We drive Fiat's 'sensible' new Panda

Published Jan 23, 2012

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Fiat 500s are everywhere. In the UK they outsell all other Fiats put together, thanks to an irresistible blend of compactness, chicness and retro appeal.

The practical but puritanical Panda, meanwhile, has faded into the background - yet, objectively, it has always been more of a car for doing the things cars should do.

Three decades ago the original Panda was a kind of Italian, updated Citroën 2CV, with its flat windows, aura of simple utility and fabric-trimmed, open-plan cabin. Its 2003 replacement was more sophisticated but kept to the functional ethos. Now, here's a new one.

Its shape is clearly derived from the previous cars', as are the structure and mechanical make-up - much of which the 500 also shares. So it's a tall car with a near-vertical tail, five doors and a high driving position - almost a small MPV. But the angular rationality has been softened with curvaceous flanks, a wider stance and rounded extremities.

And the whole look has been recast in a smiley-face, cartoonish way, with rounded-edge squares and rectangles as the motif outside and in. You'll find them on the air intakes and the shapes of the wheel arches, in the outlines of the instruments, the switch panels, the centre of the steering wheel and even, if you follow the line of the seam thereon, the steering wheel itself. Don't worry, the rim is circular, not a reprise of the Austin Allegro's much-mocked Quartic helm.

More squares, embossed and varied in size, adorn the faces of the seats' backrests to help air circulate between your back and the seat, while the open storage bin in the dashboard is meant to hark back to the original Panda “pouch”.

Options include a sliding rear seat to enlarge the boot's volume, but even with the seat in its normal position, rear passengers have less legroom than in the Panda's sternest rival, the Volkswagen Up. That said, this is a roomier Panda than before thanks to thinner front seat-backs and more shoulder width.

The increased visual sophistication is matched by the driving qualities. But before going anywhere I sampled the new heater system's claimed ability to demist the windscreen more efficiently, thanks to a colossal downpour.

View swiftly restored, I let off the handbrake, which looks like a computer mouse with a button in the side, and set off.

Four engines are offered on the UK market: a 1.2-litre petrol unit with 51kW, a 1.3-litre turbodiesel with 55kW, and a pair of two-cylinder Twinair petrol engines rated at a tax-friendly 99g/km of CO2. One has a 964cc capacity and produces 48kW; the other is familiar from the 500 and uses a turbocharger to generate a healthy 63kW from 875cc. The South African line-up, due in the fourth quarter, has not yet been confirmed.

This last is the most interesting and powered the car - in top Lounge trim rather than lowlier Pop or Easy - that I drove. Straight away this Twinair feels crisp and punchy, more so than in the 500 thanks to a recalibrated, sharper response to the accelerator as it liberates the deep, intriguing, two-cylinder thrum that suits the Panda's personality so well.

The way this Panda moves along the road is a world away from the previous one. The wider wheel track, plus softer rubber in the suspension pivots and noise-isolating upper mounts for the front struts, keep it flat and more precise in the corners while soaking up bumps with a whole new quietness. It's a more civilised machine - yet more fun to drive.

Here, then, is the Panda as cool gadget, leaving the fashion-accessory role to its dearer 500 sibling. Sense with sensibility. Sounds ideal to me. -The Independent on Sunday

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