Fiat Presents The New Palio Weekend Adventure in Brazil

 Fiat Presents The New Palio Weekend Adventure in Brazil
Fiat Palio Weekend Locker

Developing countries??? crossover


Not long ago, the Brazilian car market had very few options, low growth rates and a huge repressed demand for new vehicles. As in other parts of the world, off-road vehicles, such as SUVs, were an object of desire, but they were just too expensive for most of Brazilian customers. Fiat has intelligently explored these characteristics by creating a sort of “off-road” version of its small station wagon, the Palio Weekend Adventure, in 1999, which came with a higher and reinforced suspension that could deal with Brazilian’s poor pavement conditions, even when it relates to tarmac. Soon competitors started to copy the idea and Ford came up with something even more interesting, the EcoSport, a Fiesta-based SUV. Fiat had to go a little further and it did, with the new Palio Adventure Locker, a even higher station wagon with an electronic locking differential.

The system, called ELD (Electronic Locker Differential), has been developed with Eaton and can only be activated when the car is stopped and. ELD is usable only until the car reaches 20 km/h, when it is automatically turned off. The system, as it is obvious, cannot be used in normal driving conditions. As we have said, it is a little better than no resources to face slippery surfaces, but still does not compensate the lack of an AWD system, as Fiat Panda offers in Europe (cost is said to be the villain). This will probably make this “developing countries’ crossover” still be called a “boutique off-road”, as some have called in Brazil these high suspension vehicles with no other benefit than a more resistant suspension.

Besides the new Adventure Locker, the facelifted Palio Weekend, which has already been sold in Europe, there is a new version called Trekking, which is nothing more than the previous Adventure with a smaller engine (1.4-litre instead of the 1.8-litre that equips the top of the line version). The biggest changes Palio Weekend has suffered are in the front fascia and the rear, with new Linea-inspired backlights. This Grande Punto-based sedan will be produced in Brazil very soon and will probably be exported to many other countries, most of them in Latin America. Prices in Brazil range from R$ 39,920 (about US$ 24,000) for the basic version, ELX 1.4 Flex, to R$ 53,850 (little less than US$ 32,500) for the Adventure Locker 1.8 Flex. ABS and airbags are not included…

Source: Fiat

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 Kepe Kepe
Neither ABS nor airbags? :D And still that expensive? WTF...
May 14, 2008 5:19 pm
 voodooboy voodooboy
Wow! That's one MEAN looking machine! If only FIAT sold that in the US (With the ABS/Airbags ofcourse!)...
May 14, 2008 6:21 pm
 joelynn joelynn
Personally i think it's scandalous that manufacturers are allowed to sell cars without ABS or airbags- it's cost-cutting at the expense of lives. Shame on FIAT for selling a $32,000 car without these safety features
May 14, 2008 7:40 pm
 fusion01 fusion01
I agree entirely. All manufacturers would (and will) do the same as long as government doesn't impose regulations on motor production safety standards.
June 21, 2009 6:53 am
 ck314 ck314
hahaha what an obnoxious ripoff! they must think all brazilians are stoned indigens lmao seriously.. i mean, taking all those pics costed more than developing such a pile of excrement on wheels
May 14, 2008 10:06 pm
 BabyMilo BabyMilo
EEEWWW!!! THAT THING IS DISGUSTING
May 15, 2008 5:47 am
 eXpat eXpat
Obviously none of the previous commenters either live in or have visited Brasil. ALL cars here are expensive with imported cars costing up to double what they would else where. I was going to buy a Land Rover Discover 3 until I found out that a used base model cost more than a new top of the line one would back in the UK. Also base specs are well below what you would get in the developed world and that is for ALL car manufacturers not just Fiat.
May 7, 2009 6:33 pm