Fiat 850 Spider (1965)



This little roadster was renowned for cheap and fun to drive. In other words, it was the Mazda MX-5 of its days. Its pretty look was penned by the young Giorgetto Giugiaro when he was serving Bertone. Bertone was also responsible for building the bodywork and making final assembly. The chassis and powertrain was derived from the contemporary 850 sedan, which in turn was derived from the influential 600. No wonder it followed the same formula: rear-mounted engine and gearbox, rear wheel-drive and all-independent suspensions with wishbones and transverse leaf spring up front, semi-trailing arms and coil springs at the rear. The rear-engined configuration left enough luggage space up front and behind the seats. 



The tiny 4-cylinder engine displaced only 843cc and produced 49hp. In 1968, it was enlarged to 903cc and horsepower increased to 52hp, but it was still one of the slowest sports cars on the market. However, the Spider was gifted with an excellent handling. The RR (rear-engined, rear-drive) layout enabled a light and responsive steering. The independent suspensions benefited roadholding while the modest power never upset its grip and balance. The front disc brakes provided excellent response. Moreover, it was very economical to run, returning 40 mpg in regular driving.

Specifications

Model
850 Spider
850 Sport Spider
Year of production
  1965-68
1968-73
No. produced
Total: 124,660 units
Total: 124,660 units
Layout, Gearbox
Rear-engined, Rwd, 4M
Rear-engined, Rwd, 4M
Engine
Inline-4, ohv, 2v/cyl
Inline-4, ohv, 2v/cyl
Capacity
843 cc
903 cc
Power
49 hp
52 hp
Torque
43 lbft
48 lbft
Weight
735 kg
735 kg
Top speed
87 mph*
91 mph*
0-60 mph
18.2 sec*
15.6 sec*
       
* Tested by Autocar
 

Copyright© 1997-2009 by Mark Wan @ AutoZine