Fiat 126 - Optional Extra

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  • čas přidán 14. 04. 2022
  • Optional Extra video about the Fiat 126.
    See the main video here: • The Car that got Polan...
    To get early ad-free access to new videos, or your name at the end of my videos, please consider supporting me from just $1 or 80p a month at / bigcar
    Link to my other channel - Big Car:
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  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 222

  • @LittleCar
    @LittleCar  Před 2 lety +68

    I'm sure you don't care, but the shadow was my new monitor in front of the window.

    • @Tacko14
      @Tacko14 Před 2 lety +5

      You’re right, we (I, at least) don’t. Don’t bother about such details, we’re here for the story and the pics. I tend to focus solely on your voice. And the legos on the shelve, of course :)

    • @midlam99
      @midlam99 Před 2 lety +8

      Contrary to Taco, I care, and there's never something so cool than the editor revealing a little irritant!

    • @Tacko14
      @Tacko14 Před 2 lety +4

      @@midlam99 you made me laugh today :)

    • @lucidnonsense942
      @lucidnonsense942 Před 2 lety +1

      I really recommend getting a bunch of Photography Light Reflectors and setting them up around the room to give your shot an even wash. It'll even up the weird shadows you have coming off shelves etc. They are very cheap nowadays, basic ones will run you 50$ for a handful and some stands, you can also use them to make the led light more natural. (There are very expensive professional ones, but honestly, they probably are overkill.)
      You can use big chunks of white cardboard to even out the wash, in a pinch... basically just get enough of matt reflective surfaces so that your "stage" area has a flat wash with no significant shadows. Then use a key light / spot to add some if you want.

    • @Conservator.
      @Conservator. Před 2 lety +1

      @@Tacko14 I came here to say the same 😁👍

  • @ve2vfd
    @ve2vfd Před 2 lety +38

    You mention how light the 126 was, it reminded me a few winters ago in Florida I saw someone carrying a 126 in the back of his pickup truck. :)

    • @michaireneuszjakubowski5289
      @michaireneuszjakubowski5289 Před 2 lety +3

      When I was in high school, one class pulled a prank on our Polish lit teacher - they balanced his 126p on three garbage cans, hid nearby and waited for him to come out. After the initial freakout, they were able to return the car to its previous position with little trouble. They lifted it in place with a couple boards and a dozen strong lads ;)

  • @shapesart2701
    @shapesart2701 Před 2 lety +6

    In Poland 126p used to be converted into a rally car with all required efforts. Same 650 cc engine uplifted to 50-55 bhp, cage, better suspension. I had one but didn't complete this conversion in full. But enough to enjoy 70 mph through a forest with roaring sound behind my back. This was usually a first rally car for many decent rally drivers like Janusz Kulig (RiP).

  • @AndrzejJakubczyk
    @AndrzejJakubczyk Před 2 lety +11

    We regularly used to take one of our teachers' "Maluch" and put it between the trees at the primary school in the last year, so as she couldn't drive it without lifting it back to the street :) It takes 8 kids to lift it up and move a few meters down the street :)

  • @AndiKravljaca
    @AndiKravljaca Před 2 lety +31

    Imagine the scene. It's in the Eastern block, in the middle of the 1980s. My parents, myself, my aunt, and my two cousins, along with our luggage, went on a 250 mile trip to the seaside. In a 126. Six people. And luggage. Times were different back then!

    • @baladar1353
      @baladar1353 Před rokem +1

      Imagine the amount of the fine your parents would have to pay if you were stopped by the police, while riding a tiny car made for four persons but stuffed with six. Policemen were not so forgiving in that time, so you're lucky.

    • @mjak993
      @mjak993 Před rokem +2

      Shittier, you mean. (Trust me, I've seen it...)

    • @erik_dk842
      @erik_dk842 Před rokem +1

      It must have been the "Duzy Fiat" 125P or non of you children older than 3 years old

    • @AndiKravljaca
      @AndiKravljaca Před rokem +1

      @@erik_dk842 Definitely a white 126, I have vivid memories of it.

    • @nikolanikola8543
      @nikolanikola8543 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Somewhere in the Balkans❤

  • @--Lam
    @--Lam Před 2 lety +79

    Here in Poland we used to say the 126p is just as safe as any other car - the crumple zone ends at the engine!
    (It was literally the most unsafe car since the Ford Pinto... in a front collision driver's and passenger's legs were crushed)
    PS. It's Bielsko Biała, "bia-wah". Also "ch" in "Maluch" is just a soft "h".

    • @LittleCar
      @LittleCar  Před 2 lety +3

      😂

    • @Colaholiker
      @Colaholiker Před 2 lety +31

      It is also very quiet for rear seat passengers, as they can use their knees to cover their ears... ;-)

    • @worldhello1234
      @worldhello1234 Před 2 lety +2

      "Safety" sits behind the wheel. If "safety" fails, you need crash protection. An unsafe car is a car that is undrivable. 😂

    • @schunkolade8217
      @schunkolade8217 Před 2 lety +4

      I totaled my grandma's at a 20kph crash. Even the roof folded. But until that it was great fun.

    • @UltimatePerfection
      @UltimatePerfection Před rokem +2

      @@schunkolade8217 I wonder if the 50kph driving limit in the cities is partly because of 126p, Trabant, Polonez and other soviet era vehicles as it's literally a death wish if you drive any faster than that in those.

  • @bigcahoonaburger8550
    @bigcahoonaburger8550 Před 2 lety +6

    This car was my aunts first car. She was a nurse and used to come down from Scotland in it. I remember it was like sitting in a biscuit tin, smelt very strong of petrol and made my 5yr old head rattle above 40mph. God only knows how she drove it all over the country!

    • @poppyneese1811
      @poppyneese1811 Před rokem

      Never underestimate the fortitude of Scottish Women,,,,,,,,, I’ve heard it’s in the blood😏 Loved the story though, wish it was longer!!!

  • @simonhodgetts6530
    @simonhodgetts6530 Před 2 lety +8

    My uncle had a 126 - it was great fun, although my grandad once had to get out when we attempted a steep hill. We had to wait at the top whilst he walked up the hill…..I loved it ! We called it the FIAT fartbox!

  • @classicandclunker
    @classicandclunker Před 2 lety +5

    Sales of the 126p in Australia were the result (I'm told by a former dealer of the cars) of a lady here in Australia getting paid for her legal work, for people in Poland, in cars instead of cash. They were called Niki here due to a legal problem with Fiat (even though Fiat wasn't sold here at that time) so they called the cars after her nickname, Niki. The 126p that was assessed by our Australian Design Rules team in the 80s (which has slightly smaller air inlets on the sides) is sitting in a yard, rusting away with about a dozen other ones. I scavenged some parts there for my 126p

  • @lucidnonsense942
    @lucidnonsense942 Před 2 lety +4

    I can solve the mystery of Aus/NZ and other foreign country sales. The Polish govt was short on hard currency, so would do swaps for things like butter or some mineral resource. A third company would finance the Polish side of the deal and get repaid with a bunch of 126p cars, at a steeply discounted price.
    It was a way for PRL govt to get resources into the country, that USSR couldn't request as "aid" for military "support," or squirrel out of the country as part of "planned trade."
    So, it was something FSM was rather keen on.

    • @LittleCar
      @LittleCar  Před 2 lety

      Interesting - thanks for that info.

  • @paulkosoff8851
    @paulkosoff8851 Před 2 lety +3

    This plastic caravan N126, manufactured in Niewiadów, Poland, was exported to the UK under different names - and it was the caravan used to create an airship in Top Gear!
    BTW: Polish city is Bielsko-Biała (pronounced ...Bya-wa)

  • @theblackhand6485
    @theblackhand6485 Před 2 lety +28

    Some extra things to mention are:
    - When production of the FIAT Cinquecento started the non painted 126 bodies had to wait outside the factory. These 126 bodies once build and sold rusted the moment you laid your eyes on it. They were mainly sold in Poland. Some ended up in other east European countries.
    - The body of the 126p was raised a bit if compared with the one build in Italy. The mounting brackets which hold the front suspension leaf were thicker. The coil springs on the rear might have bin longer as well. Not sure about this one.
    - Some owners mounted a by there feet operated electrical pump to spray screen wash on the windscreen. So there hands could stay on the steering wheel. A lot saver way to drive.
    - A particular edition, probably the Personal 4, came with square rear lights. Similar as a MINI of that era.
    - The 126 original came with a 600 and 650 cc air cooled engine. Later Steyr designed and build a boxer like air cooled flat two cilinder. This engine was a bit smaller Dan the 650 cc unit, but it produced more hp. Very nice to climb the Austrian mountain passes.
    - The 126 BIS (Bis) had a 704 cc water cooled flat engine. In some countries a bit lesser in cc due to regulations.
    - In 1973 to '75 Abarth experimented with the 126 engine and wanted to realize a FIAT ABARTH 126. Only two prototipo's were build. Both from bodies build in Poland. One suppose to be in Italy and one in Poland. So far one knows these cars are lost. Vanished.
    The developments around the FIAT ABARTH 126 stopped because of the engine with 770/775cc could not handle all the extra power Abarth got out of it. Remember this was engine was of an old design and needed to be modified badly.
    From Lavazza (Piero) came a new redesigned cilinder head which by now had a two port inlet.
    This increased power straight away.
    The engine at first had a 30 DIC FIAT 850 Spider carb. But later on ABARTH added a horizontal mounted carb. Probably a Weber 40 DCOE. But a smaller one from the LANCIA Fulvia build by Solex could also be used by ABARTH. This engine, in first, had a from FIAT ABARTH 595 derived camshaft.
    ABARTH added Brembo disc brakes to the front. First from a motorcycle but that didn't turn out well. Later they took parts from the FIAT 127 and FIAT Ritmo (Strada). The suspension was modified and the front leaf got wish bones to strengthen the front suspension. Due to the disc brakes the spring leaf would otherwise bend.
    - The 126 A came with chrome bumpers. On later models the bumpers were made of a 'plastic'. Chrome wiper arms got replaced by black ones. The same with the handle on the rear bonnet.
    - The 126 did inspire other Italian coach builders like GIANNINI and some others.

    • @agenty_gd
      @agenty_gd Před 2 lety +1

      The Steyr engine actually came earlier than the 650cc as far as I know. Originally it came from an Austrian version of Fiat 500 and got carried over to the 126 after modifications, much like the 600cc was a modified engine of the Italian Fiat 500. Possibly the 600cc engine got increased to 650cc because Steyr proved that the car performs better with a more powerful engine, it just needed stronger brakes.
      Could you link the source where you found this info on the Abarth version? I would like to read about it more. I have seen a photo of a wishbone brace for this car supposedly by Abarth, but that had coil springs. What I do know is that despite the fact that 2 prototypes were lost, at one point the Polish OBR FSM rally team had a partnership with Abarth to build a rally 126p, and they used Abarth parts so in a way there were more than 2 cars like that. But the rally car unfortunately had to be trashed after its catastrophic engine failure and was replaced with one built by OBR FSM only, they could have used some parts from the previous one though but definitely not the engine lol.
      (If I'm wrong about some of this, someone should correct me, my source is basically random videos and articles found online and I'm not an expert in any way, I just like this car)

    • @MotoPasjeKamila
      @MotoPasjeKamila Před 2 lety

      Sporo fajnego info! Dzięki!

    • @theblackhand6485
      @theblackhand6485 Před 2 lety +1

      @AgentY: If you want to find out more about the FIAT ABARTH 126 you will need to type into your browser: 'fiat Abarth 126 SE028' or similar. You will get another hit with 'AB.1C.1' and 'F.B. 813-X226.B'.
      You mentioned the Polish rally team. So far as I know, but not confirmed, these cars, or at least one, had the Radiale engine of the FIAT ABARTH 695 (not in production so far I know) in it. This particular engine looked more like a motorcycle engine. The cilinder head had two inlet ports as well. It was a hemispherical type of engine and the was a second row of rocker arms.
      To see a picture of that engine I suggest that you go to the site of Berni Motori.
      The idea of FIAT was not to track race a 126 but go into rally racing with it. To bad to sad the 126 was not ready for such a task. To much had to be modified.
      The front suspension you have seen is independent and has a McPherson set up. But the prototipo's of ABARTH in first used the basic factory parts. So they modified the front leaf spring with wish bones.
      There are at least two books about ABARTH where the name 'Sergio Limone' is mentioned. He was involved with the project.

    • @theblackhand6485
      @theblackhand6485 Před 2 lety

      ps: don't forget to set your browser to surge picture too.

    • @agenty_gd
      @agenty_gd Před 2 lety

      @@theblackhand6485 Thanks for this info, it's really interesting! Yeah the suspension I have seen looked like McPherson, but makes sense that they would rather use factory parts, so that definitely wasn't part of the prototype, maybe a separately sold tuning part. Also I knew that this was the engine used for the rally car but I haven't seen pictures of it, thanks for saying how to find them!

  • @palbrvn3737
    @palbrvn3737 Před 2 lety +5

    My sister had a 126Bis with the hatch and the under'floor flat engine giving it a very low centre of gravity - It was LOTS of fun to drive and very practical for the size. I'd definitely buy one now if could find a decent one!

  • @mikeenglish6401
    @mikeenglish6401 Před 2 lety +4

    I love small cars too…..
    My first was a Fiat 650 (PWM 726J), aged 17 following my parents’ decision that I was unsafe on a moped!
    That said, I did buy a new Fiat 500 in 2008 upon their release in Europe. Great fun……

  • @TheStobb50
    @TheStobb50 Před 2 lety +9

    I like my 126 for £50 just a cheap run around of a old friend when I didn’t have a lot of money, I end up really liking it, it was very reliable but there was nothing to go wrong, I eventually got rid and got a Lada 1200 and I ended up liking that as well, One of the great advantages of having these cars is I now have a good collection of jokes

  • @lakrids-pibe
    @lakrids-pibe Před 2 lety +7

    I remember hearing the same anecdote about a Fiat being lifted and moved by a group of pranksters.

    • @LittleCar
      @LittleCar  Před 2 lety +5

      Either a common student prank or an urban legend!

    • @jamesengland7461
      @jamesengland7461 Před 2 lety +2

      It could be done with about 8-10 guys on each side of the fence passing it over.

    • @jamesengland7461
      @jamesengland7461 Před 2 lety +2

      I never did that, but I did help turn a couple cars sideways.

    • @MotoPasjeKamila
      @MotoPasjeKamila Před 2 lety +4

      In high school we once did that to our music teacher, she was soo not nice to us, so we pranked her...

    • @bartoszsosnowski8388
      @bartoszsosnowski8388 Před 2 lety +2

      It is not a legend. When i was in primary school in late 80's, bunch of older class guys, 15y old, took our music teachers fiat 126 and put it tightly between two trees outside the school so she couldn't drive it away. They later put it back into street. I did the same thing with my fellows few years later with another fiat 126 during scout camp. The fiat was used there as supply car. 😄

  • @henktulp4400
    @henktulp4400 Před 2 lety +3

    I drove a 126 for some time....did 1400 km/23hrs nonstop from Italy to French west coast including 3 high passages through the mountains (the police refused old cars entering the Frejus tunnel for safety reasons...I never bothered to tell them about the self fitted LPG installation...).....it was oldfashioned bigfun motoring!!!....
    Ps it did easily 23 kilometres on one litre of petrol!!

  • @richardgreenwood3355
    @richardgreenwood3355 Před 2 lety +3

    My first car as a student in 1986 was a 1973 Fiat 500. I got up one morning to find it had been turned 90 degrees in its space in the car park between two other parked cars. It was a 500L so it even had handles! Mind you, I still managed to extract it with a very multi-point turn!
    I like small cars too. Later in life I had a Daewoo Matiz followed by a Suzuki Wagon R+..... but now at the opposite extreme I have a Skoda Superb Estate, for caravanning.

    • @MrDuncl
      @MrDuncl Před 2 lety

      I recall four students at college coming across Bristol in a Fiat 500. They were complaining that due to a stripped thread one of the spark plugs kept falling out diminishing the power somewhat :-).

  • @polska207
    @polska207 Před 2 lety +2

    I remember my dad had a 1976 Maluch he put the plastic bumpers from a 1993 version. it was small but the whole family still went camping in it will all the stuff we needed

  •  Před 2 lety +9

    Nice video! I really enjoyed this and previous video. I like to see how other people, especially from other countries talk about our Polski Fiat. In Poland that was a really popular car since something about 2010 maybe. At that time you could buy one of these in mid range condition for something about 100-200USD. Now, they priced almost like gold, and prices reaches even around 3,500USD!! It's even more than it was priced when it was new. In my opinion it's a hype pumped prices, because in recent years this car became a sort of our Polish youngtimer, and people started to look at these as little fun car for sunday drive, and reminder of "(maybe not too) good old days". In 2022 Polski Fiat 126p it's no longer a cheap car for first choice of new driver. This status now belong to maybe Fiat Seicento which is cheaper and very often seen on the roads of Poland.
    I also have one of these little 126p. When i was really yound, around 6yo, my uncle had one of that and i simply loved it! I was really dreaming about having one of those when i became an adult. After around 16!! years of waiting, when i was 22yo i bought first one, and my dream came true. It was 1998 Fiat 126elx, and it was tired of life, rotten little car. After it i bought next one, the 1996 Fiat 126el. This car was in not to bad shape, it cost me around 180USD. After this one i bought third one, a 1991 FSM Polski FIat 126p for a 230USD. This one stayed with me today and i will never sell it. It's mine "apple of the eye". I use it as everyday use car, i love it, and i take care of them as much i can. I don't need any other car. Oh, maybe a second one to love, and to have two of those to use :D
    PS: Sorry for my bad english. I'm from Poland and i learned majority of english by myself. Somethimes i use a help of translator with some words, but i really hope this was understandable.
    Greetings from Poland :)

    • @LittleCar
      @LittleCar  Před 2 lety +1

      You have very good English!

    • @erik_dk842
      @erik_dk842 Před rokem +2

      My first visit to Poland was Christmas 1997 and the Maluch's and Duzy Fiat's were still everywhere. I've come there every year since, and I hardly ever see them now, except for enthusiasts driving them on special occasions

  • @alternatenutters2524
    @alternatenutters2524 Před 2 lety +8

    The 126 is one of your best videos yet, remembering my yellow 1975 edition. Great little car, despite sounding like two chickens on a treadmill and aquaplaning in the torrential British rain. Still miss it so much!! Thanks for all you do, these videos are much appreciated.

  • @BartAnt84
    @BartAnt84 Před 2 lety +2

    That aerodynamic version was a different car. It was a Polish replacement for 126p called The Beskid. But FSM didn't had the money to put it into the production(because of the center controlled economy).
    As for the 126p, the interesting thing in that the last versions, weren't the licquid cooled "BIS" versions, but a standard air cooled ones.
    Here in Poland you could buy both versions, and the standard was way cheaper and relieable than the BIS.

    • @erik_dk842
      @erik_dk842 Před rokem

      I remember seeing the Bis at a "giełda" in 1997 and being told that it was very undesirable. My Polish family by marriage all have stories about the Maluch's

  • @moore2522
    @moore2522 Před 2 lety

    My dad's commuter car was a 1959 Fiat 1100 back in the 60's. I used to "requisition" it as soon as he got home on Fridays and it was my weekend ride throughout high school. The washer button on the 126 dash brought back memories! That windshield washer feature was a staple throughout the 50's-60's Fiat lineup-just like the crazy spare-tire powered one in my '60 VW. Ingenuity at it's level best! Of course having the fuel pump operate off the crank mechanically through a diaphragm was NOT a good idea! When the diaphragm cracked one day, gas pumped into the crankcase and ruined the engine-but that's a story for another day. Love the videos on the Fiats!

  • @judethaddaeus9742
    @judethaddaeus9742 Před 2 lety +1

    The car industry is so strange in that most vehicles are constantly competing with one another to have the latest styling, the latest technology, the coolest image, etc. And here was the Fiat 126 attracting thousands of customers for decades based on nothing but its simple and quickly dated character and total dedication to one practical purpose. That is what makes a few cars legendary. The 2CV, Beetle, Fiat 500, Mini, and Renault 4 fit that category as well, And your videos expertly keyed into that. Thanks!
    One thing I would say is that the 126’s predecessor lasted 5 years into its run if you count the fact that they rebadged the Fiat 500 estate as the Autobianchi Giardiniera and kept it running awhile longer. I only mention that because people seem to forget about Autobianchi altogether.
    Someday, it might be nice to see a video explaining what Fiat’s 12x/13x numbers were supposed to mean. They clearly didn’t correspond to vehicle size because the 128 was smaller than the 124 and 125, and the 130 was bigger than the 131 and 132. They weren’t named in order of debut, either, since the 126 launched after the 127, 128, and 130 and at roughly the same time as the 132. It was confusing! No wonder they switched back to names beginning in the late ‘70s.

    • @LittleCar
      @LittleCar  Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah, the numbering system seemed a little random, and yes, I forgot about the 500 estate version that went on a little longer.

    • @judethaddaeus9742
      @judethaddaeus9742 Před 2 lety +1

      @@LittleCar They were indeed confusing! Also, I hope minor corrections aren’t irksome. I genuinely appreciate all the work you do to create these videos, and they are roundly excellent. Thank you.

  • @psychosquirrel555
    @psychosquirrel555 Před 2 lety +2

    I recall these, the Lada and the Samara being marketed here in Australia very clearly in 1990. I only recall seeing the Lada in any numbers, but the salty Indian Ocean air reduced them to ferric red dust within 3 years. They became a bit of a joke and were all but gone by 1997.

  • @michu9493
    @michu9493 Před 2 lety +7

    10:57 That was almost correct ;)
    Btw CH at the end of the word Maluch should be pronounced like H in Honda.

    • @erik_dk842
      @erik_dk842 Před rokem

      Not really. The sound doesn't exist in English and the H in Honda is pronounced like in house. My Polish wife says it's like German dach or hoch.

  • @roysoutdoorlife
    @roysoutdoorlife Před 2 lety +2

    I used to work in a Fiat garage and used to love the 126. Slow it may have been but it was like a little go-kart around town. The Bis handled better as they changed from 12" wheels to 13", and these had low profile tyres! I also remember the water cooled Bis engine blowing head gaskets around 18,000 miles or so. Oh - and the all round drum brakes were awful! Still a fun car though.

  • @JTA1961
    @JTA1961 Před 2 lety

    This is one of the handful of channels that ALWAYS deserves a thumbs-up...

  • @mIRChele
    @mIRChele Před 2 lety +2

    I am italian and even if "Cinquecento" definitely seemed pronounced by someone not italian, never once it seemed wrong. I mean, in Italy there are many different pronunciations (much like in UK), both with vowels open or closed, so it's completely fine. Bravo!

  • @macelius
    @macelius Před 2 lety +2

    In Poland they called the Cinqueciento the "Cienko cienko", which means "thin thin", or "skinny skinny".

  • @WayneTheBoatGuy
    @WayneTheBoatGuy Před 2 lety

    I love how you share so much more of what you do.

  • @yehyabadr2488
    @yehyabadr2488 Před 2 lety +1

    Fun Fact. The Egyptian State-Owned company El-Nasr has assembled the polish version of the 126 in Egypt from 1990-to 1999!

  • @TheBarth79
    @TheBarth79 Před 2 lety +1

    This caravan(called N 126 , "N" is for Niewiadów-town where is factory) was made specjal for fiat 126 and you can buy this caravan today. Yes,we still make them.

  • @nickwebb9290
    @nickwebb9290 Před 2 lety +1

    The lighting looks much better 👍
    I really like your ‘extra’ posts, they’re excellent 👌

  • @martinp2437
    @martinp2437 Před 2 lety +2

    Cool you added the info on push-squeeze window washer, defo one of the weirdest quirks of this car :) used to have one of those, still remember the pumping action when windshield was really dirty and you had to change the pressing fingers because of fatigue :D

  • @dinos9607
    @dinos9607 Před rokem

    Speaking of Polish 126s and their llittle caravans, I can attest that I remember back in the 1980s Polish tourists coming down to Greece in the summer driving all the way from Poland in their little 126s with papa on wheel, mama next, 2 kids behind plus the mother in law and pulling around the little caravan through Eastern Block "highways" (i.e. lack of them!). It puzzled us how they made but they did.... they must have liked Greece very very much!

  • @filipnaruniec8127
    @filipnaruniec8127 Před rokem +1

    Maluch (the little one) was more expensive used than new! Because you simply couldn't just go and buy a new one at these times.
    Your key would most probably open another 126 parked in the area or a bit further :)
    You could start the car with (depending on the model):
    -a coin inserted in between fuses
    -a broomstick inserted through the engine
    -by putting into gear and having people push the car
    Pretty much everything could be home repaired, it would fall apart cause of rust before being not able to run.

  • @peacefulscrimp5183
    @peacefulscrimp5183 Před 2 lety

    I have to work on fords all the time and everyone is like it's the first truck they have ever made and they went way out of their way to make it as complex as possible.
    It's nice to hear about cars that got it right 👍👍👍

  • @marklongman3860
    @marklongman3860 Před rokem

    When I was at college a story that was spread around was that a students 126 was carried up 2floors and lodged onto the roof top.

  • @Mark1405Leeds
    @Mark1405Leeds Před 2 lety

    The Fiat 130 coupe [rectangular headlight model] is one of the coolest cars ever

  • @diecarro79
    @diecarro79 Před 2 lety +2

    3:07 Yeah, my 1980 Seat/Fiat Panda had the exact same part for spraying water. Didn't work too well, that's for sure, it's difficult to press hard enough with a finger. What's interesting, is that my father had a 1977 Ford Fiesta and it also had a mechanical wash wipe device that was operated with the foot, and that worked quite well.

  • @Hvitserk67
    @Hvitserk67 Před 2 lety +3

    Regarding small cars and what you can actually do with these with a little creativity and sacrifice, it must have been a bit of a cultural revolution for you in terms of the USA vs. Europe. I remember in 1990 when I visited the USA for the first time it was almost a shock how big the cars were. We were three friends on a road trip in the western United States and rented a Chrysler LeBaron convertible (otherwise a nice car with the facelift and new interior), but not without it coming with a warning from the rental company. 3 people in such a small car was completely unorthodox and not normal. The car was far too small for three people. At the same time I had a Mercedes-Benz 190E and it was small compared to the Chrysler and not to mention a Fiat 126 which for example the Poles used as a family car at the time :)

    • @nlpnt
      @nlpnt Před 2 lety

      That was probably going by the rental company's recommendations which are mostly upsell. Given that it was a convertible it's especially odd since there weren't any bigger ones made that they could've upsold you to.

  • @theoldpcguy
    @theoldpcguy Před rokem

    Back in the 70s the farm boys decided it would be funny to pick up my Fiat 600 and turn it 90° in my parking space between two other cars. I calmly got into the car and went back and forth a couple times and drove home.

  • @MrSolvalou
    @MrSolvalou Před 2 lety

    Now I finally understand why Dank Pods called his 126 “Niki” in his videos

  • @garethjones2746
    @garethjones2746 Před 2 lety

    In 1990 I went on a school trip holiday to Rome, these cars would literally be bumper to bumper parked everywhere. So much so I went home and told everyone, literally it seemed every road in the city were swamped with them. I think the original fiat 500s were still about too but it’s a long time ago but has I has stayed with me.

  • @palinja
    @palinja Před 2 lety +1

    Great reviews as always !
    Most of older generations in Yugoslavia where I am from, still drive old Zastava - Fiat and most of them would buy same new car again. Some old folks don’t want / need new elections, gadgets etc. They just want new simple car for around $5000. They don’t need 200 horse powers :)

  • @nadeemchaudhry6585
    @nadeemchaudhry6585 Před 2 lety

    Brilliant video

  • @haeckmaen
    @haeckmaen Před 2 lety +1

    One version not mentioned so far is the German Steinwinter 250, a complete Fiat 126, shipped to the Stuttgart Firm minus its engine, then equipped with a Goggomobil 250 ccm engine from about 1974 to 1982. It was intended for folks with a so called German old class 4 drivers' license, basically a small motorcycle license, which also allowed to drive small cars up to 250 ccm as well before EU laws stopped this. When Goggomobil production ceased, there was no Western 250 ccm car left on the market, so Steinwinter dropped in, first with the Steinwinter Junior, a 500 with a 250 ccm engine, followed by the Steinwinter 250, the126 based model. I never drove one of these, but it must be truly awful.

    • @erik_dk842
      @erik_dk842 Před rokem

      Beats walking or taking the bus in 4 hours

  • @rickybryan1759
    @rickybryan1759 Před 2 lety

    You poured over the stars at the back just like I did! I could argue gear ratios, fuel economy, 0-100 times!

  • @islasandjessicas
    @islasandjessicas Před 2 lety

    My father brought one of these in the late 70s when my brother and I were still young, and when my parents went shopping, we ended up having to get the bus home, as there was no room for us in the car....

  • @andrewlee4938
    @andrewlee4938 Před 2 lety

    Didn’t know you were in the states. Just assumed you were in the uk. Anyway keep the videos coming 👍

  • @bartoszsosnowski8388
    @bartoszsosnowski8388 Před 2 lety

    There was funny thing with models with starter in the floor. Sometimes the connection cable was broken, so you needed a stick or umbrella to push the starter from behind. There were funny situations when the engine stopped while waiting for green light. The driver was jumping quickly outside with umbrella, opening the engine and pushing the starter.😂

  • @moviebod
    @moviebod Před 2 lety +1

    I bought a 126 bis in 1993 and I loved it, but my whole family hated it and so in the end I got rid of it and had a couple of Land Rovers. I went on to buy a MItsubishi GTO, a Lexus LS400 and a BMW M5 in 2008 because like you, I just love cars but also enjoy powerful cars. The Fiat was to be fair, a bit rubbish as I blew the head gasket when it was just three years old and the air intake tube was (I seems to recall) made from hard cardboard which I thought was a corner cut too far.

  • @SteliosBen302
    @SteliosBen302 Před 2 lety

    my neighbour used to have two of them, a 1976 yellow one that was Italian built and a 1982 polish built one in Brown it was the special edition one, I remember the school runs where there were 4 of us crammed into the back of it. It seemed to cope well with it too although starting them was a bit hit and miss on some mornings as it was a cable operated starter on both

  • @diecast_MikeEspo
    @diecast_MikeEspo Před 2 lety +4

    Cool video , some of the cars you show here look fun to drive , like a go cart . I would love to drive one of the small Fiats .

    • @LittleCar
      @LittleCar  Před 2 lety +2

      Me too!

    • @piotrmalewski8178
      @piotrmalewski8178 Před 2 lety

      check on the videos of 126p with keywords 'rajd' and 'KJS', or 126p small car big heart.
      When well modded and driven this car to this day is a beast that can beat anything if only the road is twisty enough. It's also the most spectacular to watch bacause it always goes sideways, or on two wheels.

  • @flutstraflutstra5627
    @flutstraflutstra5627 Před 2 lety

    The caravan was a Predom n126, it weighed less than 500 kg. We've had one. On paper you could sleep in it with three people and there was a kitchenette and fridge on board

  • @styre
    @styre Před 2 lety +1

    Mr Car lives in America?! insane.
    Can we please get a video of all the cars youve ever owned

    • @LittleCar
      @LittleCar  Před 2 lety +1

      Not much of a video. But here's a list: Morris Marina (didn't drive it), 1980 Ford Fiesta, mk1 VW Golf, 1989 mk4 Ford Escort (better than mk5!), 1995 Honda Civic, 2002 Audi TT, 2011 VW GTi (just gone to heaven - they're picking it up on Tuesday to scrap), Tesla Model 3.

  • @jamesengland7461
    @jamesengland7461 Před 2 lety

    Further motivation to get my Geo Metro running again!

  • @stasiekpiekarski
    @stasiekpiekarski Před 2 lety +1

    The caravan brand is Niewiadów... model 126. Yes, it was design specifically for Fiat 126!

    • @erik_dk842
      @erik_dk842 Před rokem +1

      I often see them on construction sites in Poland

  • @gekonz1129
    @gekonz1129 Před 2 lety +2

    At 7:58 you show what's FSM Beskid, the series of aerodynamic prototypes that weren't really versions of Fiat 126, rather they were designed by FSM's research plant, which's goal was to design a modern replacement of aging 126. Unfortunately these didn't go beyond the prototype stages, but were one of the steps into the direction of creating Fiat Cinquecento.

    • @LittleCar
      @LittleCar  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks for clarifying. I've posted a correction as a pinned comment on the main video after someone had a similar comment.

    • @gekonz1129
      @gekonz1129 Před 2 lety

      @@LittleCar Well thanks :) I really appreciate it

  • @Igorexing
    @Igorexing Před 2 lety +1

    @Motobieda, doczekałeś się kilku sekund sławy :)🤣

  • @verttikoo2052
    @verttikoo2052 Před 2 lety

    Oh oh oh. We need video of the Datsun 100A 🥳

  • @ngauruhoezodiac3143
    @ngauruhoezodiac3143 Před rokem

    My brother had one. He said it would do 120 km/h (75 mph) with a good tail wind and a long downhill. It did 130 km/h without a tailwind or downhill but that was with my chevvy in front and a tow rope in between after it broke down.

  • @rickybryan1759
    @rickybryan1759 Před 2 lety +1

    I recall it getting launched in Australia and it was sold as an FSM Niki. So they pushed it not Fiat. I suspect it was an enterprising Oz importer. Lada had recently been launched so I think someone else cast their eye around Eastern Europe looking for another model to sell at the bottom end of the market.

  • @CzarnyWlat
    @CzarnyWlat Před 2 lety +2

    For my taste you got polish pronunciation very well :)

    • @erik_dk842
      @erik_dk842 Před rokem

      I was less than impressed. Just use Google to hear the correct pronunciation. I've only heard him pronounce Citroen with any effort to do it correct.

  • @robertwestinghouse4098
    @robertwestinghouse4098 Před 2 lety +1

    Always enjoy your work. It is a shame, we do not go back to good honest simple motoring. My first car was a 1970 FIAT 500 and I had 15 more. What more do you need. Take out the passenger seat and the space is HUGE. Never had a Niki/126, but the horizontal engine (I am assuming it was taken from the 500 station wagon) would have been super.

  • @coolcarbon4709
    @coolcarbon4709 Před 2 lety

    It was my first brand new car...ACK 121R, still remember the reg.

  • @andyroid7339
    @andyroid7339 Před 2 lety

    Nice chat! I know what you mean re: small cars - I once had a tiny Dhiatsu (not Charde) whilst my Audi 80 2.6l was being converted to LPG and it was the most fun I've ever had in a car! I could put that car anywhere on the road! t was like a bean tin on wheels! Re: pronunciation - I think that in Italian the 3rd syllable is stressed,, the 'c' is as 'ka'' and the "cc' is pronounced 'ch' so focaccia is" foka cha"

  • @sampathkumar1010
    @sampathkumar1010 Před 2 lety

    I am a big fan of your videos. But the focaccia pronunciation? It's funny :D

  • @derekogilvie6942
    @derekogilvie6942 Před 2 lety

    My first car - in 1984 - was a red 126 De Ville. Amazing economy but so noisy although the canvas roof was cool.

  • @MrDuncl
    @MrDuncl Před 2 lety

    2:07 In the 1980s a colleagues parents forbid him from having a Motorbike. His answer; a bright yellow Beach Buggy :-)
    Probably still safer.

  • @spavatch
    @spavatch Před 2 lety +1

    Damn that dark spot!

  • @MaximilianvonPinneberg
    @MaximilianvonPinneberg Před 2 lety +1

    OMG, think I still have those copies of What Car? Used to be an avid reader of it when I was younger.

  • @mattw8332
    @mattw8332 Před 2 lety

    The circa £2600 1988 list price of the 126 intrigued me because it was the budget my dad had available to buy a newer car. He bought a 1983 MG 1600 (Maestro) for a similar amount.
    Of course a brand new 126 (or a nearly new Panda) would not have fit the bill back then because his car MUST HAVE at least 4 doors.

  • @thedeadstig123
    @thedeadstig123 Před 2 lety

    Only thing I remember was the FIAT 126 BIS was completely hated by dealers, mechanics and customers since the water cooled engines over heated and caused more problems than the old air cooled units
    Its why they built it in Poland as the "new model" for like 18 months, then shut it down and continued to build the aircooled model until 2000

  • @andrewknights1304
    @andrewknights1304 Před 2 lety

    You didn't mention the hand throttle under the dash. You could pull this out and in first gear walk alongside the car! I had mine for four years, the starter cable used to break with monotonous regularity. In the end I used to turn on the ignition, the choke, then nip round the back, open the boot and push the starter on the starter motor, "Fuel, ignition, fire!" Great fun cornering was also ridiculous, you could corner at almost any speed, not braking.

  • @Low760
    @Low760 Před 2 lety

    I remember the Nikis in Australia, and Lada nivas came around the same time too. I didn't realise they had a new water-cooled motor over the 126.

    • @damonearwaker8147
      @damonearwaker8147 Před 2 lety

      Australian and NZ Nikis were the original 126 design with Air cooled 650cc engine- the Watercooled version was a hatch back which had significant overheating issues and it was discontinued after only a few years, the Air cooled engine however still continued in production right through to the very end in 2000

  • @Tacko14
    @Tacko14 Před 2 lety

    Okay, if we’re going there: my first car was my parents’ old R11 TC. Hugely underpowered, no options whatsoever but so easy to drive. That’s a thing when your licence is still shiny. I remember stopping at a traffic light, cop car behind me, I’m ffing nervous. It’s the factual first time when you’re on your own in a car, so big moment. What if I mess up on takeoff? I didn’t, it was such an easy car to drive. In my tuition car, a 205, I might have stalled it

  • @HesseJamez
    @HesseJamez Před 9 měsíci

    That windscreen washer wasn't the worst idea - Volkswagen used the pressure of the spare tyre for the pump

  • @joannaatkins822
    @joannaatkins822 Před 2 lety

    I would love to have one of these little cars, they're so charmingly basic and cutely designed!
    I actually have a 1993 fiat panda, and I have to get rid of it soon or move it to my house somehow...

  • @albertseabra9226
    @albertseabra9226 Před 2 lety

    A good vídeo about a fantastic little ser.
    Too hás you didn't find one to drive around -- the feeling is quite different.
    Not high-tech, not exactly a Tesla....mais Vive La Differece!

  • @JohnPapPapoulidis
    @JohnPapPapoulidis Před 2 lety +1

    You shouldn't have told us about the dark corner...so I would continue to think it was my tv screen's problem 😅

    • @LittleCar
      @LittleCar  Před 2 lety +1

      At least I've worked out what it is now!

  • @HesseJamez
    @HesseJamez Před 9 měsíci

    There were even Citroen 2CV or Austin Mini pulling tiny caravans in Europe.

  • @bigyin2586
    @bigyin2586 Před rokem

    9.40 speaking if Italian pronunciation, focaccia is “focachia” (cf “cacciatore”).

  • @KubikCv
    @KubikCv Před 2 lety

    So I'm waiting for Trabant story :D PS: GDR caravan QEK Junior was lighter than polish 126N , QEK Junior HP400 .83 weights 300kg :)

  • @Colonel_RamRod
    @Colonel_RamRod Před rokem

    6:40 it also has triforce taillights. So it wins by default

  • @andrewclark891
    @andrewclark891 Před 2 lety

    Really really enjoyed the 126 video why can't we have them again. EV is too expensive nowhere to charge, can we have LPG if we can't have petrol anymore. LPG 30 per cent less co2 than petrol

  • @drh3b
    @drh3b Před 2 lety

    Near the end of my grade school in the mid Seventies, one of my teachers had a first gen Honda Civic, or "CVCC". He got so tired of kids moving it, he replaced it with a Chevy Blazer.
    Problem solved.

  • @modelmaster3507
    @modelmaster3507 Před 2 lety

    Did you know that the 126 can also pull 3 or 5 tractor trailers there’s an actual video of it. It was done in Poland

  • @floydblandston108
    @floydblandston108 Před 2 lety

    Do the Ford Festiva/Kia Pride/Mazda 121 of the late 80's/90's! Very underrated in their day, but many still around all over the world...

  • @dcarbs2979
    @dcarbs2979 Před 2 lety +1

    Video covering all of the "cheapest car in Britain" at a given time would be very interesting even if only in list form, let alone your normal level of detail. Over the last 100-120 years or so. Info about price, how long it was the cheapest for, options that brought it up to a 'basic' standard of more expensive/modern cars...Austin 7, Perodua Kelisa, Tata Nano to name a few.

    • @LittleCar
      @LittleCar  Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah - that would be a fun video. I'd just need to find the data.

  • @robsterbob580
    @robsterbob580 Před 2 lety

    If you like Lego, you can buy a lego style brick kit of the 126 made by Cobi. It's a good little kit, as good quality as Lego and builds into a realistic looking model of a 126.

  • @Pfirtzer
    @Pfirtzer Před 2 lety

    People can mock this car, but let me tell you in countries where roads are bad and not much reliable public transport, it beats walking any time.. When you live in places that are hard to reach only by 4x4 this cute car could get away as well. Who neeeds speed from 0 to 100 in 8 seconds/

  • @davidcollett768
    @davidcollett768 Před 2 lety

    Currently there is only one 1989 FSM Niki for sale in Australia for over $16k!! And it's in bits

  • @Klopcyna
    @Klopcyna Před 11 měsíci

    I thought you were based in the UK. You are definitely a native speaker of British English. Cheers

  • @terrid6349
    @terrid6349 Před 2 lety

    My first car was an N reg fiat 126, cost me £450. Got me mobile when I had no money.

  • @NORBERTUSMAXIMUS
    @NORBERTUSMAXIMUS Před 2 lety

    @11:10 "B-Yellsko B-Yawa" Bielsko Biala

  • @conradsz
    @conradsz Před rokem

    I have one sitting in the garage,1983, 60k km on the odometer.

  • @MrLurchsThings
    @MrLurchsThings Před 2 lety

    It looks it was FSM exporting to Australia.

  • @gloria.k3319
    @gloria.k3319 Před 2 lety

    I have watched many videos of yours and i like them, great job but Losing an N on Cinquecento is less irrigating than adding an I on Giugiaro....