cars made in Warsaw up to World War 2: 1938 Fiat Tipo 508Cs were produced later. The last long-stroke 6-cylinder machines (Fiat Tipo 527) were made in 1936, in which year the revolutionary 6-cylinder short-stroke ohv Fiat 1400 went into large-scale production. This had a backbone frame, Dubonnet-type independent front suspension and aerodynamic saloon bodywork with recessed headlamps. It cost £298 in England and paved the way to even greater successes – the legendary Fiat 500 Topolino (for sale in late 1936) and the Fiat 508C Millecento (for sale in 1937). The former had a tiny 570cc sv 4-cylinder engine mounted in front of its radiator, synchromesh, hydraulic brakes, independent front suspension and a 2-seater rolltop convertible body. The English price for the Fiat was £120 and it offered 55mph and 55mpg at the cost of being difficult ot maintain. It continued with little change until 1948. The Fiat Millecento was a 1089cc 4-door saloon on the same lines with ohv and 32bhp; superb handling was combined with 70mph and 35-40mpg. This Fiat was also made in long-chassis taxicab form, and as the Fiat 1100S aerodynamic coupé, a 90mph machine which cost £375 and led to a whole series of Fiat-based sports cars in post-war Italy: among those who have used Fiat components are Abarth, Cisitalia, Giannini, Moretti, Siata, Stanguellini and (on the 1940 Fiat Tipo 815) Ferrari. In 1939 there was also a big 2.8-litre 6-cylinder Fiat with seven-seater bodywork, of which only a few were made.
Fiat made a good recovery from World War 2, turning out an impressive 75.000 Fiat vehicles in 1949. However, nothing new appeared for the first few years apart from a 16.5bhp ohv version of the Fiat Topolino (for sale in 1948) and revised ‘Fiat 1100s’ and ‘Fiat 1500s’ with steering-column change (for sale in 1949). The results of Marshall Aid were seen on Fiat cars in 1950 with the oversquare (82x66mm) 4-cylinder ‘Fiat 1400’, featuring push-rod ohv, unitary construction, hypoid final drive and coil-spring independent front suspension, the Fiat Campagnola, a 1.9-litre diesel model and the luxury ‘Fiat 1900’ of 1953 with a 5-speed gearbox which cost the equivalent of £1060 and came complete with Tachimedion average-speed calculator. All-round independent suspension was seen on the limited-production 2-litre Fiat V8 sports car of 1952, which was capable of 120mph; the chassis was used for Fiat’s experimental gas-turbine coupé of 1955. In 1953 the ‘Fiat 1100’ went over to hypoid rear axle and unitary construction, the standard 35bhp berline being joined shortly afterwards by a 48bhp Fiat turismo veloce type. In 1955 the faithful old ‘Fiat 500C’ gave way to the advanced new ‘Fiat 600’, a 633cc rear-engined unitary-construction Fiat saloon with all-round independent suspension and 21.5bhp. By 1960 a million of these little Fiat cars had been made and it was still listed in 1967 with a 767cc 25bhp power unit. A real minicar was the Fiat Nuova 500 of 1957, a variation of the ‘Fiat 600’ theme with ohv air-cooled vertical-twin engine and 4-speed non-synchromesh gearbox. A slow seller at first, this Fiat formed the basis of Bianchi’s return to private-car manufacture and was subsequently up-rated to 499cc and 22bhp. Fiat stationwagon versions made from 1960 had the engine mounted horizontally under the floor. Some new thinking was seen in 1959 with a brace of 6-cylinder ohv saloons with 1.8-litre 75bhp and 2.1-litre 82bhp engines, torsion-bar independent front suspension and all-synchromesh gearboxes. These acquired disc brakes in 1961 but, like their 4-cylinder derivatives, the ‘Fiat 1300’ and ‘Fiat 1500’ of the same year, they retained non-independent springing at the rear. A stationwagon-cum-taxi variant of the ‘Fiat 600’, the Fiat Multipla, had been introduced in 1956 and from 1959 onward limited-production Fiat sporting models reappeared. The first of these was the hohc ‘Fiat 1500S’ with an Osca-designed engine, which had grown up by 1962 into a disc-braked 1600cc, 85bhp model. This was followed by a 6-cylinder ‘Fiat 2300S’ capable of 120mph.
Fiat’s role as a universal provider has resulted in a steadily widening range. In January 1967, the Fiat make was being manufactured or assembled in 18 different countries, not including the Spanish SEAT, the Austrian Steyr-Puch and the German Neckar (by NSU at Heilbronn) which rate as individual makes, or the agreement negotiated by Fiat with the Sovjet Government in 1966 to build a Fiat car factory in the USSR. Another rear-engined Fiat model of 850cc joined the range in 1964. The ‘Fiat 1100’ was brought up to date in 1966 when the car acquired floor change and front disc brakes and lost its time-honoured transmission handbrake. For those requiring something between this and the roomy ‘Fiat 1300’. There was the 1.2-litre Fiat Tipo 124 with an all-synchromesh gearbox, disc brakes front and rear and a 5-bearing crankshaft. Early in 1967 the Idromatic semi-automatic transmission became available as an optional extra on the ‘Fiat 850’, while two new sports models were announced: the Fiat 124 Sport with twin ohc, cogged-belt camshaft drive and the option of a 5-speed gearbox, and the Ferrari-designed 2-litre 4ohc V6 Fiat Dino with front-mounted engine (unlike its Maranello counterpart). Twin-ohc 4- and 5-speed 124 derivatives, the 1600cc 125 saloons, followed soon afterwards.
Fiat made 1.346.000 private cars in 1968, and extended their interests acquiring a 50 per cent holding in Ferrari and 15 percent in Citroën. At the same time Autobianchi was integrated into the parent Fiat company. Over the next 12 months new Fiat models were limited to a special version of the Fiat 850 saloon with front disc brakes; more powerful 903cc Fiat 850 spyders and coupés; a more powerful Fiat 124, the Special with 1438cc pushrod engine and four headlamps; and a revised Fiat Dino with transistorized ignition. This last was given a 2.4-litre, 180bhp engine and strut-type irs in 1969, when Fiat acquired the Lancia company. But the most important news of the season was a long-awaited 1100 replacement, the fwd Fiat 128 saloon. This derived from the Autobianchi Primula and A112, and featured an 1116cc 4-cylinder transverse engine with cogged-belt ohc, all-independent springing, and front disc brakes. It attained 88mph on 55bhp. By October 1971, 700.000 of these Fiats had been made. The range was widened with a station wagon, a 1290cc Rallye version capable of 95mph, an a series of coupés with various engine options. Also new was the 130, Fiat’s first true prestige car for many years, and their first to have an automatic gearbox as standard, though these had been available on the 6-cylinder Fiat 2300 as long ago as 1963. The 2866cc dohc V6 engine had almost square dimensions. Other featured on the Fiat were alternator ignition, power steering, all-disc brakes, and independent suspension all round. It did not begin to appear in quantity until 1971, by which time there was an alternative coupé version, capacity was up to 3.2-litres, and Fiat-buyers could specify at 5-speed ZF manual gearbox. The 600 and 1100 were finally phased out at Turin by Fiat during 1970. A year later the Fiat 850 saloon had also departed, replaced by the fwd Fiat 127, a scaled down Fiat 128 offered as a 2-door saloon or estate car. It had front disc brakes and the 903cc 850 coupé engine set transversely. Fastest of the Fiat 124s was now the 1.4-litre dohc Special T, and all but the basic 1197cc variant were available with automatic.
Meanwhile Fiat had returned to competitions with a Fiat rally team of 124 Sports, scoring their first big victory in the 1972 Acropolis. During 1972 the 125 was replaced by the Fiat 132, a big saloon styled in the manner of the 130. New 1.6-litre and 1.8-litre dohc 4-cylinder engines were used, and the Fiat cars were available with three transmissions: 4- or 5-speed manual, or automatic. When the 124 was revised for 1973 these new engines were installed in both the Special T and the Sport versions of the Fiat family; spyders and coupés were available with the bigger unit in 118bhp form. Also new for 1973 were the Fiat 126, a four-seater saloon with rear-mounted 594cc air-cooled 2-cylinder engine, and the X1/9, the Fiat company’s first mid-engined sports coupé, powered by a 75bhp 1.3-litre 128 unit.
The rest of the Italian Fiat range comprised the indestructible twin-cylinder 500, as well as the 127, 128, 130 and Dino families. Production was divided among the three major Turin plants (Mirafiori, Rivalta an Lingotto), the overflow handled by Autobianchi of Milan (some 500s), Naples (850 minibuses), and Ferrari (all Dinos). Fiat cars were also manufactured or assembled in some 25 countries, the major subspecies being Fiat-Concord (Argentina), Polski-Fiat (Poland), SEAT (Spain), Steyr-Puch (Austria), VAZ (Russia) and Zastava (Yugoslavia). Obsolete models produced outside Italy included the 600s and 850s of SEAT, and 1963-type 1100s still made in India by Premier of Bombay. During 1973 Fiat (England) Ltd were importing SEAT-built 850s for the British market.
Source: Georgano, encyclopedia of motorcar; MCS
The information is written with the greatest of care. However, if you have any suggested amendments please contact us at office@prewarcar.com


