RE: Unique, 840-mile Fiat Coupe prototype for sale
RE: Unique, 840-mile Fiat Coupe prototype for sale
Friday 31st October

Unique, 840-mile Fiat Coupe prototype for sale

Most pre-prod protos end up at the scrapper - not this one


For all the convoluted, eye-strainingly ugly car designs we see these days, we can always trust Pininfarina to show the big OEMs how it should be done. The Italian design house has recently released some shadowy teaser images of a Honda NSX restomod. And a faithful one at that by the looks of it, with pop-up headlights, side intakes behind the doors and a rear wing that seamlessly integrates with the body. We’ll have to wait for the full reveal, but from what we’ve seen so far, it’s going to be a real looker.

Not that we’d expect anything less from Pininfarina. Sure, it’s had a few misses in the past, like the Hyundai Matrix and Daewoo Tacuma, but it’s otherwise been hit after consummate hit. This is the firm that was in charge of Ferrari design for decades, after all, resulting in such stunners as the 250 LM, Testarossa and Enzo. There are some real stunners at the more conventional end of the spectrum, too, like the Peugeot 406 Coupe, Alfa Romeo Spider and the delightful Fiat Coupe, much like the example you see here.

In fact, this particular car holds a special place in the Fiat/Pininfarina story. It’s a pre-production prototype (chassis No. ZFA175000P0014756 if you’re interested), and the seller understands that it once sat proudly at the 'Pininfarina Experience Centre’ for the public to admire. From there, it was apparently sold off to an employee, where it spent a little over a decade as part of a private collection. Yet, despite its role as a prototype, it’s barely moved over the last 31 years. The dash reads just 840 miles, which must surely make it the least-used Fiat Coupe on the planet. 

So what exactly makes it a prototype, then? Well, it doesn’t look any different to the normal car, which is probably a good thing, nor is there any special hardware lurking beneath. But according to the seller, there are a few bits here and there that never made it to the production car, such as the blocky gear knob, the lower section of the dashboard and various other bits you (probably) can’t see. Being a pre-prod prototype means there are a few rough edges, too; you’ll notice cables hanging from the bottom of the dash and an empty hole where you’d normally find the stereo.

Otherwise, it’s a standard Fiat Coupe 16V. Obviously, the 20V five-pot is the more desirable of the Coupes, but the 16V has a lot going for it. The engine was essentially the twin-cam unit from the Lancia Delta Integrale, with this turbocharged example putting out a respectable 190hp. That was a decent amount of grunt back in 1994, and certainly too much for the front axle to handle, so Fiat fitted the turbo’d 16V with a limited-slip differential to keep a lid on it. 

Above all, it’s a proper time warp, with the paintwork, interior and engine bay all looking in immaculate condition. That should come as no surprise given the mileage, and the fact that it’s never been registered in the countries it has lived in. Quite how tricky it’d be to get it roadworthy in the UK is beyond me. But being sat in a barn as part of a larger collection is a much nicer fate than what most prototypes are afforded, and it’ll be a fun little conversation starter. All you have to do is give the seller a bell and find out how much they want for it…


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

Martingt4

Original Poster:

15 posts

116 months

Article seems to suggest that Pininfarina were responsible for the exterior design, they were not.
It was an in-house design attributed to a certain Chris Bangle.
Pininfarina were responsible for the interior design hence why you find the badge on the inside

Moss Feen

260 posts

183 months

I find it hard to understand Why this car would be here in the Pininfarina Experience Centre (Italy) when Its a RHD car in a LHD country

s m

24,040 posts

222 months

Martingt4 said:
Article seems to suggest that Pininfarina were responsible for the exterior design, they were not.
It was an in-house design attributed to a certain Chris Bangle.
Pininfarina were responsible for the interior design hence why you find the badge on the inside
To be fair they have put one on the outside too by the rear wheel

biggbn

28,552 posts

239 months

One of the most loveable cars I have owned. Always felt it was a cur price GT car, hugely comfortable, very practical and quick....

GTEYE

2,306 posts

229 months

Moss Feen said:
I find it hard to understand Why this car would be here in the Pininfarina Experience Centre (Italy) when Its a RHD car in a LHD country
That was exactly my thought too…it sounds like the “story” may have been elaborated…

The car itself as pointed out was designed by Bangle before he went to BMW. As a design I’m not sure it’s really aged that well, the 20v version with the 5 pot was the more desirable version, the earlier 16v 4 pot was always in its shadow.

Taz73

313 posts

31 months

Moss Feen said:
I find it hard to understand Why this car would be here in the Pininfarina Experience Centre (Italy) when Its a RHD car in a LHD country
Whilst I m not disputing the story it does seem odd, even uk manufacturers seem to predominantly have LHD prototypes and show cars.

Still a very cool thing, I always thought it was a Bangle design as opposed to pininfarina, maybe he worked for them and not fiat?

A quick look on Wikipedia implies that it was designed by Chris Bangle, as another poster said the interior was designed by Pininfarina and it was built in the Pininfarina factory.

Edited by Taz73 on Friday 31st October 07:03

Nigel_O

3,447 posts

238 months

Nerd alert…

Pretty sure this has an incorrect grille fitted. The original 16v grilles were more recessed and of an ‘egg-crate’ design. The grille on this car is from a later 20v model.

Still - nice to see such a well preserved example. I once owned a 1995 pre-launch Fiat demo 16v Coupe in the same colour.

Yes, the 16v are slower than the later 5-pot versions (only 138bhp from the non-turbo), but the handling is a bit sweeter with less weight over the front wheels

GregorFuk

571 posts

219 months

I owned a 20V Turbo. I loved it. But in over 20 years of motoring, it's still the only car in which I've suffered complete foot to the floor, zero retardation, brake failure. For that reason alone, I'd never own another.

Slowlygettingit

831 posts

60 months

Ugly as sin.

username_checksout

320 posts

19 months

I was convinced ‘For all the convoluted, eye-strainingly ugly car designs we see these days…’

was going to be followed by ‘…it all started here.’

Hideous when new and the passing of time has done nothing to diminish its ugliness. I wouldn’t want one even if it was free.

ChocolateFrog

33,259 posts

192 months

Polarising car then hehe

Bangle really was a visionary. I think his designs tend to grow on you and it's the same for the Coupe.

They could be seriously quick too, atleast for a short time.

Spidermoor

49 posts

26 months

Nigel_O said:
Nerd alert

Pretty sure this has an incorrect grille fitted. The original 16v grilles were more recessed and of an egg-crate design. The grille on this car is from a later 20v model.
If this is a PPP, wouldn't that be entirely possible whilst specs were decided on. As for it being RHD, surely there are always RHD PPP's to check out the dash fit, etc...

GreatScott2016

2,021 posts

107 months

Slowlygettingit said:
Ugly as sin.
I was never a fan either. Yellow also does it no favours. That said, always lovely to see a pristine example of an older car.

Every day a journey

2,495 posts

57 months

"Being a pre-prod prototype means there are a few rough edges, too; you’ll notice cables hanging from the bottom of the dash and an empty hole where you’d normally find the stereo."

Being a FIAT those foibles weren't just limited to PPPs

sir humphrey appleby

1,797 posts

241 months

This is down the road from me and being an ex 20vt owner myself I got quite nostalgic having a look at it. I noticed that the gear knob was different.

CanAm

12,065 posts

291 months

Every day a journey said:
"Being a pre-prod prototype means there are a few rough edges, too; you ll notice cables hanging from the bottom of the dash and an empty hole where you d normally find the stereo."

Being a FIAT those foibles weren't just limited to PPPs
biggrin

Mark_Blanchard

989 posts

274 months

Great looking car, almost bought a second hand 20V Turbo 25 years ago but the vehicle inspect report came back as oil leaks everywhere and avoid. Don't know if that was common or not.

J4CKO

45,012 posts

219 months

I have a soft spot for these, I had a 20VT but the experience was not a good one, I bought in haste.

Drove a pretty much identical one like this that a mates mum had stored for years, he recommissioned it and I had a go and to be honest it just felt old and slow with the 16 valve engine.

Quite like the yellow, very much a signature colour for the Coupe.

TIGA84

5,461 posts

250 months

sir humphrey appleby said:
This is down the road from me and being an ex 20vt owner myself I got quite nostalgic having a look at it. I noticed that the gear knob was different.
You should have put a smiley face on the dog too. hehe

Richard-390a0

3,104 posts

110 months

username_checksout said:
I was convinced For all the convoluted, eye-strainingly ugly car designs we see these days

was going to be followed by... it all started here.

Hideous when new and the passing of time has done nothing to diminish its ugliness. I wouldn't want one even if it was free.
Same here!