In this book, motoring writer Martin Buckley provides a detailed
overview of a car that has become a favorite among motoring aficionados.
Launched in 1969, the year the Fiat had bought Lancia, Ferrari, and
launched the successful 127, the Fiat 130 was an all-new prestige saloon
powered by a V6 engine and featuring all the latest thinking in chassis
design and luxury refinement. Densely engineered and built with little
thought to cost or compromise, the 1969-77 130 was created to show the
versatility of Fiat's creative talents with a car that could take on
Mercedes Benz, Jaguar, and even Rolls Royce. With this car, Fiat
designers sought to extend influence of the booming Italian industrial
giant beyond popular motoring with an Italian prestige car of
international importance. Formal and sober, the first somewhat
underpowered 2.8 liter 130 saloons got off to an uncertain commercial
start from which the model never truly recovered. However, from 1971 a
3.2 liter engine made the 130 the car it should have been and the
Pininfarina coupe, a gracefully angular two-door grand touring car, was
instantly recognized as a design classic which was much imitated. Only
now is the beauty, rarity, and all-round excellence of the Fiat 130
coupe beginning to be reflected in the prices asked for surviving
examples from a 4600-unit, six-year production run. Published on the
50th anniversary of the launch of the Fiat 130 and written by a Fiat 130
owner and motoring writer, this book will be welcomed by all classic car
enthusiasts.