Fiat Tipo

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Value for money?

With the Fiat Tipo range starting from as little as R229 900, it looks like extraordinary value for money. Tested here is the 1.6 Easy Automatic, which retails for R274 000. For interest sake, the diesel manual costs exactly the same. Do you get value for your money here? We think you do, considering the better-than-basic fittings and features, and it all comes in comfortably under R300 000. The more established players such as the Toyota Corolla and Chevrolet Cruze are both over R300 000.

Verdict

Unlike the Fiat 500, which seems to sell primarily on its image and cuteness, the Tipo is a far more serious and logical purchasing proposition. Based on the product offering alone, we think the Tipo has enough going for it to make it credible. There's ample room and the vehicle offers credible levels of refinement and specification to tick most boxes.

http://www.cars.co.za/motoring_news/fiat-tipo-sedan-16-easy-auto-2017-review/43668/

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FIAT SA WANTS YOU TO TRADE IN YOUR SCRAPPED CAR

Fiat South Africa has launched a campaign that allows owners of scrapped cars to trade them in for more “environmentally friendly” Fiat vehicles.

Under its new scrapped vehicle campaign, Fiat SA says buyers will be offered up to R40 000 by the Fiat dealership upon receipt of a scrapping certificate for their old vehicle. This amount can then be used towards the purchase of a new or used Fiat vehicle.

In order to qualify, the local arm of the Italian automaker says buyers will be required to produce a scrapping or deregistration certificate, proof of ownership and proof that the vehicle in question was registered in the name of the buyer for at least the previous six months.

Fiat SA adds that buyers who wish to take part in the campaign but have not yet scrapped their vehicle “would need to do so in person at the relevant licensing department”, with the vehicle needing to be deregistered on eNatis and with the South African Police Service.

The company says vehicles that are eligible for deregistration or scrapping include those that have been declared unfit for operation on public roads, have been stolen and not recovered, have been permanently demolished or have become exempt from registration.

http://www.carmag.co.za/news_post/fiat-sa-wants-you-to-trade-in-your-scrapped-car/
 
Fiat launches cash-for-clunkers sales incentive

Fiat has devised a campaign to encourage owners of older, less environmentally friendly vehicles, to scrap their cars and rather consider stepping into a Fiat.

Fiat’s campaign is called "The Big Deal" and the aim is simple - Scrap your old car and buy a Fiat!

Fiat’s local passenger car lineup currently consists of the recently launched Tipo hatchback and sedan, Fiat 500 hatchback and cabriolet, Fiat 500X crossover and the Fullback bakkie. Fiat is also expected to introduce the Fiat Panda compact family car in South Africa soon as well as a 60th-anniversary edition of the Fiat 500. It's worth mentioning that both the Fiat 500 with its 0.9-litre, 3-cylinder engine and the Tipo sedan with its 1.3-litre turbodiesel engine are particularly fuel efficient. The Tipo sedan is one of the most fuel efficient budget cars currently available in South Africa with a claimed fuel consumption figure of 3.7 L/100km.

"The Big Deal" consists primarily of a scrapped vehicle deal where a Fiat dealership will offer up to R40 000 upon receipt of a Scrapping Certificate for your old vehicle. This can then be used to purchase a new or used Fiat vehicle.

In order to qualify for the campaign, customers will be required to produce a Scrapping or Deregistration Certificate, Proof of Ownership and proof that the vehicle was registered in the name of the owner within the last 6 months. Customers would be required to scrap/deregister the vehicle at a local traffic department and deregister the vehicle on eNatis and at the South African Police Service.

Vehicles that are eligible for deregistration or scrapping include those that have been declared unfit for operation on public roads, have been stolen and not recovered, have been permanently demolished or have become exempt from registration.

If a customer, for whatever reason, does not qualify for the scrapped vehicle deal, Fiat dealerships offer 2 additional trade-in programs. All Fiat vehicles are sold with a 3-year/100 000 km warranty and service plan.

http://www.cars.co.za/motoring_news/fiat-launches-cash-for-clunkers-sales-incentive/43722/
 
No one is impressed with that 1.4 and 1.6 motor, that's the thing that is letting it down. Most journalist love the 1.3 diesel version.
 
Fiat Tipo 1.3d Easy Sedan Review

The numbers

Price: R274 900
Engine: 1248 cc, DOHC, 16-valve, inline four, turbodiesel
Power: 70 kW at 4000 rpm
Torque: 200 Nm at 1500 rpm
Zero to 100 km/h: 11.8 seconds
Maximum speed: 183 km/h
Real life fuel consumption: About 5.5 l/100 km
Tank: 45 litres
Luggage: 520 litres (seatbacks up)
Warranty and service plan: 3 years / 100 000 km

Last week, we drove a Fiat Tipo hatchback with 1.4-litre petrol motor and entry-level Pop trim. It’s a solid and spacious family car not too cluttered with gadgets - which is either good or bad, depending on your expectations.

We enjoyed driving it although some people might feel it requires too much involvement; keeping the revs up to extract its full potential. It’s Italian, first cousin to Alfa Romeo and baby step-cousin to Ferrari, so you need to work it. Capisci?

This week we got to drive a sedan - mid-spec’ Easy trim, 1.3-litre Multijet ll diesel and five speeds, rather than six, in its short-throw, butter-smooth manual gearbox. Multijet ll brings with it a variable geometry turbocharger and more injection pulses per combustion cycle - as many as eight if needed. That translates to the same 70 kilowatts of power the 1400 puts out but at lower revs, 4000 rather than 6000, and much more torque – 200 Nm vs. 127 for the benzina burner and again at much lower rpm, 1500 not 4500. Lazy drivers will love it. The single disadvantage is that this engine is only available, for now at least, in a sedan. This sedan. But that doesn’t necessarily mean hardship.

The saloon body, longer by 164 mm, provides 80 litres more boot volume and the psychological reassurance of added crumple space behind the back seat – for the safety of the bambini, you understand. Unlike the hatch its bootlid doesn’t just unlock when you double-click the button on the key fob, it opens completely.

It features a 2/3, 1/3-split seatback that folds down to create an extended loading space. Again, unlike the hatch, you have only a through-loading “window” rather than full-width and full-height accessibility. That’s why, spec-for-spec, hatchback Tipos are priced slightly higher than sedans.

Out on the open road, the little diesel turns over at about 2900 rpm in top gear but, despite being a little beyond its best torque output (the curve is almost flat between 1500 revs and 2000), it rolls on strongly. It also maintains road speed up long, 100-km/h restricted hills without effort. Latent Alfisti will enjoy its ability to spin freely up to 5000 rpm when they feel slightly wicked.

Easy trim adds 16” alloy wheels; chromed door handles; body-coloured mirror caps; front fog lamps; leather trimmed steering wheel; reversing alarm; a third rear head restraint; a second visor mirror; cruise control and automatic, but still single channel, air conditioning to basic Pop specification. It opens the door to a wider range of options too.

Buyers may tick boxes for the more sophisticated VP2 music provider with touch screen (with or without TomTom satnav), a backup camera, or lumbar support for the driver’s chair.
The boot opens at a height of 70 cm with a sill about 17 cm deep, so loading and emptying should be painless. The volume is long, wide, rectangular, and up to 56 centimetres deep so there’s plenty of space for bulky luggage. It is lit but does not feature lashing rings or bag hooks. All Tipos have fully sized spare wheels.

It may have been imagination, but head space for rear seat passengers felt slightly less than in the hatchback. The SA standard tall passenger’s hair brushed the roof lining, although knee room and foot space remained the same. The triple-tone grey and charcoal fabric seats were nicely shaped for comfort and the central tunnel wasn’t too high. Headroom up front is more generous than in the rear. Vertical, and fore and aft, adjustments allowed for bodies longer than that of our 6’1” tester.

Controls are neatly laid out and easy to reach, pedals are small but well spaced and it’s easy to get the clutch foot to its resting pad. Our overall impression was of good fit and finish, solid build, comfortable suspension and that Fiats deserve better reception than they get in South Africa. This particular model fits its role as a family- or fleet car well although, if we were greedy, we'd ask for a bit more power and sportiness – an 88-kW MultiAir perhaps.

Source:http://www.scarletpumpkin.com/fiat/review_2017_fiat_tipo_13_diesel_sedan
 
Fiat's Tipo is practical but short on power

Ever heard of a Fiat Tipo? If you’re a car nerd of sorts then you might have at some point, but for the average South African this will be a completely new proposition. It’s actually a throwback to a hatchback that Fiat built in the late eighties and early nineties, but which never made it to our shores.

Like its ancestor, the Tipo loosely fits into the Golf and Astra class, but unlike its Bravo predecessor, the newcomer has a more back-to-basics approach to life. In an age where everything is trying to be all fancy and upscale, Fiat happily throws around payoff lines like “Skills, no frills” for its Tipo hatch, and its sedan counterpart, and that is actually quite a refreshing thing to hear.

This attitude shows in the styling too. The Tipo is not trying to be a dazzlingly sexy Italian model, although calling most specification grades ‘Easy’ (our car was a 1.6i Easy auto) possibly makes it sound a little naughtier than it is. Instead it’s a clean, mature and mildly attractive design with a handsomely pronounced beltline and some traces of BMW 1 Series in its side profile.

Enough of that, let’s size it up

Measuring 4368mm from front to back, the not-so-little Fiat is actually a good 90mm longer than a VW Golf, albeit 7mm narrower, while sitting on a slightly longer wheelbase. It’s bigger than practically everything in its class and has a spacious 440 litre boot. Rear legroom is ample and easily at the sharp end of the class, dare we even speculate that Pavarotti would have slotted in there quite comfortably.

So you’re getting a lot of space for the money as the Tipo is priced at the lower end of the segment, starting at R249 900 for the 1.4i Pop, and thereby undercutting all its major rivals, including the Ford Focus (from R259 900), Opel Astra (R264 300), Toyota Auris (R271 000) and VW Golf (R289 900). Our range-topping 1.6i auto test car retails at R294 900.

Curiously, though, Fiat has also made a blunder on the pricing front, with hatchback models commanding a R20 000 premium over the equivalent sedans, so you’d have to be a real hatch fanatic to not opt for the latter, which seems like quite a bargain at R229 900 for the base model.

Yet even if we concede that the hatchbacks still offer good value in relation to their rivals, there’s the inevitable question of whether Fiat has cut corners elsewhere.

Sadly, yes, I must confess as we peek under the bonnet.

Unlike most competitors, there is no turbocharging for the petrol models and in fact the engine capacities are quite small by class standards, with the majority of Tipos powered by a 1.4-litre normally aspirated petrol engine that musters just 70kW and 127Nm. Our car’s 1.6-litre engine produces 81kW at 5500rpm and 152Nm at 4500rpm, and it’s only available with a six-speed automatic transmission.

Then there’s the weight problem, with our car Tipo-ing the scales at over 1300kg.

The result of that power-to-weight deficit is that the Tipo is quite slow, and economy is merely average, with our car drinking 8.2 litres per 100km under mixed conditions.

Although the transmission is smooth enough in its operation, it’s not always an easy-going driving experience as the ‘box often has to labour the engine to keep up with fast-paced city avenue traffic and it is rather loud at high revs. Overtaking on the open road is an exercise in patience and even mild hills on highways require a bit of a run-up.

Yet other than that, and presuming that most of the time you’re happy to plod around town at a reasonably mild pace, it’s actually a pleasant and ‘Easy’ car to drive. The ride quality is agreeable over most surfaces, the steering provides reasonably good feedback and it’s easy to get into a comfortable position behind the wheel.

It helps too, that Fiat has the ergonomics taped. There’s a button on the leather-covered steering wheel for practically everything you can think of, besides pouring your espresso, and when you do run out of things to push, the touch-screen audio system is an easy stretch as it’s positioned really high on the dashboard. The system is quite basic, and simple to operate.

The ‘Easy’ models, which span most of the line-up, are also very generously equipped. In addition to that aforementioned touch-screen set-up with Bluetooth connectivity, they pack cruise control, automatic climate control and rear park distance control. A navigation system and reverse camera are optional.

As for the look and feel of things, it’s a far cry from the high-end, elegant snootiness of the Golf and even the lines are more functional than pretty, but then I wouldn’t go as far as calling it cheap looking - even if some of the plastics are on the shiny side.

Safety wise, it packs stability control and tyre pressure monitoring, but Fiat has skimped a bit on the inflatable cushions, with side and curtain airbags costing extra. A three-year or 100 000km service plan (and matching warranty) is included in the price.

VERDICT

The Tipo is a practical, well-priced (lower down in the range at least) and generally likeable little car, but the petrol models struggle on the performance front, particularly at Gauteng altitudes. If you’re looking for the best price to satisfaction ratio, the 1.3 turbodiesel sedan is likely to be your best bet.

FACTS: Fiat Tipo 1.6 Easy auto

Engine:1.6-litre, 4-cyl, petrol
Gearbox:6-speed automatic
Power:81kW @ 5500rpm
Torque:152Nm @ 4500rpm
0-100km/h (claimed, coastal):11.2 seconds
Top speed (claimed, coastal):192km/h
Price:R294 900
Warranty:3-year/100 000km
Service plan:3-year/100 000km

http://www.iol.co.za/motoring/road-tests/fiats-tipo-is-practical-but-short-on-power-10558672

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Review: Fiat's Tipo modestly ticking all the boxes

Family sedans are all about practicality, convenience and good fuel consumption.

Fiat's new Tipo takes on the established players in the market such as the Toyota Corolla, Volkswagen Jetta and the Honda Ballade.

After a week of testing the Tipo, Rouel van Nelson says it's a vehicle that ticks all the boxes for the right reasons and here’s why.

First impressions – At first glance

The Tipo 1.4 16v Fire presents a somewhat timid outward appearance, understated in its looks department. That however is not necessarily a bad thing as one could argue that simple is better, less is more etc.

The vehicle is well put together with 17’’ alloys, chrome details and a sleek chrome grille, adding a dash of elegance to the laid-back look of the car. As for the rear end, the Tipo features classy LED rear lights with a chrome panel across the boot.

In a nutshell, the Tipo may not turn heads. However it has decent looks with no unnecessary detailing. It is a family orientated vehicle after all.

There’s always room

Inside the shell of the car, there is room and lots of it. When it comes to the driver’s and passenger’s seats, one does not get the feeling of being cramped or ones knees being squashed up close to the dashboard.

The seating is relatively comfortable and although it does not come with leather upholstery, it is neatly put together.

The backseat has ample room and will seat three people with ease and boasts what can be considered a marquee feature of the car, a 520 litre boot. The Tipo sports a broad and deeply set boot, which would be great should a family plan a holiday or getaway of some sorts.

A comfortable drive, just one drawback

Upon testing the Tipo, there was nothing to suggest that there was anything wrong with the drive. If anything, driving the Tipo proved to be rather relaxing, easy and tranquil. The four-cylinder 1.4 16v Fire is the entry-level petrol engine, delivering 70kW/127Nm, combined with a six-speed manual gearbox. It might not sound much but it is enough when a push is needed in an overtaking situation.

One of the drawbacks regarding the drivetrain of the car is that of the sixth gear. It could be deemed as a gear to cruise in; however, one gets the exact same feeling while driving in fifth gear. There simply are not enough horses left to gallop in the sixth gear.

A bargain?

With the Tipo being an unfamiliar competitor in the world of family sedans, you would be pleased to know it’s pretty kind to the wallet in comparison to its rivals.

Price – R229 900

Prices of well-known family sedans

Toyota Corolla – R263 900
Volkswagen Jetta – R278 300
Chevrolet Cruze – R252 700
Honda Ballade – R246 000
Hyundai Elantra – R299 900
Mazda 3 – R258 500

It’s cheaper than all the above mentioned vehicles and it offers every basic need required of a family sedan.

Well put together, value for money

In conclusion, the Tipo is a car unflattering to the eye, however, it was never made for that purpose. It ticks all the boxes at a basic level and is well put together from the drive, to the interior to the exterior.

http://www.wheels24.co.za/NewModels/review-fiats-tipo-modestly-ticking-all-the-boxes-20170811
 
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