1. Fiat Punto Diesel
  2. Fiat Punto 1.2 2004 Manual
  3. Fiat Punto 1.2 Manual 2016
  4. Fiat Punto Hgt
Fiat Punto
Overview
ManufacturerFiat (1993–2014)
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (2014–2018)
Also calledFiat Grande Punto
Fiat Punto Evo
Production1993–2018
Body and chassis
ClassSubcompact (B)
Body style3-door hatchback
5-door hatchback
2-door convertible[nb 1]
3-door van
LayoutFront-engine, front-wheel-drive
Chronology
PredecessorFiat Uno
SuccessorFiat Argo (South America)

The Fiat Punto is a supermini car produced by the Italian manufacturer Fiat from 1993 to 2018, spanning over three generations. The third generation of the car was marketed as the Grande Punto, between 2005 and 2009, and the Punto Evo, between 2009 and 2012, when the bare Punto name was reintroduced. As of May 2013, nearly nine million units had been sold globally.[1][2]

The first generation Punto was made 3,429 million units, the second generation 2,96 million units, and the third generation 2,67 million units.[3]

  • 1First generation (1993–1999)
  • 2Second generation (1999–2010)
    • 2.4Facelift
  • 3Third generation (2005–2018)
  1. Specs for Fiat Punto 1.2 16v ELX, manual 5 door about engine, performance, chassis, and safety. You can find specs for weights, interior and exterior dimensions.
  2. Specs for Fiat Punto 1.2 16v ELX, manual 5 door about engine, performance, chassis, and safety. You can find specs for weights, interior and exterior dimensions.
  3. Haynes service and repair manual.pdf, engleski jezik, 49.7 MB. Garage: Fiat Punto 1.2 16v HLX, Fiat Punto 1.3 16v Multijet Dynamic; Posted December 12, 2013 (edited).
  4. Page 2 Customer, Thank you for selecting Fiat and congratulations on your choice of a Fiat Punto. We have written this handbook to help you get to know all your new Fiat Punto features and use it in the best possible way. Page 3 MUST BE READ! REFUELLING Petrol engines: only refuel with unleaded petrol with octane rating (RON) not less than 95.

First generation (1993–1999)[edit]

Fiat sells cars around the world. The Fiat Punto workshop manual makes it easy to maintain these city cars that carry Fiat’s racing pedigree. The classic Fiat Punto was manufactured from 1993 until 2010, with a new car called the Grande Punto beginning in 2005. Internally codenamed Project 176, the Punto was announced in September 1993 as a replacement for the ageing Fiat Uno and launched in late 1993/early 1994. Entry-level in the Punto range were the 1.1 and 1.2 L petrol engines and the 1.7 diesel engine. Fiat Punto Cabrio was produced between 1993 and 1999. One of the more popular Fiat models ever built was the Fiat 124, which is a mid-sized family car. It was manufactured between 1966 and 1974, and effectively replaced the Fiat 1300 and Fiat 1500. If your Fiat needs fine tuning, our repair manuals offer comprehensive technical specifications, step-by-step guides and more.

First generation (176)
Overview
Production1993–1999
AssemblyMelfi, Potenza, Italy
Mirafiori, Torino, Italy
Termini Imerese, Palermo, Italy
Tychy, Poland[4]
DesignerGiorgetto Giugiaro at Italdesign (hatchback)
Bertone (convertible)[5]
Body and chassis
Body style3-door hatchback
5-door hatchback
2-door convertible
3-door van
RelatedFiat Barchetta
Fiat Albea
Fiat Doblò
Fiat Palio
Fiat Siena
Fiat Strada
Lancia Y
Powertrain
Engine1.1 L I4 (petrol)
1.2 L I4 (petrol)
1.2 L I416-valve (petrol)
1.4 L I4turbo (petrol)
1.6 L I4 (petrol)
1.7 L I4 (diesel)
1.7 L I4 (turbo-diesel)
Transmission5-speed manual
6-speed manual
CVTautomatic
Dimensions
Wheelbase2,450 mm (96.5 in)
Length3,760 mm (148.0 in)
Width1,625 mm (64.0 in)
Height1,450 mm (57.1 in)
Curb weight830–1,040 kg (1,830–2,290 lb)
1,070 kg (2,360 lb) (cabrio)
Three door
Five door
Cabrio

Internally codenamed Project 176, the Punto was announced in September 1993 as a replacement for the ageing Fiat Uno and launched in the end of 1993 or the beginning of 1994, depending on the market. The Fiat Punto was voted European Car of the Year for 1995,[6] defeating rival Volkswagen Polo by only 78 points.

The official launch of the Punto in the United Kingdom was in October 1993, at the London Motorfair.[7]

The Punto was designed by Giorgetto Giugiaro and was available as a three door or five door hatchback, a two door cabriolet and a three door panel van.[8] As the majority of the new Fiat group models, suspension was all independent, composed of MacPherson struts at the front and trailing arms at the rear.

Entry level in the Punto range were the 1.1 and 1.2 L petrol engines and the 1.7 diesel engine. The 1.2 engine's actual capacity is 1242 cc, available in three versions. The first, was fitted in the Punto ELX 75 and produced 75 hp (56 kW) at 6000 rpm while the second, fitted to Punto ELX 85 produced 86 hp (64 kW) at 6000 rpm.

The third was a 60 hp (45 kW) engine which eventually replaced the 1.1 54 hp (40 kW) engine.

Interior

Sporting versions[edit]

A Sporting model was also available with a 1.6 8v updated 128 SOHC engine, producing 88 hp (66 kW), later replaced in 1997 by the 1.2 16v FIRE engine used in the 85 ELX, and a power drop to 86 hp (64 kW).

GT versions[edit]

1.2

The top of the range model was the 136 PS (100 kW; 134 hp) 1.4 GT, using an evolution of the turbocharged 128 SOHC engine originally found in the Fiat Uno Turbo Mk II, capable of running over 200 km/h (120 mph) and reaching 100 km/h (62 mph) in 7.9 seconds[citation needed], and came fitted with a five speed manual gearbox.

During the years, the GT was made in three different 'series' with power 136 PS (100 kW; 134 hp) (1993–1995),133 PS (98 kW; 131 hp) (1995–1997) and 130 PS (96 kW; 130 hp) (1997–1999).[9]

Convertible[edit]

A cabriolet (convertible) version was also available; built by Bertone (rather than at the main Fiat factory), it featured an electric powered fully retracting roof and was one of the cheapest open top cars in the world at the time. In Europe, it was also made with a manual roof.

How the combination works is, the first wheel is directly linked to the dial on the front (and it is the last number you will input) but the first wheel has a knob on the back of it which pushes a knob on the front of the second wheel, which has a knob on the back of it which pushes a knob on the front of the third wheel.Rotating the dial two full revolutions is how you get the third wheel to move, but when you reverse directions it stays wherever it stopped, and after one full revolution you are turning the second wheel in the opposite direction. Inside the lock are three wheels which each have a slot in them, when you pull the shackle, there is a cam which needs to slide freely into the three aligned slots or it will not open.I don't know the correct terminology, I am not a locksmith, I just disassembled enough of these in high school to figure it out. I think this person knew the combination ahead of time. The you rotate the first wheel until all of the slots in the wheels are lined up and in alignment with that cam I spoke of earlier.So this method shouldn't work, as you put tension on the shackle, the cam will be stopped from moving by 2 out of the three wheels.What you can do, if you're very very sensitive, is feel when the first wheel's knob touches the second wheel's knob and starts turning it. As you reverse direction again and do the final rotation the second wheel stays wherever it stopped. How to crack master lock.

Available in both ELX and SX trim, initially powered by the 90 hp (67 kW) 1.6 Mpi unit (replaced in 1995 by the 86 hp (64 kW) 1.2-L 16v FIRE unit). Approximately 55,000 cars were built between 1994 and 1999, although the last cars were registered in 2000.

Other versions[edit]

Particular versions of the first generation Punto were the Punto 6Speed, a 1.1 FIRE Punto 55 with a six speed gearbox, the Punto Selecta with a CVT type automatic gearbox, and the Punto ED (Economical Drive), a 1.1 Punto whose five speed gearbox was designed for high fuel efficiency.

Engines[edit]

CodeDisplacementTypePowerTorqueCompression
1.1 SPI1,108 ccI454 PS (40 kW; 54 hp) at 5500 rpm86 N·m (63 lb·ft) at 3250 rpm9.6:1
1.2 SPI1,242 ccI460 PS (44 kW; 59 hp) at 5500 rpm98 N·m (72 lb·ft) at 3000 rpm9.6:1
1.2 MPI1,242 ccI473 PS (54 kW; 72 hp) at 5000 rpm106 N·m (78 lb·ft) at 4000 rpm9.8:1
1.2 16v1,242 ccI486 PS (63 kW; 84 hp) at 6000 rpm113 N·m (83 lb·ft) at 4500 rpm10.2:1
1.4 Turbo1,372 ccI4133-136 PS (98-100 kW; 131-134 hp) at 5750 rpm208 N·m (153 lb·ft) at 3000 rpm7.9:1
1.4 Turbo1,372 ccI4131 PS (96 kW; 129 hp) at 5600 rpm200 N·m (148 lb·ft) at 3000 rpm9.0:1
1.6 MPI1,581 ccI490 PS (66 kW; 89 hp) at 5750 rpm129 N·m (95 lb·ft) at 2750 rpm9.5:1
1.7 Diesel1,698 ccI457 PS (42 kW; 56 hp) at 4500 rpm98 N·m (72 lb·ft) at 2500 rpm19:1
1.7 Diesel1,698 ccI464 PS (46 kW; 63 hp) at 4500 rpm118 N·m (87 lb·ft) at 2500 rpm19:1
1.7 Diesel1,698 ccI472 PS (53 kW; 71 hp) at 4500 rpm137 N·m (101 lb·ft) at 2500 rpm19:1

Second generation (1999–2010)[edit]

Second generation (188)
Overview
Also calledFiat Punto Classic
Zastava 10
Production1999–2010 (Italy)[10]
2005–2011, 2013 (Serbia)[11]
AssemblyMelfi, Potenza, Italy
Mirafiori, Torino, Italy
Termini Imerese, Palermo, Italy
Kragujevac, Serbia (Zastava)
Body and chassis
Body style3-door hatchback
5-door hatchback
3-door van
RelatedFiat Idea
Lancia Ypsilon
Lancia Musa
Powertrain
Engine1.2 L I4 (petrol)
1.2 L I416-valve (petrol)
1.4 L I416-valve (petrol)
1.8 L I416-valve (petrol)
1.3 L I4MultiJet (diesel)
1.9 L I4DS (diesel)
1.9 L I4JTD (diesel)
Transmission5-speed manual
6-speed manual (Sporting)
5-speed semi-automatic (Dualogic)
6-speed semi-automatic (Speedgear)[12]
7-speed semi-automatic (Speedgear)[12]
Dimensions
Wheelbase2,460 mm (96.9 in)
Length3,800 mm (149.6 in) (3-door, 1999–03)
3,835 mm (151.0 in) (5-door, 1999–03)
3,840 mm (151.2 in) (3-door, 2003–10)
3,865 mm (152.2 in) (5-door, 2003–10)
Width1,660 mm (65.4 in)
Height1,480 mm (58.3 in)
Curb weight860–1,050 kg (1,900–2,310 lb)
Three door (pre facelift)
Five door (pre facelift)
Van (pre facelift)
Punto

The second generation Punto, codenamed Project 188, was launched in September 1999 at the Frankfurt Motor Show. The styling was all new while retaining the original Punto's distinctive shape and design, while the chassis and interior were completely overhauled, with a new torsion beam rear suspension.

The new Punto also became the first Fiat in decades to carry the original round Fiat badge, to celebrate Fiat's centenary.

At the launch event of the hatchback, the Fiat Wish concept car was also presented, which was hardtop convertible version of the Fiat Punto, very similar in styling with the Peugeot 206 CC.[13] The model was conceived by Pininfarina to celebrate the centenary of Fiat.[14][15]

Entry level[edit]

The 1.1 and 1.4 engines were discontinued due to emissions issues and the entry level models had only a 1.2 petrol unit, with either 8 or 16 valves, giving 60 hp (45 kW) and 80 hp (60 kW) respectively, or a 1.9L diesel, with common rail injection and turbocharger or naturally aspired with mechanical injection.[16]

Sporting versions[edit]

Fiat Punto HGT Abarth

Two sporty versions were offered. The 1.2 16 valve Sporting model with a six-speed manual, and the 1.8 HGT which could reach almost 130 mph (210 km/h). The 1.2 16V model also has a Speedgear CVT equipped variant (with a sequential manual shift mode consisting of six gears, seven for the Sporting model).

The 1.8 HGT accelerates from 0 to 60 in 8.0 seconds. It was considered a big improvement in handling over the Punto GT. The HGT was also available (in limited numbers) as an 'HGT Abarth' which added deeper bumpers, rear spoiler, side skirts, new alloy wheels and interior trim. The HGT Abarth had no technical improvements over the regular HGT.

Power steering[edit]

The second generation Punto has also adopted the Dualdrive electric power steering and came with two operation modes, using an electric motor, rather than a hydraulic pump driven by the engine.

This resulted in reduced fuel consumption and less environmental impact. It has a fuel economy of 5.6 l/100 km (50 mpg‑imp; 42 mpg‑US), urban and 3.9 l/100 km (72 mpg‑imp; 60 mpg‑US), extra urban for the 1.9 diesel. The 1.8 petrol does 8.8 l/100 km (32 mpg‑imp; 27 mpg‑US), urban and 5.3 l/100 km (53 mpg‑imp; 44 mpg‑US), extra urban.

Facelift[edit]

Facelift (2003)

At the beginning of 2003, Fiat celebrated the rollout of the 5,000,000th production Punto. During the same year, the second generation facelift brought further revisions to the platform, including extensive changes to the exterior styling and engines, partly due to changes in pedestrian safety regulations.

The round Fiat badge, found only on the bonnet of second generation models, was introduced on the tailgate of the second generation facelift. On 1 June 2005, Fiat produced the 6,000,000th Punto at the Melfi plant.[17]

Engine changes included a new 1.4 L 16v engine, alongside the staple 1.2 and 1.2 L 16v variants, and the introduction of two HGT versions, the 1.9 L MultiJet diesel engine and the 1.8 L 16v petrol engine, which could reach almost 130 mph (210 km/h) continued over from the pre-facelift version. There was an introduction also of the 1.3 L common rail diesel MultiJet engine.

Punto Classic[edit]

Despite the launch of the slightly larger Grande Punto at the end of 2005, the second generation Punto remained in production, marketed as the Punto Classic, and has been sold in many emerging markets in addition to the newer versions. It was launched for the first time in Chile in 2007.[18] It ended production in Italy in November 2010.[19]

Zastava 10[edit]

2006–2008 Zastava 10

In October 2005, Serbian automotive manufacturer Zastava reached an agreement with Fiat to assemble this version under licence in Kragujevac, Serbia, with the model name Zastava 10. After acquiring a majority stake in Zastava in the autumn of 2008, Fiat continued production of this vehicle under the Fiat Punto Classic name from March 2009.[20]

Production was stopped in middle of 2011,[21] and it got restarted in 2013 albeit very briefly.[22] It has been available with the 1.2 litre petrol engine and later,[11] also with the 1.3 litre diesel engine, the 2013 version featured a newer, more modern engine.[23]

Trim levels[edit]

The Punto was initially released in four different trim leveles: S, SX, ELX and HLX,[24] that were later renamed to Actual, Active, Dynamic and Emotion. Three special versions of the three door hatchback were also available: Sporting, HGT and Abarth. The 'Sporting' had a six-speed manual gearbox as standard.

The top level included such features as ABS, front and side airbags, window bags, remote central locking, front power windows, electrical power steering, air conditioning, trip computer with four functions, CD player, CD changer, alloy rims and fog lamps. Options such as navigation and burglar alarm were also offered.[16]

After the facelift, it also received EBD, ESP with ASR and hill holder, climate control with double zone heating, MP3 player and subwoofer (HGT only), rear parking sensors and cruise control as an option.[25] A revised instrument panel with a larger display could now show the instant consumption too.[26]

Engines[edit]

Four petrol engines with multi point injection system were available, as well as one indirect injection diesel and three common rail turbocharged diesel engines with intercooler (JTD and MultiJet). The 1.8 16v and the 1.9 MultiJet engines were available only with the three door version in the HGT trim level.[16]

EngineDisplacementPowerTorqueTop speed0–100 km/hCombined consumptionCO2 emissionsProduction years
Petrol engines
1.2-L 8v1,242 cc44 kW (60 PS; 59 hp) at 5000 rpm102 N⋅m (75 lb⋅ft) at 2500 rpm155 km/h (96 mph)14.3 s5.7 l/100 km (50 mpg‑imp)136 g/km09/1999–
01/2010
1.2-L 16v1,242 cc59 kW (80 PS; 79 hp) at 5000 rpm114 N⋅m (84 lb⋅ft) at 4000 rpm172 km/h (107 mph)11.4 s6.0 l/100 km (47 mpg‑imp)142 g/km09/1999–
01/2006
1.4-L 16v1,368 cc70 kW (95 PS; 94 hp) at 5800 rpm128 N⋅m (94 lb⋅ft) at 4500 rpm178 km/h (111 mph)9.9 s6.1 l/100 km (46 mpg‑imp)145 g/km06/2003–
01/2006
1.8-L 16v1,747 cc96 kW (131 PS; 129 hp) at 6300 rpm164 N⋅m (121 lb⋅ft) at 4300 rpm205 km/h (127 mph)8.6 s8.3 l/100 km (34 mpg‑imp)197 g/km09/1999–
01/2006
Diesel engines
1.3-L MultiJet 16v1,251 cc51 kW (69 PS; 68 hp) at 4000 rpm180 N⋅m (133 lb⋅ft) at 1750 rpm164 km/h (102 mph)13.4 s4.5 l/100 km (63 mpg‑imp)119 g/km06/2003–
01/2006
1.9-L D 8v1,910 cc44 kW (60 PS; 59 hp) at 4500 rpm118 N⋅m (87 lb⋅ft) at 2250 rpm155 km/h (96 mph)15.0 s5.7 l/100 km (50 mpg‑imp)150 g/km09/1999–
06/2003
1.9-L JTD 8v1,910 cc59 kW (80 PS; 79 hp) at 3000 rpm[nb 2]196 N⋅m (145 lb⋅ft) at 1500 rpm170 km/h (106 mph)[nb 3]12.2 s4.9 l/100 km (58 mpg‑imp)130 g/km09/1999–
01/2006
1.9-L JTD 8v1,910 cc63 kW (86 PS; 84 hp) at 3000 rpm[nb 4]200 N⋅m (148 lb⋅ft) at 1500 rpm173 km/h (107 mph)[nb 5]11.5 s4.9 l/100 km (58 mpg‑imp)130 g/km2002–
01/2006
1.9-L MultiJet 8v1,910 cc74 kW (101 PS; 99 hp) at 4000 rpm260 N⋅m (192 lb⋅ft) at 1750 rpm185 km/h (115 mph)9.6 s5.3 l/100 km (53 mpg‑imp)140 g/km06/2003–
01/2005

Third generation (2005–2018)[edit]

Fiat Grande Punto
First, second and third generation Puntos

The Grande Punto, codenamed Project 199, was unveiled at the 2005 Frankfurt Motor Show and went on sale later on that year. Again styled by Giugiaro,[27] the car is based on the Fiat Small platform developed in joint venture with Opel-General Motors.

Punto Evo[edit]

In September 2009, the Grande Punto was facelifted, with the replacement known as the Punto Evo. It received a new front end in addition to revised rear lights, and a new interior.

Punto[edit]

In January 2012, the Punto name was brought back when the Punto Evo was facelifted and given a similar front end to the 2005 Grande Punto. The new Punto kept the revised rear lights and interior of the 2009 Punto Evo, but not on the base 'Pop' trim level which reverted to the older Grande Punto interior.[citation needed]

In October 2014, Top Gear Magazine placed the Punto Pop 1.2 litre 8v 69 on its list of 'The worst cars you can buy right now', describing the car as 'An outclassed elderly supermini that kicks out 126 g/km yet takes 14.4 secs to wheeze to 62 mph, and it costs more than £10k.'[28]

The Grande Punto in India went through a facelift changing the front face and a revised rear and giving it a more aggressive look and was named Punto Evo. This car also sports an SUV like ground clearance of 185mm for diesel and 195mm for petrol to suit Indian roads.[29] In October 2014, Fiat India released the Avventura, which was a crossover variant of the Punto Evo.[30][permanent dead link]

Production of the Punto finally ended in August 2018, with no direct successor being announced.[31]

Punto Van[edit]

The Punto Van is a compact van designed for the commercial market. It features a petrol 1.2 8v engine, a petrol/CNG 1.2 8v engine and a diesel 1.3 MultiJet 16v engine.

Motorsport[edit]

Fiat Grande Punto Abarth S2000

The Punto has always been popular with amateur racing drivers due to its low cost and the wide availability of spare parts. Several competition and homologated versions of the Punto have been produced, such as the Punto Rally, the S1600 and the Punto Abarth.

A new rally car based on the third generation Punto, the Super 2000 Punto Abarth, was unveiled in 2005. It is four-wheel drive and powered by a 2.0 L 16 valve engine capable of producing 280 hp (210 kW). Also, a turbodiesel front wheel drive rally car has been produced, the Fiat Grande Punto R3D.

The Punto was the first diesel car to compete in the Targa Tasmania.[citation needed]

The Punto has won several rally championships, specifically:

  • Italian Rally Championship (2003 and 2006)
  • European Rally Championship (2006)

Fiat Punto Diesel

A motorsport version of the car can be found in several liveries in the video games Colin McRae Rally 04, Colin McRae: DiRT, Sega Rally Revo and Gran Turismo 6.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^The first generation only.
  2. ^Also with 63 kW (86 PS; 84 hp) from 04/2002.
  3. ^173 km/h (107 mph) from 06/2003.
  4. ^Also with 63 kW (86 PS; 84 hp) from 04/2002.
  5. ^173 km/h (107 mph) from 06/2003.

Fiat Punto 1.2 2004 Manual

References[edit]

  1. ^'Fiat Punto: sucesso no Brasil e no mundo'. fiatpress.com. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  2. ^'Fiat Punto 2012: the evolution of a best seller'. fcapress.com.br. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  3. ^Auto Edizione: Laatste Fiat Punto van de band, einde van een tijdperk Auto Edizione, accessdate: 3. August 2018
  4. ^'10 million vehicles produced in the former FSM and Fiat Auto Poland factories -> Авто Новини -> Автопрес 2001'. www.auto-press.net.
  5. ^Bertone, storia dei modelliArchived 8 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^'Rewind to 1995: Fiat Punto'. Quicks. Archived from the original on 17 January 2014. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  7. ^'Motor Show 1993: Small cars are rapidly becoming big business: Efficient production boosts choice, writes Martin Derrick'. www.independent.co.uk. 19 October 1993. Retrieved 10 October 2017.
  8. ^'Fiat Punto (1994 - 1999)'. RAC. Retrieved 27 December 2012.
  9. ^'Punto GT'. Puntopower.com. Archived from the original on 18 July 2011. Retrieved 16 August 2007.
  10. ^'Una Jeep per Mirafiori'. Il Sole 24 Ore (in Italian). 27 November 2010. Retrieved 7 July 2011. Attualmente da Mirafiori escono Fiat Multipla, Punto Classic, Idea, Lancia Musa e Alfa Mito. Entro l'anno le prime due andranno fuori produzione [Currently from Mirafiori are rolling out Fiat Multipla, Punto Classic, Idea, Lancia Musa and Alfa Mito. By the end of the year the first two will go out of production]
  11. ^ ab'Kragujevac: Workers 'expected more''. B92 News. 31 January 2009. Archived from the original on 6 January 2014. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
  12. ^ ab'Fiat Punto Speedgear'(PDF). The AA. 29 August 2000. Retrieved 5 January 2014. Called Speedgear, they offer a whole raft of ratios – a veritable cog-fest – through an electronically controlled, continuously variable (CVT) system which, on demand, also doubles as a sequential manual gearbox. The new transmission is available in either the five-door ELX or the three-door Sporting; the former with six stepped ratios in the sequential manual mode, the latter with seven – these being closer spaced.
  13. ^'Prototipos Fiat Punto y versiones curiosas' (in Spanish). Club Fiat Punto. Archived from the original on 12 October 2011. Retrieved 5 January 2014.CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
  14. ^'Comunicato Stampa: Wish'(PDF) (in Italian). Pininfarina. 18 November 1999. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  15. ^'Timeline'(PDF). Pininfarina. 19 July 2006. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  16. ^ abc'Fiat Punto specifications'. Auto-types.com. Retrieved 6 October 2012.
  17. ^'News'. Italiaspeed.com. 2 June 2005. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  18. ^'El Fiat Punto regresa a Chile' (in Spanish). Autocosmos.cl. 18 October 2007. Retrieved 7 July 2011.[dead link]
  19. ^'Auto economiche nuove: Fiat Punto Classic fuori produzione' (in Italian). Auto e Motore. 24 February 2011. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
  20. ^'italiaspeed.com'. www.italiaspeed.com.
  21. ^'::: ekapija - Fiat to restart Punto Classic production in 2013 :::'. ekapija.com.
  22. ^'Punto Classic is Fiat鈥檚 secret weapon in Serbia - AutoEdizione.com'. AutoEdizione.com.
  23. ^'Fiat Punto Classic'. Fiat Automobile Serbia. Archived from the original on 31 January 2012. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
  24. ^'Fiat Punto Mk2 1999-2003 (Proyecto 188)' (in Spanish). Club Fiat Punto. Archived from the original on 12 October 2011. Retrieved 6 October 2012.
  25. ^'Catalogo Fiat Punto'(PDF) (in Italian). FiatPunto.com. Archived from the original(PDF) on 9 October 2003. Retrieved 6 October 2012.
  26. ^'Fiat Punto owner's manual'. Fiat. Retrieved 6 October 2012.
  27. ^'Motor shows'. Italiaspeed.com. Retrieved 5 August 2007.
  28. ^'The Worst Cars You Can Buy Right Now'. Top Gear magazine. 9 October 2014. Retrieved 12 October 2014.Italic or bold markup not allowed in: publisher= (help)
  29. ^'New Fiat Punto Evo Review, Test Drive'. Autocar India. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
  30. ^'Fiat India launched Avventura at INR 5.99 Lakh'. autocarhindi.com. Retrieved 11 November 2014.
  31. ^'Fiat Punto taken off sale after 13 years - Autocar'. www.autocar.co.uk.

External links[edit]

Fiat Punto 1.2 Manual 2016

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fiat Punto.
« previous — Fiat car timeline (Europe), 1980s–present
Type1980s1990s2000s2010s
0123456789012345678901234567890123456789
City car126CinquecentoSeicento / 600
500
Panda IPanda IIPanda III
SuperminiHatchback127Punto IPunto II
UnoPalioGrande PuntoPunto EvoPunto
SedanDunaSienaAlbea
Compact carHatchbackRitmoTipoBravo I / BravaStiloBravo IITipo
Sedan128
131RegataTempraMareaLineaTipo
Mid-size car132ArgentaCroma ICroma II
CabrioletRitmo CabrioPunto Cabrio500C
SpiderSpidereuropa *Barchetta124 Spider
CoupéCoupé
Sports carX1/9
LAVFiorino IFiorino IIFiorino III / Qubo
Doblò IDoblò II
Mini CUVSedici500X
Mini MPVIdea500L
Compact MPVMultipla
Large MPVUlysse IUlysse IIFreemont
LCVDailyScudo IScudo IITalento
Ducato IDucato IIDucato III
Mini pickupStrada
PickupFullback
Off-roadCampagnola (1107)
Legend
  • Manufactured by Pininfarina — * from 1983
  • Manufactured by Maggiora in Italy untill 2002
  • Manufactured by Bertone from 1982
  • Manufactured by Mazda in Japan
  • Manufactured by Suzuki in Hungary
  • Manufactured by Sevel Nord (FCA/PSA) in France
  • Manufactured by Chrysler in Mexico
  • Manufactured by Renault in France
  • Manufactured by Sevel Sud in Italy
  • Manufactured by Mitsubishi in Thailand
Zastava, road car timeline, 1955–2008
Type1950s1960s1970s1980s1990s2000s
567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678
City car600
750
850
SubcompactYugo/Koral
10
CompactSkala
128Florida
Large family car1300/1500
LCVRival

Fiat Punto Hgt

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