Fiat-Abarth #1
Fiat-Abarth #1
Last edited by Ferrer; 08-16-2012 at 05:59 AM.
Lack of charisma can be fatal.
Visca Catalunya!
Abarth-Fiat 850 TC #2
Lack of charisma can be fatal.
Visca Catalunya!
Abarth-Fiat 850 TC #3
Lack of charisma can be fatal.
Visca Catalunya!
Fiat Abarth 850 TC #4
Lack of charisma can be fatal.
Visca Catalunya!
Incredibly strange, I searched Hide Out both on 'Fiat' and 'Abarth', but seemed to be missing. Otherwise merging will be unevitable
The Fiat Abarth 850TC Berlina was an economical automobile manufactured by the Italian manufacturing firm Abarth & Co. of Turin, Italy in the 1960s.
The automobile was a joint project of the Abarth and the Fiat companies. Its engine was a four-cylinder model provided by Fiat, with 846.768 cc capacity and 70 bhp rating. Overall length was 10.14 ft (3.091 m), overall width was 4.59 ft (1.400 m), height was 4.525 ft (1.379 m), wheelbase was 6.563 ft (2.000 m), and its front and rear track was 3.81 ft (1.161 m). The fuel tank held 5.9 imperial gallons, and its empty weight was 1749 lb (793 kg).
The automobile's appearance was similar to the same-year model of Fiat 600, but it incorporated a boxlike structure ahead of the front bumper which held the engine's oil cooler.
Source: Wikipedia
Abarth-Fiat 850 TC Berlina (Tipo 114) 1961-1970 - Ultimatecarpage.com forums
However, we didn't have the interior pic, so that's a welcome addition.
Lack of charisma can be fatal.
Visca Catalunya!
Indeed, merging was unevitable
Ferrer, besides adding the interior pic don't forget the pics I posted are proper high rez (da bomb)
What about production years, it seems my source has mislead me?
I got them from here: Macchine | Berni Motori | Abarth
These chaps do seem to know their Abarths -
Lack of charisma can be fatal.
Visca Catalunya!
A well written article about Abarth 850 TC, found from internet:
In Italy in the 1960s, if something was Abarthizzara, it was superior to the norm. As one Italian author put it, "Abarthizzata could be used indiscriminately to describe a particularly well-endowed girl or a garden tool made more efficient as a result of some ingenious alteration." The more common use for this adjective was to describe cars, of course, but it's evident that a word with such ubiquitous applications could only come about from a truly popular source. The source was Carlo Abarth.
Though born in Austria, Carlo Abarth lived long and prospered in Italy, where his number one goal over the length of his auto-making career was to win races. His earliest efforts, running Cisitalia's racing team, produced impressive race wins. When Cisitalia floundered in 1949, Abarth took several of the chassis and built his first automobiles. His engines were built on Fiat blocks but were blessed by his unique ability to generate maximum power out of minimum metal. Until 1956, his chassis all wore custom bodies provided by Italy's finest carrozzerie, from Allemano to Zagato. While cars and the race tracks were his passion, his bread and butter work was mufflers and high performance exhaust systems.
In April 1956, Abarth's first Fiat 600-bodied automobile appeared at the Turin Salon. The stock Fiat 600 had taken the country by storm the previous year; it was Italy's first new post-war people's car (the original 'people's car,' the Topolino, had been updated in 1952, but still looked hopelessly pre-war). The 600 was affordable, and it was a huge success. For that April show, Abarth lined up six identical Fiat 600 Berlinettas (sedans) that hid under their modest pearl-grey sheet-metal the true star of the show: the Abarth 750 engine. Abarth had transformed Fiat's diminutive 600cc 22-bhp motor into a fire-breathing 747cc 51.5-bhp race-winner. While the design world and international automotive press went gaga over the custom-bodied 750s that appeared alongside those humble sedans (especially the Double Bubble Zagato), the Italian consumers did the opposite: here, finally, was a race car they could afford.
Well, some of them could afford. At first, the process of converting the 750 Berlinettas at the factory was slow and costly. Abarth's exhaust system business kept his small staff too busy to satisfy more than a few Berlinetta customers. All that unsatisfied demand was hard to ignore. So instead of hiring more staff to take apart, modify, repaint, then reassemble all those cars, Abarth decided to offer the conversion as a kit.
The 750 had an illustrious racing career in a mind-boggling array of bodies, both kit and custom, before Abarth went to work on his next great engine. In lat 1960, Fiat introduced the 600D, which increased the stock four-cylinder's displacement to 767 cc. In Abarth's hands that number jumped up to 847 cc. Carlo stretched the 600's 60mm bore to 62.5mm and lengthened the 63.5mm stroke to 69mm. Maximum speed rose to 140 kph (87 mph), (as fast as saloon cars with twice the engine size) and torque increased from 55 Nm (39.8 lb-ft) to 70 Nm at 2800 rpm.
The car was designated 850 TC, for Turismo Competizione, and to meet homologation requirements to race in the 'Touring Competition' class, Abarth had to build 1,000 units, which he (apparently) did by the end of 1961. How many more 850 TCs were built--as cars or kits--is anyone's guess. The kit itself included a crankcase with larger diameter bearing supports, a tempered steel crankshaft, lighter and stronger connecting rods, and lighter pistons with smaller skirts. A new camshaft altering timing and valve lift, a Solex 32 PBIC carburetor and single-pipe manifold wed to the famous Abarth silencer joined valves, valve springs, gaskets, air filter, clamps, and miscellaneous screws to complete the kit. Those all important emblems, grilles, badges and lettering had to be ordered separately. The front radiator (seriously needed to cool the larger motor), perforated disc wheels and larger brakes (definitely recommended!) were also extras obtained for a price.
Despite the price of the kit and the add-on prices for essentials like the radiator and brakes, it was still cheaper for the average Italian to purchase the kit, and do the work themselves (or in cousin Giuseppe's shop) than to pay Abarth to build one. The Abarth-built cars did benefit from extra touches, though, like strengthened front leaf springs, larger rear springs, front disc brakes, the extra radiator mounted below the floor pan and caliper hinges that allowed the engine lid to sit open--a touch that the competition though was for extra cooling, but in fact was a trick that increased the bubble car's aerodynamics considerably. Abarth-built cars also usually received a fancy three-spoke steering wheel and Amadori or Campagnolo wheels. Even though each started with a standard Fiat body, every Abarth-built car was different.
On the race tracks, it didn't matter if your 850 TC was built on Corso Marchie in Turin, or if you'd built it in your own backyard. Depending on the compression you chose, your new Abarth 850 could crank out 52 bhp (at 6000 rpm), 55 bhp (at 6200 rpm) or 57 bhp (at 6500 rpm). These little sedans racked up victories right and left, helping Abarth win the Manufacturer's Championship 7 years running, from 1962 to 1967, and the European 'Challenge' touring 850 Class in '65, '66 and '67. When the 55 bhp version won the tough Nurburgring race in 1963, the cars with the motor henceforth wore that German track's name on their trunk lids. The later 57 bhp version first wore the nickname SS, then took on the word 'Corsa' (Italian for race) and competed in Touring's Group 2 and Group 5. The last two 850TC/Corsas had compression ratios of 12.5:1 and generated 78 bhp at 8000 rpm with the single Solex carburetor, or a whopping 93 bhp at 8000 rpm with two Weber 40 DCOE 2s. Those Group 5 Corsa cars reached top speeds of 190 kph (118 mph) and wiped out most of the competition.
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