Lancia Appia

The Lancia Appia is a passenger car introduced in 1953 by Italian car manufacturer Lancia as a replacement for the Ardea, and which remained in production for ten years. The Appia was the last in a long line of Lancia production cars dating back to the Lancia Lambda (introduced in 1922) to use sliding pillar front suspension. All three series produced had a 1089cc Lancia V4 engine.

Lancia Appia
Lancia Appia Berlina, second series
Overview
ManufacturerLancia
Production1953–1963
Designer
  • Pinin Farina (Coupé)
  • Giovanni Michelotti at Vignale (Convertibile and Lusso)
  • Zagato (Appia Zagato)
Body and chassis
ClassSmall family car
Body style
  • 4-door saloon
  • 2-door saloon (Vignale)
  • 2-door coupé (Pinin Farina)
  • 2-door coupé (Zagato)
  • 2-door convertible (Vignale)
  • 3-door estate (Viotti)
LayoutFront-engine, rear-wheel-drive
RelatedLancia Aurelia
Powertrain
Engine1.1 L Lancia V4 (petrol)
Transmission4-speed manual
Dimensions
Wheelbase2,480 mm (97.6 in) S.1
2,510 mm (98.8 in) S.2, S.3
Length3,865 mm (152.2 in)
4,010 mm (157.9 in) S.2
4,020 mm (158.3 in) S.3
Width1,420 mm (55.9 in)
1,485 mm (58.5 in) S.2
1,390 mm (54.7 in) S.3
Height1,422 mm (56.0 in)
1,405 mm (55.3 in) S.2
1,450 mm (57.1 in) S.3
Kerb weight820–920 kg (1,808–2,028 lb)
Chronology
PredecessorLancia Ardea
SuccessorLancia Fulvia

In addition to the saloon, a number of special bodied Appias were produced, including a coupé by Pinin Farina, a convertible and 2-door saloon by Vignale and an aluminium-bodied GT by Zagato, as well as light commercial vehicle variants. In total 107,000 Appia were built: 98,000 saloons, 3,863 commercial vehicles, and 5,161 chassis supplied to coachbuilders.

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