Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Fiat's TwinAir debuted at Internationale Automobil-Ausstellung 2007 in the Fiat Panda Aria concept car. [ 3 ] as an 80 PS (59 kW), turbocharged, CNG-hydrogen mix and gasoline bifuel unit. The production TwinAir engine was launched at the 2010 Geneva Motor Show in 85 PS (63 kW), turbocharged gasoline form and became available later in 2010 in ...
Fiat Blue and Me Geneva Auto Show 2011 March. Blue&Me is an integrated in-vehicle infotainment system used worldwide on many vehicles marketed by Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA) from model years 2006–2017.
Grande Punto Fiat Linea Fiat Marea Weekend JTD Fiat Cinquecento. 2009–2018 Fiat 500 - Americas; 2016–2020 Fiat 500X - South America; 2012–2022 Fiat 500L; 2017–2020 Fiat 124 Spider; 2002–2012 Fiat Albea; 1981–1985 Fiat Argenta; 1995–2005 Fiat Barchetta; 2007–2014 Fiat Bravo; 1995–2001 Fiat Bravo/Brava; 2000–2002 Fiat Brava ...
The Fiat 500 is an A-segment city car manufactured and marketed by the Italian car maker Fiat, a subdivision of Stellantis, since 2007.It is available in hatchback coupé and fixed-profile convertible body styles, over a single generation, with an intermediate facelift in Europe in the 2016 model year.
Previously, FCA had assembled a different model, also named the 500e, from December 2012 to June 2019 at its Toluca Car Assembly plant in Mexico; this earlier 500e was a BEV derived from the second-generation 2007 Fiat 500 and was sold exclusively in a limited number of states within the United States market.
The Fiat 500 (Italian: Cinquecento, pronounced [ˌtʃiŋkweˈtʃɛnto]) is an economy / city car that was manufactured and marketed by Fiat Automobiles from 1957 until 1975. It was sold as a two-door semi-convertible or saloon car and as a three-door panel van or estate car.
The second-generation Punto was a strong seller in the UK after its October 1999 launch, but the new modern-day Fiat 500 (launched there in January 2008) has accounted for most of the company's UK sales in more recent years. The original Fiat 500 had been one of the few direct competitors for the iconic Mini during its 1960s heyday. [37]
The FIRE (for "Fully Integrated Robotised Engine") is a series of automobile engines from Fiat Powertrain Technologies, built in FCA's Termoli, Betim and also in Dundee, MI (only in 1.4 Multiair versions) plants.