Abarth 124 Spider: UK Review
So is the £30K 124 Spider the one to have?
For the Abarth 124, things start well. While the overhangs are probably still a bit awkward and the ride height a little tall, the Abarth is a far sportier and more exciting thing to look at than a regular 124. The red accents work, the black bonnet is a nice feature and the wheels look cool as well, although four exhausts might be a bit much.
Inside, any thoughts about the amount of Alcantara and scorpion logos that can be squeezed into one interior are cast aside once the noise from those exhausts is heard. This really is a very, very loud little car. And that's before the Sport mode is selected. It will make people look, whether you want them to or not, because it's a proper old din. Sometimes it sounds great, all fizzy and angry four-cylinder sports car, and occasionally it sounds like an outboard motor. It sounds authentic at least, the pops and bangs that sometimes emerge from behind you seemingly from driving hard and not because the ECU says so.
There's a broader point to consider here though: the aggressiveness of the exhaust and the firmness of the suspension send very clear signals that this is no longer a soft and accommodating 124. This is the sports car, the car to channel the emotional, exciting Italian spirit. It therefore must be judged as such...
There are good points, honest. But the amount of scuttle shake can make it hard to isolate them. It was a point made by Mike Duff last year, the toughening up of the 124's suspension not helping its structural integrity. In Britain on bumpy and wet roads the flex really dents your confidence as the car feels to be pulling itself in different directions.
Moreover, while the firmness has added some extra precision, it still hasn't solved the rather skittish behaviour that afflicts both 124 and MX-5 in damp conditions. The Abarth feels like its springs have been stiffened but the dampers left unchecked, even though the press material speaks of 'Abarth by Bilstein' items. While it leans and lurches less than a standard car, the Abarth still doesn't engender much faith at the limit as the control of wheel and body movements feels rather slack. It's a bizarre sensation in a car so light.
The limited-slip diff is a worthwhile addition though; no longer is power squandered through an inside wheel and, with good response from the pedal, the Abarth can be adjusted easily on the throttle to a pleasing degree. Again though the driver isn't entirely comfortable because of the slightly glassy steering, a common trait throughout these cars. You don't know much about what the front is doing, so the first you know is when the rear is letting go. Best be quick...
To be fair to the Abarth, it actually indulges your silly side at sensible speeds by offering a good chunk of torque low in the rev range. The gears are pleasingly short too. Trouble is - hopefully you're spotting a theme here - that when you want to extend the engine it doesn't feel all that willing. It's a small turbo that's very much about its mid-range, rather than the upper reaches. Arguably that's less appealing in a sports car, a point forced home by the revvy and eager 2.0-litre used in the MX-5.
The brakes are very good, the gearbox still excellent, and there's a real pleasure to be had in driving something small on British roads - it feels really well suited. Lots about the Abarth impresses, it's just that lots frustrate as well. And for all the noise and four-exhaust fury, it still isn't that fast.
Finally, while Abarth of course has history with the 124, here it feels misplaced. If the standard car is meant to be the more relaxed and refined version of the MX-5, why force it into a sportier suit? As mentioned when we drove the MX-5 RF, that more luxurious hard top variant would surely sit more comfortably with the Fiat's remit. That leaves the MX-5 there to base the racier variants on, as has happened so successfully over the past quarter of a century.
As it is, the Abarth is difficult to recommend. It's a better 124, and rather good fun in certain situations, though that fun comes at a cost: £30,000, to be precise. Not only is a 2.0-litre Sport MX-5 preferable, that sort of money brings a turbocharged car into budget as well. A GT86 is £5K cheaper and more fun straight out of the box. Despite that, it's not hard to imagine the 124 proving popular with Abarth aficionados; look at the Abarth 500s, where a Fiesta ST is cheaper and better to drive - still see plenty of them, don't you? For fans of the look and image, they will find a lot to like about the Abarth; it's just disappointing that there's limited appeal here for those beyond the committed few.
ABARTH 124 SPIDER
Engine: 1,368cc, turbocharged inline-four
Transmission: six-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 172@6,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 184@
0-62mph: 6.8sec
Top speed: 144mph
Weight: 1,060kg
MPG: 44.1 (NEDC combined)
CO2: 148g/km
Price: £29,620
Doesn't this engine come in more powerful guises elsewhere?
Not that it really matters to me as I don't fit in the latest MX5 so I assume I won't fit in this either!
It was difficult to explain to the Ford dealer why I decided a car that was worse in every quantifiable way was better than the ST but it really is just more fun... especially at legal speeds!
The car is a poor facsimile of the original & why such a huge clumsy plastic badge on the boot lid, it's horrid.
Sorry Mazda/Fiat or whoever you are this is a nasty cheap ugly sports car lacking the honest sincerity of the original MX-5.
Why oh why would anybody spend £30k on the thing. just look at what's out there for the same price, albeit used, that takes you onto a another level of quality & class.
Doesn't this engine come in more powerful guises elsewhere?
Not that it really matters to me as I don't fit in the latest MX5 so I assume I won't fit in this either!
G
But it's not that much better than the Mazda, indeed the whole thing is one of diminishing returns, a 131bhp MX-5 is so much fun, paying an extra £4k for a 160bhp one is dubious, paying an extra £12k over the basic MX-5 for the Abarth isn't something you can defend.
Simon
I also can't say I notice any of the criticisms that are made here either ??
Costs like for like are similar really even throwing in BBR's full 3x warranty etc.
The 124 does look good on the road though. It's just too expensive, too small and not as desirable as an original version. (to me anyway)
This is way more special and considerably cheaper. I'd buy a boring modern daily with the change.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/1982-Fiat-124-Spider-200...
Doesn't this engine come in more powerful guises elsewhere?
Not that it really matters to me as I don't fit in the latest MX5 so I assume I won't fit in this either!
It was difficult to explain to the Ford dealer why I decided a car that was worse in every quantifiable way was better than the ST but it really is just more fun... especially at legal speeds!
https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...
Doesn't this engine come in more powerful guises elsewhere?
Not that it really matters to me as I don't fit in the latest MX5 so I assume I won't fit in this either!
The MultiAir is much harder to tune than it's T-Jet cousin, especially with the little GT1446 turbo..
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