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500: 2007 312 2007 2016 A-segment city car inspired by the original Fiat 500. 500e (332) 2020 332 2020 – A-segment battery-electric city car. Argo: 2018 358 2018 – B-segment/subcompact hatchback mainly marketed in Latin America. Grande Panda: 2024 2024 – B-segment hatchback mainly marketed in Europe. Mobi: 2016 341 2016 –
Fiat 500 fuoriserie, Alessandro Sannia, All Media, 2003; Fiat 500 (genio di un'epoca), Ugo Castagnotto and Anna Maria Quarona, Lindau, 1992 ISBN 88-7180-039-7. Fiat 500 – guida al restauro, Marcello Lo Vetere and Italo Grossi, Giorgio Nada, 2003 ISBN 88-7911-209-0. Fiat 500 Gold Portfolio 1936–1972, R.M. Clarke, Brooklands ISBN 1-85520-246-8
The Abarth 500 is a performance model of the Fiat 500 tuned in-house by FCA's Abarth subsidiary. It was unveiled at the 78th Geneva Motor Show, a year after the rebirth of Abarth brand and company. [36] All models use a turbocharged and intercooled version of the 1.4 L Fire I4 petrol engine. Rear
In February 2019, Fiat Chrysler announced plans to invest $4.5 billion in manufacturing in Michigan. [57] The plant is estimated to create nearly 6,500 jobs. Plans include $1.6 billion to build a Jeep factory in Detroit. [58] In May 2019, Fiat Chrysler proposed merging its business with Renault [59] but it was later withdrawn. [60]
500 Topolino (1936), Centro Storico Fiat Left to right: a 1936–1949 500(A)/ B, a 1950–55 500C sedan, and the back of a post-war 500 wagon. The Topolino was one of the smallest cars in the world at the time of its production. Launched in 1936, three models were produced until 1955, all with only minor mechanical and cosmetic changes.
The FIRE (for "Fully Integrated Robotised Engine") is a series of automobile engines from Fiat Powertrain Technologies, built in FCA's Termoli, Betim and also in Dundee, MI (only in 1.4 Multiair versions) plants.
The Fiat 500e (project 332), also known as the 500 elettrica or New 500 [4] is a battery-electric car by Italian manufacturer Fiat as the third generation of its 500 city cars, following the original 500 (1957–1975) and second-generation 500 (2007–2024).
MultiAir was developed over ten years at Fiat's Centro Ricerche Fiat (CRF) in Orbassano outside Turin, [13] after a five-year delay during Fiat's 2000-2005 partnership with General Motors. [14] The vice president of Fiat Powertrain Research & Development, Rinaldo Rinolfi, led the team who developed the technology at a cost of over $100 million.