Doylestown Auto Repair

Junkyard Gem: 1985 Bertone X1/9

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Sales of

the Fiat X1/9

began in the United States in 1974, and the price tag was very reasonable for a mid-engined Italian two-seater. For a time, these cars were common sights on American streets, at least in non-rusty areas. Then Americans became disillusioned with the

Fiat

brand, and the company folded its tent and departed the continent after 1982, not returning until 2010. Automotive dealmaker

Malcolm Bricklin

saw an opportunity at that point, and his company began bringing in 124 Sport Spiders badged as Pininfarinas and X1/9s badged as Bertones. Here’s an ’85 Bertone in a California wrecking yard.

Junked 1985 Bertone X1/9

Fiat had hired

Bertone

to design the X1/9 in the first place, so the badging change wasn’t so jarring to those Americans familiar with the

car’s history

. Bricklin

introduced Subaru cars

to the United States in the late 1960s, started

his own car company

in the middle 1970s, then went on to bring a

Yugoslavian-built Fiat 127 variant

to these shores, via the same company that was already bringing in the X1/9.

Junked 1985 Bertone X1/9

Power came from what amounted to a Fiat 128 engine/transaxle assembly, mounted just behind the rear window. In 1985, the Bertone X1/9 had 75 horsepower and weighed just over a ton.

Junked 1985 Bertone X1/9

This car still has the allegedly valuable hardtop. I’m pretty sure that every American X1/9 owner has several of these stashed away by now.

Junked 1985 Bertone X1/9

Optimistically, Bertone used a six-digit odometer in this car. 188,285 miles would have been pretty respectable in a 1985

Corolla

, never mind a Fiat known for shaky electrical systems and poor build quality. I still

see quite a few X1/9s in the big self-service wrecking yards

, and even more 124 Sport Spiders.

Junked 1985 Bertone X1/9

The seat upholstery is very stylish.

Junked 1985 Bertone X1/9

I checked this car’s VIN on

the California smog-check database,

which shows that it last passed the emissions test in 2009. Perhaps something broke soon after that and the car awaited

repairs

that never came.

Junked 1985 Bertone X1/9

It has both a trunk

and

a frunk.

Just a thing for a nice leisurely drive on a salt flat.

from Autoblog http://bit.ly/2J6VJJj