| The
Panda is a shining example of what Fiat Auto knows best: design and build
great small cars. Given the company’s precarious financial health,
is this car - however worthy of the adulation - capable of pulling its
maker out of the messy quagmire? While it alone will not help, the Panda
could herald a resurgence for Fiat, says OVERDRIVE’s European correspondent
Ray Hutton after driving the 1.2-litre Panda.
The
Fiat Panda was elected the European Car of the Year 2004. Because I preside
over the international jury that elected it, I would like to say that
winning the Car of the Year guarantees that the Panda will be a success.
It doesn't. Fiats have won several times before, and some of them have
gone on to be best-sellers (127, Uno) while others (Tipo, Bravo/Brava)
hardly made a mark on the sales charts in Europe. Meanwhile, Fiat Auto,
the company, got into financial trouble from which it has yet to emerge.
The
new Panda will not in itself revive Fiat - it is made in Poland, not Italy,
and it is at the cheap end of the market where profits are low. But it
would seem to herald a brighter future, with Fiat concentrating on what
it has always done best: making useful small cars that are easy to own
and fun to drive. And over the last six months it has seemed to do well
for its maker in most European markets.
What it has done is to raise the standard among cars in the lowest price
class. In the UK Panda prices start with the 1.1-litre Active at £6,295.
For that, you get a car the length of a Volkswagen Lupo but with five doors
and the interior space of a supermini from the class above. It comes with
electric power steering, electric windows, and central locking with remote
control from a jack-knife key. Very grown up. It
also claims high standards of safety. Two airbags are fitted as a matter
of course. The cheapest version started out without antilock braking
(ABS) but that became compulsory in Europe for new cars from big manufacturers
from this summer. Among its competitors, only the latest Daihatsu Charade
is close to matching the Panda's specification and equipment and that
is a smaller car with a three-cylinder engine which costs £6,495
in five-door form.
Elsewhere,
the Panda offers the choice of 1.1- and 1.2-Iitre petrol engines and the
most advanced small diesel in the business - the 1.3-Iitre 16-valve MuItijet,
already available in the Punto supermini and the Opel Corsa. The diesel-engined
Panda, only now becoming available, is actually the top model of the range
but it could be too expensive to make sense in a car like this. Small
cars are already pretty economical so the fuel consumption improvement
provided by the diesel is less significant than in a bigger model.
I
concentrated on the 1.2-litre Panda Dynamic - the type that is the biggest
seller in Britain. There are actually four Dynamic versions which feature
either air conditioning, a large, electrically-operated glass sunroof,
or a superior sound system with steering wheel controls. All are less
than £7,500. Additionally, the Panda is the first car in its price
class to include on its options list: traction control, ESP electronic
stability control, a 'hill holder' system, park-distance sensors, and
six airbags.
The
60bhp 1.2-litre petrol engine is an old design of no great technical merit
but in this car it is quieter and smoother than in previous applications.
It's not fast, of course, but it is lively enough for town and normal
suburban roads and on the motorway it keeps up with the traffic gaggle
on all but the steepest inclines. Fuel consumption averages around 50
miles per gallon.
I
have driven several Pandas in Italy and in Britain but it was two 100-mile
journeys here that confirmed to me the 'big car' qualities that set it
apart from others of its size and price. Noise levels were low, thanks
in part to a fully-trimmed cabin - no great areas of painted metal inside
like the rustic old Panda. The seats, high like a mini-MPV, were comfortable
and the driving experience really quite rewarding. The gear-lever is positioned
conveniently close to the small steering wheel, high up on a massive centre
console that extends from the dashboard. The suspension is quite supple
so that the body rolls when cornering, more than most modern cars and,
on its skinny tyres the Panda may not have terrific roadholding but it
does handle nicely. The steering is responsive and doesn't require much
effort. The brakes are similarly reassuring. In summary, this is an honest
and surprisingly refined small car.
It's
practical too. The luggage area isn't generous but in all but the cheapest
versions, the rear seats can slide forward to enlarge it (at the expense
of rear seat knee room). But motoring families should note that the rear
seat backs fold down with a 50:50 split and therefore provide only two
positions with seat belts.
This
five-door Panda is the beginning of a series. Two different four-wheel
drive variants are coming soon - one with the standard body and the other
dressed up as an SUV. Next year there will be a three-door version which
will replace the altogether less accomplished Seicento and there is a
plan, not yet finally approved, to use the Panda platform to make an inexpensive
retro model that resembles the much-loved Fiat 500 of the 1960s. The smallest-ever
Euro Car of the Year could be the start of something big. |