RE: Fiat Panda 4x4 | Shed of the Week
RE: Fiat Panda 4x4 | Shed of the Week
Yesterday

Fiat Panda 4x4 | Shed of the Week

Fancy squeezing into something Italian as the evenings close in? Shed has just the thing...


Another Shed of the Week first timer today in the shape of this Fiat Panda 4x4. While we’re on the subject of shape, this one is odder than usual as the smartphone operative seems to have selected a mode that horizontally squishes everything the camera sees. With a view to viewing Mrs Shed in a more positive light, Shed has been eagerly Googling spectacles that might do the same sort of thing.

The idea of adding 4x4 hardware to a titchy car might seem weird, but Fiat had been up to those tricks long before this one came along. There was a 48hp 965cc 4x4 version of the original Giugiaro-designed Panda. That car sold in huge numbers from 1980 to 2003, to whit nearly four and a half million. Giugiaro put its success down to its conceptual similarity to a pair of jeans, which he saw as ‘a simple, practical article of clothing without pretence’. He also reckoned the first Panda had the essential quality of a military design: light, rational and optimised for a specific purpose, like a helicopter. It’s not exactly the same but Shed does dimly remember spinning one of these 4x4s while negotiating the village’s only roundabout after an evening on Old Dirigible Ale that had started at lunchtime. This was in the pre-postmistress days so there was no other chopper-related action that he can recall.  

The gen-two Panda you’re furrowing your brows at here first hit the scene in 2003. A joint scribble by Bertone and Fiat’s in-house felt tip artists, it was a much more modern mini-MPV type of design. Thanks to its height and additional doorage, it was a lot more practical than its three.-door predecessor. The rear seat backs folded flat, albeit only onto fixed seat bases so you had a two-tier luggage space instead of a flatter (but shorter) one. Still, with the seats down you had over 850 litres to play with, and even with them up the 200-litre space was bigger than a Mini’s. 

The gen-two was heavier than the gen-one, not that surprising really when you realise that some of those first Pandas weighed as little as 715kg, but it was never remotely lardy, failing to broach the 1,000kg mark in any iteration. Like the first Panda, the new one was well attuned to the market. It sold like hot cakes. Just as well too, because Fiat was teetering on the brink of bankruptcy at the time.

This 2010 example is one of the last gen-two Pandas (the third generation came out in 2011) so it benefits from the 2009 revisions that improved the economy and emissions of the 1.2 engine, dropping it to 155g/km which on the UK VED tax table equates to £255 or thereabouts. Insurance is dirt cheap too, typically group 2. You might be able to find slightly cheaper gen-two 4x4s in the classifieds but most if not all of them will be older than our £1,695 shed and Shed thinks that not many of them will look as fresh as this two-owner car, or have a better service record. 

That last one would be a British thing. You can’t imagine the average Italian bothering to quite the same extent. They have always known, or hoped at least, that Pandas were built to be abused. The colour of our shed is described as beige, but if you drive it in the correct brick-on-throttle fashion there should be nothing beige about the experience. The ABS system was specially hopped up for the 4x4 to help minimise unwanted helicoptering. 

As numerous tests have demonstrated, the hiked-up Panda 4x4 was impressively dogged off the road. With rose-tinted specs set aside the lack of power from the single-cam, eight-valve 59hp/75lb ft 1.2 petrol version and the roly-poly drive engendered by the tall body did limit its usefulness on tarmac. It took the best part of 20 seconds to wheeze its way up to 60mph, eventually topping out at a shouty 90mph. The 2008-on Panda Cross was a better bet as it had the gutsier 75hp/100lb ft 1.3 MultiJet diesel motor but you’ll pay a lot more for one of them. The fun of this 1.2 will come from the low running costs and the high excitement of trying to keep the speed up.   

Our shed’s towbar is comically large for a car that could only tow 800kg braked or 400kg unbraked. Not sure why, but shortly after Shed showed the pics of the back end to the postmistress they both felt the need to slope off to the back of the cricket pavilion. 


See the full ad

Author
Discussion

Billy_Whizzzz

Original Poster:

2,371 posts

159 months

Yesterday (06:14)
quotequote all
Brilliant, go anywhere and fun. One of the best sheds ever.

Taz73

302 posts

28 months

Yesterday (06:16)
quotequote all
Pandas are cool little things,4x4 models just amp that up, so a great shed as far as I'm concerned.

BeastieBoy73

735 posts

128 months

Yesterday (06:25)
quotequote all
Always had a soft spot for Fiat Pandas as my mum had a couple in the 80s. Not so much a fan of the colour of this one but a great shed, regardless.

Quhet

2,684 posts

162 months

Yesterday (06:26)
quotequote all
What a fun little car. Fiat got these Pandas absolutely spot on

humphra

559 posts

108 months

Yesterday (06:29)
quotequote all
I love the idea of these, but when it comes to the reality of actually buying one..... its a no. However, it surely fits the bill of being a cracking shed!

As for the article...... i got to the last paragraph, checked the photos, and laughed out loud. Cheers, Shed!

Wren-went

984 posts

54 months

Yesterday (06:30)
quotequote all
Who doesn't love any generation of Panda 4x4, great little shed this will sell ino problem.

rs mexico

483 posts

232 months

Yesterday (06:37)
quotequote all
Wife had one for 4 years great Town car and not a single issue with it in that time .Replaced her not so reliable Mitsubishi Pinin..When it snowed it was Great fun and drifting was effortless .Went to get the newer version but wasn’t impressed and moved onto minis.

yme402

545 posts

118 months

Yesterday (06:40)
quotequote all
Great little car and as a 4x4 it will be as hardy as a mountain goat.
Inverness registered so watch for rust

JRaj

79 posts

89 months

Yesterday (06:53)
quotequote all
Flies under the radar and then some.

Driveline Shunt

944 posts

158 months

Yesterday (06:53)
quotequote all
"Unwanted helicoptering" is not a phrase I expected to hear today..

Cracking shed, as fast as planning permission but a very worthy entry into the Shed pantheon.

Gad-Westy

15,829 posts

229 months

Yesterday (06:57)
quotequote all
yme402 said:
Great little car and as a 4x4 it will be as hardy as a mountain goat.
Inverness registered so watch for rust
Yeah, they can go a little crusty underneath. Though they’re also the sort of car that many owners do a lot of winter proofing on so they can also be surprisingly good. I’ve only had later twinair 4x4’s and absolutely love them so no arguments from me on this SOTW. The sort of car that has you praying for severe conditions. smile

Tin Hat

1,417 posts

225 months

Yesterday (06:59)
quotequote all
I suspect that I have seen every shed of the week on these pages.

This is the best ever

TheMilkyBarKid

761 posts

45 months

Yesterday (07:04)
quotequote all
I’m definitely in the yes camp on this - characterful, fun, useful with the 4x4, stick winter tyres on them and they’ll go anywhere, cheap to run. At this price this is the perfect shed for me.

CDP

7,852 posts

270 months

Yesterday (07:13)
quotequote all
This is a brilliant. Shed has had a good run recently.

I'd buy it if I needed another car.

Tickle

5,657 posts

220 months

Yesterday (07:14)
quotequote all
Brilliant shed!

Love my Cross, cars that get under your skin.

MGBGTMX5

27 posts

139 months

Yesterday (07:20)
quotequote all
Was the backdrop of the rubbish bin intended to show off if its curvy design? Or just show they are roughly the same size?

LightweightLouisDanvers

2,574 posts

59 months

Yesterday (07:31)
quotequote all
Probably a great little car but having been relegated to my wife's Fiat 500 for months after she had ankle surgery and needing to drive my automatic Landrover I cannot stand the thought of the abject misery driving this would bring.

POIDH

1,971 posts

81 months

Yesterday (07:37)
quotequote all
That's a cheeky wee shed - and I like it. My father had a MK3 for a few years, it was a zippy little thing with bags of character, way more space inside than expected and a certain "je ne sais quoi", or whatever the Italian version is...

ST330

169 posts

27 months

Yesterday (07:39)
quotequote all
yme402 said:
Great little car and as a 4x4 it will be as hardy as a mountain goat.
Inverness registered so watch for rust
Beat me to it. After all the comments on the Type-R last week about buying used cars in Scotland and here we have one proudly wearing its Inverness first registration.

I ran an Inverness registered Volvo, rust was never an issue.

Panda, cracking little go anywhere car in 4x4 trim, just remember to bring ear plugs. And cardboard if the driveshaft boot seals are weeping.

paddy1970

1,128 posts

125 months

Yesterday (07:47)
quotequote all
Just don't drive it on the motorway...I once took one from London to York ...my ears are still bleeding from it...

Regarding rust, they don't suffer much from it...my wife had a cx3 awd that rusted in no time compared to the panda 4x4...

Brilliant car but only for local trip...even better on the snow (with snow tyres)...can do 4 wheel drive drift...use to wake up at 4 am when it snowed overnight and take it to the Yorkshire moors ...