Logo
The original Lancia logo was designed by Count Carlo Biscaretti di Ruffia. The logo shows a lance and shield with flag. The Turin automobile museum is named after him as Museo Nazionale dell'Automobile “Carlo Biscaretti di Ruffia”. The logo was redesigned in 2007.
Association with other manufacturers
Lancia was not closely associated with any other manufacturer until the late 1960s. By this time, the company's expensive, high standards of production had become unsustainable. In aiming to produce a product of the highest quality, company bosses had sacrificed cost-effectiveness and when Fiat launched a take-over bid in 1969, they accepted. This was not the end of the distinctive Lancia brand, and new models in the 1970s such as the Stratos, Gamma and Beta served to prove that Fiat wished to preserve the image of the brand it had acquired.
During the 1980s, the company cooperated with Saab Automobile, with the Lancia Delta being sold as the Saab 600 in Sweden. The 1985 Lancia Thema also shared a platform with the Saab 9000, Fiat Croma and the Alfa Romeo 164.
Current models
Lancia Ypsilon
Lancia Musa
Lancia Delta[edit] Lancia YpsilonMain article: Lancia Ypsilon
The Ypsilon is a supermini car produced from 2011, It is based on a updated Fiat 500 platform.
[edit] Lancia MusaMain article: Lancia Musa
A small MPV produced since 2004 in two series, the Musa is largely based on the Fiat Idea.
[edit] Lancia DeltaMain article: Lancia Delta
A small family car unveiled at the 2008 Geneva motor show. Using stretched version of Fiat Bravo platform. Available as five-door hatchback.
[edit] Exclusive and limited production[edit] Lancia StratosMain article: Lancia Stratos
New Lancia Stratos by Pininfarina for Michael Stoschek
Past car models
Lancia has a long tradition of passenger, fast touring, sports and racing cars. They have tended to emphasize quality, appearance and sophisticated design, somewhat at the expense of power and competitive pricing. Among the most beautiful, desirable and unusual models are various Lancia Zagato models.
The Lancia Aurelia introduced the front engine rear transmission configuration later used by Ferrari, Alfa Romeo, Porsche, GM, and Maserati, as well as the V6 engine, which is now common. It also had inboard rear brakes, an important way of reducing un-sprung weight.
Future models
At the 2011 Geneva Motor Show, three new Lancia vehicles were introduced, all based on Chrysler platforms. They include a car and convertible based on the new Chrysler 200 to be named Flavia and a luxury saloon/sedan and minivan, both based on the Chrysler 300, called Lancia Thema and Town & Country, respectively.[4]
Trucks
Lancia Esadelta CLancia Eta (car with a loading area)
Lancia Jota (1915)
Lancia Dijota (1915)
Lancia Triota (1921)
Lancia Tetrajota (1921)
Lancia Pentajota (1924)
Lancia Esajota
Lancia Eptajota (1927)
Lancia Omicron
Lancia Ro (1932)
Lancia Ro-Ro (1935)
Lancia 3Ro (1938)
Lancia EsaRo (1941)
Lancia E 290 (1941) single-built electric truck
Lancia 6Ro (1947)
Lancia Esatau (1950–1968)
Lancia Beta / Lancia Beta Diesel
Lancia Esatau B (1955)
Lancia Beta Diesel (1959) Lancia Beta 190, with a supercharged twin-cylinder compressor – two stroke – diesel engine
Lancia Esadelta B (1959)
Lancia Esadelta C (1969)
Buses
Lancia Trijota
Lancia Tetrajota
Lancia Omicron
Lancia Ro
Lancia Esatau
Lancia Esagamma
Military vehicles
Lancia IZM (1912) armored vehicle
Lancia 3Ro (1939) truck
Lancia EsaRo (1942) truck
Lancia Lince (lynx) (1942) armored car – a copy of Daimler Dingo MK I
Lancia 6Ro (1948) LKW
Lancia CL51 (Z 20) (1954) troop transporter
Lancia TL51 (Z 30) (1954) lorries
Lancia in the United States
Whilst some models had been imported on a small scale in the 1950s and 1960s, Lancias were officially sold in the United States from 1975. Sales were comparatively slow and the range was withdrawn at the same time as Fiat in 1982.
In 2009, following Fiat's acquisition of a stake in United States-based Chrysler and part of Chrysler's restructuring plans, it was stated that Fiat plans for the Chrysler brand and Lancia to codevelop products, with some vehicles being shared. Olivier Francois, Lancia's CEO, took over as CEO of the Chrysler division in October 2009. Fiat has also stated that, depending on the market, some Chrysler cars will be sold as Lancias and vice versa. Francois plans to reestablish the Chrysler brand as an upscale brand, a position somewhat muddied after the Plymouth brand was discontinued.[5] At the 2010 Detroit Auto Show, A Chrysler badged Lancia Delta was on display, likely the first Lancia to be sold as a Chrysler and possibly as a replacement for the Chrysler PT Cruiser.[6]
Formula One
A Lancia D50A Formula One carAfter Vincenzo Lancia's son Gianni became director of the firm, it started to take part more frequently in motorsport, eventually deciding to build a Grand Prix car. Vittorio Jano was the new designer for Lancia and his Lancia D50 was entered into the 1954 Spanish Grand Prix, where Alberto Ascari took the pole position and drove the fastest lap. In the 1955 Monaco Grand Prix Ascari crashed into the harbour after missing a chicane. One week later Ascari was killed in an accident driving a Ferrari sports car at Monza. With Ascari's death and Lancia's financial problems the company withdrew from Grand Prix racing.[7] Altogether Lancia took two victories and ten podiums in Formula One.[8]
Remnants of the Lancia team were transferred to Scuderia Ferrari,[9] where Juan Manuel Fangio won the 1956 championship with a Lancia-Ferrari car.
Rallying
A Lancia Delta S4 Group B rally carLancia has been very successful in motorsport over the years, and mostly in the arena of rallying. Prior to the forming of the World Rally Championship, Lancia took the final International Championship for Manufacturers title with the Fulvia in 1972. In the WRC, they remain the most statistically successful marque (despite having withdrawn at the end of the 1993 season), winning constructors' titles with the Stratos (1974, 1975 and 1976), the 037 (1983) and the Delta (six consecutive wins from 1987 to 1992). The Delta is also the most successful individual model designation ever to compete in rallying. All this gave Lancia a total of 10 Championships over the years.
Juha Kankkunen and Miki Biasion both won two drivers' titles with the Delta. Among other drivers to take several World Rally Championship wins with Lancia were Markku Alén, Didier Auriol, Sandro Munari, Bernard Darniche, Walter Röhrl, Björn Waldegård and Henri Toivonen. The history of the brand in rallying is also tainted with tragedy, with deaths of Italian driver Attilio Bettega at the 1985 Tour de Corse in a Lancia 037 and then Finnish championship favourite Toivonen in a Lancia Delta S4 at the same rally exactly a year later. These deaths would eventually lead to the end of Group B rallying.
Sports car racing
A Lancia LC1 Group 6 sports carDuring Lancia's dominance of rallying, company also expanded into sports cars in the late 1970s until the mid-1980s. Originally running the Stratos HF in Group 4, as well as a brief interlude with a rare Group 5 version, the car was replaced with the Monte Carlo Turbo. In 1982 the team moved up to Group 6 with the LC1 Spyder, followed by the Group C LC2 coupé which featured a Ferrari powerplant in 1983. The LC2 was a match for the standard-setting Porsche 956 in terms of raw speed, securing 13 pole positions over its lifetime, however its results were hampered by poor reliability and fuel economy and it only managed to win three European and World Endurance Championship races. The team's inability to compete against the dominant Porsche 956 and 962 sports cars led it to drop out of sportscar racing at the end of 1986 in order to concentrate on rallying, although private teams continued to enter LC2s with declining results until the early 1990s.