RE: Road-legal Abarth 1000 Berlina Corsa for sale

RE: Road-legal Abarth 1000 Berlina Corsa for sale

Monday 5th May

Road-legal Abarth 1000 Berlina Corsa for sale

It revs to 8,000rpm, weighs less than 600kg, and looks like this - best thing ever, right?


From Boreham Escort to Jim Clark Emira, there’s been a nice '60s theme of late. It’s easy to see why it’s a decade that’s still so often celebrated: think about everything that happened to motorsport in 10 short years. The British Saloon Car Championship had emerged at the end of the previous decades, which exploded in popularity with racy Minis, Lotus Cortinas and then the Escorts. The Porsche 911 launched in 1963, then the Mustang the year after - talk about a pair of competition icons. Ford battled Ferrari at Le Mans, with that era then swept aside by the Porsche 917 in 1970. Heady days indeed, and why the '60s remain such a popular motorsport era even now. 

Here’s another race car from the time, albeit something a little humbler than the big guns. And a small old car that isn’t a Mini. Yep, it’s an Abarth-modified Fiat 600, specifically a 1967 Abarth 1000 Berlina Corsa. It represents pretty much the ultimate evolution of Carlo Abarth’s endless tinkering with small Fiats, which had begun back in the '50s. The ‘Abarth tuning kit for the Fiat 600’ has more than 50 parts, including big carbs, high-compression pistons and spicy cams. 

It was when capacity increased that the Abarths got really serious, though, and the 850 Turismo Competizione was eligible for Group 1 Touring Cars from 1961; the famous bonnet lift structure came soon after, and the light, agile Abarth made its name on tight and twisty tracks. The 982cc 1000 Berlina first arrived in 1962, an old crank design allowing stroke to increase for a larger engine. By 1967, when this car was made, 1,000 units of both had been made and Group 2 eligibility was reached, meaning further modification was possible. And almost 120mph claimed from cars just like this…

According to the advert for this one, it enjoyed a successful hillclimb career in the '70s, and despite subsequent restoration, it retains all original bits and bobs. It was repainted four years ago (looking absolutely brilliant for it) and only cared for by specialists ‘to exceptional condition’. Most excitingly, it conforms to those Group 2 regs for contemporary competition - and remains road legal. 

Road or track in something that looks like this would be ridiculous fun, and check out the spec: less than 600kg, 85hp at 7,600rpm, five-speed, a limited-slip diff, a custom roll cage and more. All racers of this period are intense, as the Escort proved; the Abarth promises to be absolutely manic fun. And presumably quite affordable to run by classic competition standards, given there’s so little to it. 

While £70,000 is hardly the average weekend toy budget, again given what some old race cars cost it’s hardly an exorbitant sum. There are roadgoing Escorts for sale at that much, before even thinking about those with proper pedigree. And everyone wants an Escort or a Mini - an Abarth offers up something very different indeed. Best hope you fit…


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

big_rob_sydney

Original Poster:

3,599 posts

207 months

Not a fan myself, as I just dont see the appeal of something from that far back with only 85bhp at 70k.

I can understand maybe a Ferrari etc from that period being big money, because they have F1 pedigree and so on, but I just have zero interest in anything Fiat / Abarth related. They did win a wrc in 1977 with an Abarth 131, but aside from this no other achievements on the biggest stages, and fringe at best. And that win in 77 was also clouded by a lot of dubious tactics from what I recall. But in any case, thats a different car, and a modified race car as well.

Benzinaio

272 posts

15 months

Knew I'd seen it before.
Fantastic little thing. Here it is going round Druids back in 2018.
Hope image stays put as PH doesn't like my Flickr uploads for some reason.


Abarth by Jayson Cork, on Flickr

biggbn

26,563 posts

233 months

That is a wonderful little monster. I'd have many things like this in my lottery barn.

Gruntled

140 posts

92 months

You really do not want to drive this car on the road and meet an oncoming object. Especially with so many heavy cars about. Lethal.

TGCOTF-dewey

6,334 posts

68 months

Gruntled said:
You really do not want to drive this car on the road and meet an oncoming object. Especially with so many heavy cars about. Lethal.
So no different many other classics and motorbikes then.

Motormouth88

521 posts

73 months

Ummmm, no thanks

Baroque attacks

5,612 posts

199 months

That is brilliant!

NDNDNDND

2,346 posts

196 months

That looks like awesome fun - I can imagine that being a great addition to a collection, plus eligibility for historic racing.

The kneepads are a fun period detail!

Dingu

4,854 posts

43 months

Gruntled said:
You really do not want to drive this car on the road and meet an oncoming object. Especially with so many heavy cars about. Lethal.
Surprised you drive on the road at all, or even get out of bed!

mooseracer

2,307 posts

183 months

Gruntled said:
You really do not want to drive this car on the road and meet an oncoming object. Especially with so many heavy cars about. Lethal.
For goodness sake

The Pistonsdead

5,025 posts

220 months

mooseracer said:
Gruntled said:
You really do not want to drive this car on the road and meet an oncoming object. Especially with so many heavy cars about. Lethal.
For goodness sake
Treat it for what it is and I'm sure it will be a hoot.

HTP99

23,760 posts

153 months

What's with the engine cover being permanently open, looks a tad odd?

EmailAddress

14,300 posts

231 months

Gruntled said:
You really do not want to drive this car on the road and meet an oncoming object. Especially with so many heavy cars about. Lethal.
HTP99 said:
What's with the engine cover being permanently open, looks a tad odd?
I remember when this place were all fields.

The state of it now, <shakes head.>

ex-devonpaul

1,411 posts

150 months

HTP99 said:
What's with the engine cover being permanently open, looks a tad odd?
Cooling. Air cooled.

Nice car, probably not silly money, but I hate washing the outside, imagine having to keep the enginer clean as well smile

911Spanker

2,255 posts

29 months

EmailAddress said:
Gruntled said:
You really do not want to drive this car on the road and meet an oncoming object. Especially with so many heavy cars about. Lethal.
HTP99 said:
What's with the engine cover being permanently open, looks a tad odd?
I remember when this place were all fields.

The state of it now, <shakes head.>
Exactly. The PH population these days isn't exactly the knowledgeable type.

Rough101

2,586 posts

88 months

I’m glad it exists, but I dont want one.

Firebobby

780 posts

52 months

Gruntled said:
You really do not want to drive this car on the road and meet an oncoming object. Especially with so many heavy cars about. Lethal.
Ford KA.
Fiat Panda.
Toyota Aygo.
Pug 106.
The list goes in and on for small light cars on the road and I'll be honest, I haven't seen any of them littering the verges of our very busy SUV congested roads?

Gruntled

140 posts

92 months

You really do not want to drive this car on the road and meet an oncoming object. Especially with so many heavy cars about. Lethal.

FlukePlay

1,093 posts

158 months

There's actually something very similar, although a recreation, in a RevComps competition:

https://www.revcomps.com/product/1967-fiat-abarth-...


mooseracer

2,307 posts

183 months

FlukePlay said:
There's actually something very similar, although a recreation, in a RevComps competition:

https://www.revcomps.com/product/1967-fiat-abarth-...
I'd not say that is very similar