Difference between revisions of "Lancia"

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[[Image:lancia_logo2.jpg|center|120px]]
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[[Image:lancia_logo.png|center|105px]]
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[[Image:fulviafront.jpg|thumb|350px|<center>'''Lancia Fulvia 1600 Sport [[Zagato]]''']]
 +
'':go here for'' [[Lancia motorcycle|Lancia]] ''motorcycle''
  
  
[[Image:fulviafront.jpg|thumb|350px|Lancia Fulvia 1600 Sport Zagato]]
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'''Lancia Automobiles S.p.A.''' {{IPA|[ˡlantʃa]}} is an [[Italy|Italian]] [[automobile manufacturer]] founded in 1906 by [[Vincenzo Lancia]] and which became part of the [[Fiat|Fiat Group]] in 1969. The company has a long history of producing distinctive cars and also has a strong rally heritage. Modern Lancias are seen as presenting a more luxurious alternative to the models in the Fiat range upon which they are based. One of the firm's trademarks is the use of letters of the [[Greek alphabet]] as the names of its models. The Lancia CEO is Olivier François.
  
'''Lancia''' is an [[Italy|Italian]] [[automobile]] manufacturer founded in [[1906]] by [[Vincenzo Lancia]], part of the [[Fiat]] group since [[1969]].  During the [[1980s]], the company cooperated with [[Saab Automobile]], with the [[Lancia Delta]] being sold as the [[Saab 600]] in [[Sweden]]. The [[1985]] [[Lancia Thema]] also shared a platform with the [[Saab 9000]], [[Fiat Croma]] and the [[Alfa Romeo 164]].
 
  
In the [[United Kingdom]], Lancia increasingly suffered from image problems during the [[1980s]] associated with rust (though in reality, the [[Lancia Beta]] truly deserved this reputation, due to Fiat's infamous utilization of inferior [[Russian]] steel), and pulled out of the UK market in [[1994]]. Since then no [[right hand drive]] models have been produced.
+
==History==
  
In the [[United States]], Lancias were sold from [[1977]] until [[1984]]. It was withdrawn at the same time as Fiat.
+
===Foundation and early years===
 +
[[Image:2006 SAG - Lancia Beta Torpedo 1520 HP 1909 -03.JPG|right|250px|thumb|Lancia Beta Torpedo (1909)]]
 +
Lancia was founded on 29 November 1906 in [[Turin]] by [[Vincenzo Lancia]] and his friend Claudio Fogolin, both being Fiat racing drivers, as Lancia & C. The first Lancia automobile the "[[Lancia Alfa-12HP|tipo 51]]" or 12 HP (later called Alfa) was made in 1907 and produced from 1908. This car had a small four cylinder engine with a power of 58 bhp.
 +
[[Image:lancia logo antico.jpg|left|thumb|150px|'''Original Lancia Logo''']]
 +
Lancia is famous for many automotive innovations. These include the 1913 [[Lancia Theta-35HP|Theta]], which was the first production car in Europe to feature a complete electrical system as standard equipment. The first car with a [[monocoque]]-type body - the [[Lancia Lambda|Lambda]], produced from 1922 to 1931 also featured 'Sliding Pillar' independent front suspension that incorporated the spring and hydraulic damper into a single unit (and featured on most production Lancias until the Appia was replaced in 1963). [[1948]] saw the first 5 speed [[gearbox]] to be fitted to a production car (Series 3 Ardea). Lancia premiered the first full-production [[V6 engine]], in the 1950 [[Lancia Aurelia|Aurelia]], after earlier industry-leading experiments with [[V8 engine|V8]] and [[V12 engine]] configurations. It was also the first company to produce a [[V4 engine]]. Also, Lancia pioneered the use of [[independent suspension]] in production cars, in an era where [[live axle]]s were common practice for both the front and rear axles of a car.  They also developed rear transaxles which were fitted to the Aurelia and Flaminia ranges.
  
Lancia is famous for many innovations concerning the automobile sector. These include the first full-production [[V6]] engine, in the [[1950]] [[Lancia Aurelia|Aurelia]], and earlier experiments with [[V8]] and [[V12]] engine configurations.
+
===Logo===
 +
The original Lancia logo was designed by Count Carlo Biscaretti di Ruffia. The logo shows a lance and shield with flag. The
 +
[[Museo Nazionale dell'Automobile|Turin automobile museum]] is named after him as Museo Nazionale dell'Automobile “Carlo Biscaretti di Ruffia”. The logo was redesigned in 2007.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
== Association with other automakers ==
 +
Lancia was not closely associated with any other manufacturer until the late 1960s. By this time, the company's expensive, high standards of production had become unsustainable. In aiming to produce a product of the highest quality, company bosses had sacrificed cost-effectiveness and when Fiat launched a take-over bid in 1969, they accepted. This was not the end of the distinctive Lancia [[brand]], and exciting new models in the 1970s such as the [[Lancia Stratos|Stratos]], [[Lancia Gamma|Gamma]] and [[Lancia Beta|Beta]] served to prove that Fiat wished to preserve the image of the brand it had acquired.
 +
 
 +
During the 1980s, the company cooperated with [[Saab Automobile]], with the [[Lancia Delta]] being sold as the [[Saab 600]] in [[Sweden]]. The 1985 [[Lancia Thema]] also shared a platform with the [[Saab 9000]], [[Fiat Croma]] and the [[Alfa Romeo 164]].
 +
 
 +
==Automotive==
 +
===Current models===
 +
[[Image:Lancia Ypsilon front 20071002.jpg|thumb|right|Lancia Ypsilon]]
 +
[[Image:2june 2007 615.jpg|thumb|right|Lancia Thesis on diplomatic duties]]
 +
[[Image:Lancia Phedra front 20071105.jpg|thumb|right|Lancia Phedra]]
 +
====Lancia Ypsilon====
 +
Main article [[Lancia Ypsilon]]
 +
 
 +
The Ypsilon is a luxury [[supermini car]] produced from 2003, evoluted in 2007 and is Lancia's best selling model as of 2006. Available with small (1.2- and 1.4-litre) [[petrol engine|petrol]] and [[JTD]] [[diesel engine]]s, is also signed by MOMO design in one version: The Ypsilon Sport Momo Design.
 +
 
 +
====Lancia Musa====
 +
Main article [[Lancia Musa]]
 +
A small [[Minivan|MPV]] produced since 2004, the Musa is largely based on the [[Fiat Idea]] and available with rich image and equipments as high quality.
 +
 
 +
====Lancia Delta====
 +
Main article [[Lancia Delta]]
 +
 
 +
====Lancia Thesis====
 +
Main article [[Lancia Thesis]]
 +
The Thesis is a four-door executive sedan produced since 2002. It is the successor of the [[Lancia Kappa]].
 +
 
 +
====Lancia Phedra====
 +
 
 +
Main article [[Lancia Phedra]]
 +
The Phedra is a prestigious [[MPV]] made by Sevel, a joint-venture of [[PSA]] and Fiat Group. It is manufactured at the [[Sevel Nord]] factory near [[Valenciennes]] in [[France]], and has been in production since 2002.
 +
 
 +
===Trucks, buses and other historical production===
 +
==== Light commercial vehicles ====
 +
* Lancia Beta / Lancia Beta Diesel
 +
* Lancia Jolly
 +
* Lancia Superjolly
 +
 
 +
==== Trucks ====
 +
[[Image:Lancia Esadelta C.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Lancia Esadelta C]]
 +
 
 +
* Lancia Eta (car with a loading area)
 +
* Lancia Jota (1915)
 +
* Lancia Dijota (1915)
 +
* Lancia Trijota (1921)
 +
* Lancia Tetrajota (1921)
 +
* Lancia Pentajota (1924)
 +
* Lancia Esajota
 +
* Lancia Eptajota (1927)
 +
* Lancia Omicron
 +
* Lancia Ro (1932)
 +
* Lancia Ro-Ro (1935)
 +
* Lancia 3Ro (1938)
 +
* Lancia EsaRo (1941)
 +
* Lancia E 290 (1941) single-built electric truck
 +
* Lancia 6Ro (1947)
 +
* Lancia Esatau (1950-1968)
 +
* Lancia Beta / Lancia Beta Diesel
 +
* Lancia Esatau B (1955)
 +
* Lancia Beta Diesel (1959) Lancia Beta 190, with a supercharged twin-cylinder compressor - two stroke - diesel engine
 +
* Lancia Esadelta B (1959)
 +
* Lancia Esadelta C (1969)
 +
* Lancia Esagamma (1968)
 +
 
 +
==== Buses ====
 +
* Lancia Trijota
 +
* Lancia Tetrajota
 +
* Lancia Omicron
 +
* Lancia Ro
 +
* Lancia Esatau
 +
* Lancia Esagamma
 +
 
 +
==== Trolleybuses ====
 +
* Lancia Esatau V11
 +
 
 +
 
 +
==== Military vehicles ====
 +
* [[Lancia IZ]] (1912) ''armored vehicle''
 +
* Lancia 3Ro (1939) ''truck''
 +
* Lancia EsaRo (1942) ''truck''
 +
* Lancia Lince (lynx) (1942) ''armored car - a copy of [[Daimler Dingo]] MK I''
 +
* Lancia 6Ro (1948) ''LKW''
 +
* Lancia CL51 (Z 20) (1954) ''troop transporter''
 +
* Lancia TL51 (Z 30) (1954) ''lorries''
 +
 
 +
 
 +
==Lancia in the United Kingdom==
 +
[[Image:LanciaBetaSpiderRoofOff.jpg|thumb|right|Lancia Beta Spyder]]
 +
[[Image:Gamwiki.jpg|thumb|right|Lancia Gamma coupé]]
 +
In the late 1970s and 1980s, Lancia suffered an increasing image problem in the [[United Kingdom]], centred around a perception that Lancia cars were prone to [[rusting]], due to the Lancia [[Lancia Beta|Beta]] rust scandal. Poor rust prevention techniques  and inadequate water drainage channels led to the Beta gaining a reputation for being rust-prone, particularly the first series vehicles, which were built from 1972–75. The corrosion problems could be structural; for instance where the subframe carrying the engine and gearbox was bolted to the underside of the car. The box section to which the rear of the subframe was mounted could corrode badly causing the subframe to become loose. The problem affected mostly first series saloon models and not the Coupé, HPE, Spider or Montecarlo versions.
 +
 
 +
In the UK, Lancia's largest export market at the time, the company commenced a campaign to buy back vehicles affected by the subframe problem. Some of these vehicles were 6 years old or older. Customers were invited to present their cars to a Lancia dealer for an inspection. If their vehicle was affected by the subframe problem, the customer was offered a part exchange deal to buy another Lancia or Fiat car. The cars that failed the inspection were scrapped.
 +
 
 +
Lancia had already introduced one year previously a six-year anti-corrosion warranty. Whilst later Betas, second series cars, had reinforced subframe mounting points and post-1979 cars were better protected from the elements, these issues, accompanied by critical press coverage, damaged the whole marque's sales success in the UK market. Lancia's reputation was not helped by widespread rumours of Fiat and Lancia using Russian steel.
 +
 
 +
The last right-hand drive model was sold in 1994, after which Lancia withdrew from all right-hand drive markets. At this time the Thema and Dedra were the only current models.
 +
 
 +
The Beta still enjoys a following today among enthusiasts.
 +
 
 +
In September 2006 it was announced that the brand will return to the UK with a right-hand drive version of its [[Lancia Delta|new Delta]], in early 2009.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
== Lancia in the United States ==
 +
Whilst some models had been imported on a small scale in the 1950s and 1960s, Lancias were officially sold in the [[United States]] from 1975. Sales were comparatively slow and the range was withdrawn at the same time as Fiat in 1982.
 +
 
 +
== Lancia in motorsport ==
 +
===Formula One===<!-- [[Lancia in Formula One]] links to this section -->
 +
[[Image:1954-type Lancia D50A 616298256.jpg|thumb|right|A Lancia D50A [[Formula One]] car]]
 +
After Vincenzo Lancia's son [[Gianni Lancia|Gianni]] became director of the firm, it started to take part more frequently in motorsport, eventually deciding to build a Grand Prix car. [[Vittorio Jano]] was the new designer for Lancia and his [[Lancia D50]] was entered into the [[1954 Spanish Grand Prix]], where [[Alberto Ascari]] took the pole position and drove the fastest lap. In the [[1955 Monaco Grand Prix]] Ascari crashed into the harbour after missing a chicane. One week later Ascari was killed in an accident driving a Ferrari sports car at Monza. With Ascari's death and Lancia's financial problems the company withdrew from Grand Prix racing.
 +
 
 +
Remnants of the Lancia team were transferred to [[Scuderia Ferrari]], where [[Juan Manuel Fangio]] won the [[1956 Formula One season|1956 championship]] with a Lancia-Ferrari car.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
===Rallying===
 +
[[Image:Lancia Delta S4.jpg|thumb|right|A [[Lancia Delta S4]] [[Group B]] rally car]]
 +
Lancia has been very successful in motorsport over the years, and mostly in the arena of [[rallying]]. Prior to the forming of the [[World Rally Championship]], Lancia took the final [[International Championship for Manufacturers]] title with the [[Lancia Fulvia|Fulvia]] in 1972. In the WRC, they remain the most statistically successful marque (despite having withdrawn at the end of the [[1993 World Rally Championship season|1993 season]]), winning [[List of World Rally Championship Constructors' Champions|constructors' titles]] with the [[Lancia Stratos|Stratos]] ([[1974 World Rally Championship season|1974]], [[1975 World Rally Championship season|1975]] and [[1976 World Rally Championship season|1976]]), the [[Lancia 037|037]] ([[1983 World Rally Championship season|1983]]) and the [[Lancia Delta|Delta]] (every year from [[1987 World Rally Championship season|1987]] to [[1992 World Rally Championship season|1992]]). The Delta is also the most successful individual model designation ever to compete in rallying.
 +
 
 +
[[Juha Kankkunen]] and [[Miki Biasion]] both won two [[List of World Rally Championship Drivers' Champions|drivers' titles]] with the Delta. Among other drivers to take several World Rally Championship wins with Lancia were [[Markku Alén]], [[Didier Auriol]], [[Sandro Munari]], [[Bernard Darniche]], [[Walter Röhrl]], [[Björn Waldegård]] and [[Henri Toivonen]]. The history of the brand in rallying is also tainted with tragedy, with deaths of Italian driver [[Attilio Bettega]] at the 1985 [[Tour de Corse]] in a [[Lancia 037]] and then Finnish championship favourite Toivonen in a [[Lancia Delta S4]] at the same rally exactly a year later. These deaths would eventually lead to the end of [[Group B]] rallying.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
===Sports car racing===
 +
[[Image:2006FOS 1982LanciaLC1Martini.jpg|thumb|right|A [[Lancia LC1]] [[Group 6]] sports car]]
 +
During Lancia's dominance of rallying, the company also expanded into sports cars in the late 1970s until the mid-1980s.  Originally running the [[Lancia Stratos HF|Stratos HF]] in [[Group 4]], as well as a brief interlude with a rare [[Group 5]] version, the car was replaced with the [[Lancia Monte Carlo|Monte Carlo]] Turbo.  In 1982 the team moved up to [[Group 6]] with the [[Lancia LC1|LC1]] Spyder, followed by the [[Group C]] [[Lancia LC2|LC2]] coupé which featured a [[Ferrari]] powerplant in 1983. The LC2 was a match for the standard-setting [[Porsche 956]] in terms of raw speed, securing 13 pole positions over its lifetime, however its results were hampered by poor reliability and [[Fuel economy in automobiles|fuel economy]] and it only managed to win three [[European Endurance Championship|European]] and [[World Endurance Championship]] races. The team's inability to compete against the dominant [[Porsche 956]] and [[Porsche 962|962]] sports cars led it to drop out of sportscar racing at the end of 1986 in order to concentrate on rallying, although private teams continued to enter LC2s with declining results until the early 1990s.
 +
 
 +
==Engines==
 +
* [[Lancia V4 engine]]
 +
* [[Lancia V6 engine]]
 +
* [[Lancia V8 engine]]
 +
* [[Lancia Flat-4 engine]]
 +
 
 +
==See also==
 +
 
 +
* [[List of Italian companies]]
 +
* [[List of automobile manufacturers]]
 +
* [[List of Formula One constructors]]
  
Measured in [[WRC]] victories, Lancia is by far the most successful brand in rally cars.
 
 
    
 
    
 
==Timelines==
 
==Timelines==
 
{{Lancia Pre War Timeline}}
 
{{Lancia Pre War Timeline}}
 +
{{Lancia Post War}}
 
{{Lancia modern timeline}}
 
{{Lancia modern timeline}}
 +
{{Formula One constructors}}
  
 +
{{-}}
 
==Models and Pics==
 
==Models and Pics==
  
 
{{Lancia}}
 
{{Lancia}}
 
+
{{-}}
  
 
==Engines==
 
==Engines==
Line 38: Line 183:
  
 
[[Lancia Value in Italy (Euro)]]
 
[[Lancia Value in Italy (Euro)]]
 +
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
 
* [http://www.lancia.com/ Lancia]
 
* [http://www.lancia.com/ Lancia]
* [http://dmoz.org/Recreation/Autos/Makes_and_Models/Lancia DMOZ Category: Lancia]
+
* [http://www.lancia.it/ Lancia Italy Official Website]
 
* [http://www.eurovan2.com/ Lancia Phedra Forum]
 
* [http://www.eurovan2.com/ Lancia Phedra Forum]
 
* [http://www.viva-lancia.com/ Viva Lancia fanpage!]
 
* [http://www.viva-lancia.com/ Viva Lancia fanpage!]
 
* [http://www.lancisti.net '''Lancia Support Website''']
 
* [http://www.lancisti.net '''Lancia Support Website''']
 +
* [http://www.lanciamotorclub.co.uk/ Lancia Motor Club (UK) - The oldest and largest Lancia Club in the world with members from around the world]
 +
* [http://www.lanciaclubitalia.com/ Lancia Club Italy]
 +
* [http://www.viva-lancia.com/ Viva Lancia fanpage!]
 +
* [http://www.lancia-historie.de/index_english.html Information about the firm since 1881]
 +
* [http://www.lanciaclub.pl/ Polish Lancia Official Club]
 +
* [http://www.lanciasport.com/ Club Lancia Sport (UK)]
  
  
 +
{{-}}
 +
{{A-Z multipage list|Car Information and Photos by Marque|Information and Photos by Marque|}}
 +
{{A-Z multipage list|Motorcycle Information and Photos by Marque|Motorcycle Information and Photos by Marque|}}
 
{{Car Information and Photos by Marque}}
 
{{Car Information and Photos by Marque}}
 
{{Motorcycle Information and Photos by Marque}}
 
{{Motorcycle Information and Photos by Marque}}

Latest revision as of 09:41, 5 March 2017

Lancia logo.png
File:Fulviafront.jpg
Lancia Fulvia 1600 Sport Zagato

:go here for Lancia motorcycle


Lancia Automobiles S.p.A. [ˡlantʃa] is an Italian automobile manufacturer founded in 1906 by Vincenzo Lancia and which became part of the Fiat Group in 1969. The company has a long history of producing distinctive cars and also has a strong rally heritage. Modern Lancias are seen as presenting a more luxurious alternative to the models in the Fiat range upon which they are based. One of the firm's trademarks is the use of letters of the Greek alphabet as the names of its models. The Lancia CEO is Olivier François.


History

Foundation and early years

Lancia Beta Torpedo (1909)

Lancia was founded on 29 November 1906 in Turin by Vincenzo Lancia and his friend Claudio Fogolin, both being Fiat racing drivers, as Lancia & C. The first Lancia automobile the "tipo 51" or 12 HP (later called Alfa) was made in 1907 and produced from 1908. This car had a small four cylinder engine with a power of 58 bhp.

Original Lancia Logo

Lancia is famous for many automotive innovations. These include the 1913 Theta, which was the first production car in Europe to feature a complete electrical system as standard equipment. The first car with a monocoque-type body - the Lambda, produced from 1922 to 1931 also featured 'Sliding Pillar' independent front suspension that incorporated the spring and hydraulic damper into a single unit (and featured on most production Lancias until the Appia was replaced in 1963). 1948 saw the first 5 speed gearbox to be fitted to a production car (Series 3 Ardea). Lancia premiered the first full-production V6 engine, in the 1950 Aurelia, after earlier industry-leading experiments with V8 and V12 engine configurations. It was also the first company to produce a V4 engine. Also, Lancia pioneered the use of independent suspension in production cars, in an era where live axles were common practice for both the front and rear axles of a car. They also developed rear transaxles which were fitted to the Aurelia and Flaminia ranges.

The original Lancia logo was designed by Count Carlo Biscaretti di Ruffia. The logo shows a lance and shield with flag. The Turin automobile museum is named after him as Museo Nazionale dell'Automobile “Carlo Biscaretti di Ruffia”. The logo was redesigned in 2007.


Association with other automakers

Lancia was not closely associated with any other manufacturer until the late 1960s. By this time, the company's expensive, high standards of production had become unsustainable. In aiming to produce a product of the highest quality, company bosses had sacrificed cost-effectiveness and when Fiat launched a take-over bid in 1969, they accepted. This was not the end of the distinctive Lancia brand, and exciting new models in the 1970s such as the Stratos, Gamma and Beta served to prove that Fiat wished to preserve the image of the brand it had acquired.

During the 1980s, the company cooperated with Saab Automobile, with the Lancia Delta being sold as the Saab 600 in Sweden. The 1985 Lancia Thema also shared a platform with the Saab 9000, Fiat Croma and the Alfa Romeo 164.

Automotive

Current models

Lancia Ypsilon
Lancia Thesis on diplomatic duties
Lancia Phedra

Lancia Ypsilon

Main article Lancia Ypsilon

The Ypsilon is a luxury supermini car produced from 2003, evoluted in 2007 and is Lancia's best selling model as of 2006. Available with small (1.2- and 1.4-litre) petrol and JTD diesel engines, is also signed by MOMO design in one version: The Ypsilon Sport Momo Design.

Lancia Musa

Main article Lancia Musa A small MPV produced since 2004, the Musa is largely based on the Fiat Idea and available with rich image and equipments as high quality.

Lancia Delta

Main article Lancia Delta

Lancia Thesis

Main article Lancia Thesis The Thesis is a four-door executive sedan produced since 2002. It is the successor of the Lancia Kappa.

Lancia Phedra

Main article Lancia Phedra The Phedra is a prestigious MPV made by Sevel, a joint-venture of PSA and Fiat Group. It is manufactured at the Sevel Nord factory near Valenciennes in France, and has been in production since 2002.

Trucks, buses and other historical production

Light commercial vehicles

  • Lancia Beta / Lancia Beta Diesel
  • Lancia Jolly
  • Lancia Superjolly

Trucks

Lancia Esadelta C
  • Lancia Eta (car with a loading area)
  • Lancia Jota (1915)
  • Lancia Dijota (1915)
  • Lancia Trijota (1921)
  • Lancia Tetrajota (1921)
  • Lancia Pentajota (1924)
  • Lancia Esajota
  • Lancia Eptajota (1927)
  • Lancia Omicron
  • Lancia Ro (1932)
  • Lancia Ro-Ro (1935)
  • Lancia 3Ro (1938)
  • Lancia EsaRo (1941)
  • Lancia E 290 (1941) single-built electric truck
  • Lancia 6Ro (1947)
  • Lancia Esatau (1950-1968)
  • Lancia Beta / Lancia Beta Diesel
  • Lancia Esatau B (1955)
  • Lancia Beta Diesel (1959) Lancia Beta 190, with a supercharged twin-cylinder compressor - two stroke - diesel engine
  • Lancia Esadelta B (1959)
  • Lancia Esadelta C (1969)
  • Lancia Esagamma (1968)

Buses

  • Lancia Trijota
  • Lancia Tetrajota
  • Lancia Omicron
  • Lancia Ro
  • Lancia Esatau
  • Lancia Esagamma

Trolleybuses

  • Lancia Esatau V11


Military vehicles

  • Lancia IZ (1912) armored vehicle
  • Lancia 3Ro (1939) truck
  • Lancia EsaRo (1942) truck
  • Lancia Lince (lynx) (1942) armored car - a copy of Daimler Dingo MK I
  • Lancia 6Ro (1948) LKW
  • Lancia CL51 (Z 20) (1954) troop transporter
  • Lancia TL51 (Z 30) (1954) lorries


Lancia in the United Kingdom

Lancia Beta Spyder
Lancia Gamma coupé

In the late 1970s and 1980s, Lancia suffered an increasing image problem in the United Kingdom, centred around a perception that Lancia cars were prone to rusting, due to the Lancia Beta rust scandal. Poor rust prevention techniques and inadequate water drainage channels led to the Beta gaining a reputation for being rust-prone, particularly the first series vehicles, which were built from 1972–75. The corrosion problems could be structural; for instance where the subframe carrying the engine and gearbox was bolted to the underside of the car. The box section to which the rear of the subframe was mounted could corrode badly causing the subframe to become loose. The problem affected mostly first series saloon models and not the Coupé, HPE, Spider or Montecarlo versions.

In the UK, Lancia's largest export market at the time, the company commenced a campaign to buy back vehicles affected by the subframe problem. Some of these vehicles were 6 years old or older. Customers were invited to present their cars to a Lancia dealer for an inspection. If their vehicle was affected by the subframe problem, the customer was offered a part exchange deal to buy another Lancia or Fiat car. The cars that failed the inspection were scrapped.

Lancia had already introduced one year previously a six-year anti-corrosion warranty. Whilst later Betas, second series cars, had reinforced subframe mounting points and post-1979 cars were better protected from the elements, these issues, accompanied by critical press coverage, damaged the whole marque's sales success in the UK market. Lancia's reputation was not helped by widespread rumours of Fiat and Lancia using Russian steel.

The last right-hand drive model was sold in 1994, after which Lancia withdrew from all right-hand drive markets. At this time the Thema and Dedra were the only current models.

The Beta still enjoys a following today among enthusiasts.

In September 2006 it was announced that the brand will return to the UK with a right-hand drive version of its new Delta, in early 2009.


Lancia in the United States

Whilst some models had been imported on a small scale in the 1950s and 1960s, Lancias were officially sold in the United States from 1975. Sales were comparatively slow and the range was withdrawn at the same time as Fiat in 1982.

Lancia in motorsport

Formula One

A Lancia D50A Formula One car

After Vincenzo Lancia's son Gianni became director of the firm, it started to take part more frequently in motorsport, eventually deciding to build a Grand Prix car. Vittorio Jano was the new designer for Lancia and his Lancia D50 was entered into the 1954 Spanish Grand Prix, where Alberto Ascari took the pole position and drove the fastest lap. In the 1955 Monaco Grand Prix Ascari crashed into the harbour after missing a chicane. One week later Ascari was killed in an accident driving a Ferrari sports car at Monza. With Ascari's death and Lancia's financial problems the company withdrew from Grand Prix racing.

Remnants of the Lancia team were transferred to Scuderia Ferrari, where Juan Manuel Fangio won the 1956 championship with a Lancia-Ferrari car.


Rallying

Lancia has been very successful in motorsport over the years, and mostly in the arena of rallying. Prior to the forming of the World Rally Championship, Lancia took the final International Championship for Manufacturers title with the Fulvia in 1972. In the WRC, they remain the most statistically successful marque (despite having withdrawn at the end of the 1993 season), winning constructors' titles with the Stratos (1974, 1975 and 1976), the 037 (1983) and the Delta (every year from 1987 to 1992). The Delta is also the most successful individual model designation ever to compete in rallying.

Juha Kankkunen and Miki Biasion both won two drivers' titles with the Delta. Among other drivers to take several World Rally Championship wins with Lancia were Markku Alén, Didier Auriol, Sandro Munari, Bernard Darniche, Walter Röhrl, Björn Waldegård and Henri Toivonen. The history of the brand in rallying is also tainted with tragedy, with deaths of Italian driver Attilio Bettega at the 1985 Tour de Corse in a Lancia 037 and then Finnish championship favourite Toivonen in a Lancia Delta S4 at the same rally exactly a year later. These deaths would eventually lead to the end of Group B rallying.


Sports car racing

A Lancia LC1 Group 6 sports car

During Lancia's dominance of rallying, the company also expanded into sports cars in the late 1970s until the mid-1980s. Originally running the Stratos HF in Group 4, as well as a brief interlude with a rare Group 5 version, the car was replaced with the Monte Carlo Turbo. In 1982 the team moved up to Group 6 with the LC1 Spyder, followed by the Group C LC2 coupé which featured a Ferrari powerplant in 1983. The LC2 was a match for the standard-setting Porsche 956 in terms of raw speed, securing 13 pole positions over its lifetime, however its results were hampered by poor reliability and fuel economy and it only managed to win three European and World Endurance Championship races. The team's inability to compete against the dominant Porsche 956 and 962 sports cars led it to drop out of sportscar racing at the end of 1986 in order to concentrate on rallying, although private teams continued to enter LC2s with declining results until the early 1990s.

Engines

See also


Timelines

1900–1940 Lancia Pre War Timeline
Lancia Automobiles S.p.A., a subsidiary of the Fiat S.p.A. since 1969, car timeline, 1900s–1940s -- Lancia Pre War Timeline Next »
Type 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
V4 Lambda Artena Aprilia
Augusta
Straight-4 Alfa-12HP Beta-15/20HP Epsilon Theta-35HP Dikappa
Alfa-24HP Gamma-20HP Eta-30/50HP Kappa
Delta-20/30HP Zeta-12/15HP
Straight-6 Dialfa-18HP
V8 Astura
Trikappa Dilambda
V12 12 cil V
1940–1980 Lancia Post War
« Previous Lancia Automobiles S.p.A., a subsidiary of the Fiat S.p.A. since 1969, car timeline, 1940–1980 -- Lancia Post War Next »
Type 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Family car ... Ardea Appia Fulvia
... Aprilia Beta / Trevi (828)
Executive car Flavia 2000 Gamma (830)
Coupé Fulvia Coupé/Sport
Beta Coupé/Spider/ Montecarlo (828)
Aurelia Flaminia Gamma Coupé/GT (830)
Sports car Stratos
Racing car D23/D24 D50
1980s-Present Lancia Modern Timeline
« Previous Lancia car timeline, 1980s-present -- Lancia modern timeline
Type 1980s 1990s 2000s
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
City car Autobianchi Y10 or Lancia Y 10
Supermini Ypsilon
Small family car Delta Delta
Large family car Beta Prisma Dedra Lybra
Executive car Gamma Thema Kappa Thesis
Mini MPV Musa
Large MPV Zeta Phedra
Racing car Lancia 037 Delta S4
Formula One constructors
Current Constructors (2008)

Ferrari · BMW Sauber · Renault · Williams · Red Bull · Toyota · Toro Rosso · Honda · Force India · McLaren

Former Constructors:

AFMAGSAlfa RomeoAltaAmonAndrea ModaApollonArrowsArzani-VolpiniAston-ButterworthAston MartinATSATS (Germany)BARBehra-PorscheBellasiBenettonBoroBrabhamBRMBRPBugattiCisitaliaColoniConnaughtConnewCooperCosworthDallaraDe TomasoDelahayeDerrington-FrancisEagleEifellandEmerysonEMWENBEnsignERAEuroBrunFergusonFIRSTFittipaldiFondmetalFootworkFortiFrazer NashFryGilbyGordiniGreifzuHeskethHillHWMJaguarJBWJordanKauhsenKlenkKojimaKurtis KraftLanciaLarrousseLDSLECLeyton HouseLifeLigierLolaLotusLyncarMakiMarchMartiniMatraMcGuireMercedes-BenzMerzarioMidlandMilanoMinardiModenaOnyxOSCAOsellaPacificParnelliPenskePorscheProstRAMRebaqueReynardRialSauberScarabSciroccoSerenissimaShadowShannonSimtekSpiritStebroStewartSurteesTalbotTalbot-LagoTec-MecTecnoTheodoreTokenTolemanTrojanTyrrellVanwallVeritasWilliams (FWRC)WolfZakspeed


Models and Pics

LANCIA

1907-1918: Alfa-12HP · Alfa-24HP · Dialfa-18HP · Beta-15/20HP · Delta-20/30HP · Epsilon · Eta-30/50HP · Gamma-20HP · Theta-35HP · Zeta-12/15HP
1918-1945: Aprilia · Ardea · Ardennes · Artena · Astura · Augusta · Belna · Dilambda · Kappa · Lambda · Trikappa
1945-1980: Appia · Aurelia · Beta · D20 · D23 · D24 · D25 · D50 · Flaminia · Flavia · Fulvia · Gamma · Montecarlo · Stratos HF
1980-2000: Dedra · Delta · Delta S4 · Kappa · LC1 · LC2 · Lybra · Prisma · Thema · Trevi · Y10 · Ypsilon · Zeta · 037 (Group B)
Current models: Musa · Phedra · Thesis · Ypsilon
Concept models: Marcia · Medusa · Megagamma · Orca · Sibilo


Vincenzo Lancia · Corporate website · A brand of the Fiat group


Engines

Concept Cars and Designs

Concept Cars by Italdesign

Designs by Pininfarina

Internal Links

Lancia Value in Italy (Euro)


External links



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