![]() To maximize interior space, Giugiaro designed the Panda to be boxy and unusually tall – its height matched its width, a profile unbeneficial to handling but gave it so much advantage in space efficiency. This enabled not only a lot of headroom but also a higher seating position, which allowed the passengers to sit more upright thus freed up leg room and foot room. The tall-body design would influence many mini cars from rival manufacturers as well as Fiat's own Uno and Lancia Y10. ![]() However, that didn't matter to the Panda. In many ways, it was a modern Citroen 2CV – designed for the poor and especially those lived in rural area. It was cheap to buy and to maintain. It was economical to run. It offered a folding rear seat which could turn to a large cargo area. Its removable fabrics enabled the cabin to be cleaned easily. It even offered a 4x4 version to deal with country roads. Cheap cars had never been so versatile and clever. |
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Panda 750 (1986) |
Panda 1000 (1986) |
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All: 1980-2003 | All: 1980-2003 |
No. produced |
All: 4.5 million units |
All: 4.5 million units | All: 4.5 million units |
Size (L / W / H / WB) mm |
3380 / 1460 / 1440 / 2160 |
3380 / 1460 / 1440 / 2160 | 3380 / 1460 / 1440 / 2160 |
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Front-engined, 4wd, 5M | Front-engined, Fwd, 5M |
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Inline-4, sohc,
2v/cyl |
Inline-4, sohc,
2v/cyl |
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769 cc |
999 cc |
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34 hp |
45 hp |
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42 lbft |
59 lbft |
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652 kg |
700 kg |
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79 mph* |
88 mph* |
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20.6 sec* |
16.0 sec* |