Talk:Lancia Beta

Latest comment: 2 months ago by Olddemdike in topic Impartiality



Images

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I've added some images of two of my old Betas. Unfortunately they were very much working cars, so they're as good an example of the most likely place to find rust on Betas as they are of cars in their prime. So if anyone finds better images to use, feel free to replace them :). MarkGrant 19:11, 10 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Power Steering

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I had a 1979 american model beta coupe, and it had power steering as well - I don't believe the article's implication that it was only on RHD cars is correct.

Hello friend. The article is correct as it stands. It refers to power steering introduced on left hand drive vehicles first. A few lines later it mentions that power steering was subsequently introduced a number of years later on right hand drive vehicles. Hope this clarifies. Bowjm 06:10, 7 January 2007 (UTC) Bowjm 06:11, 7 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

Spider/Spyder

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I just checked a photo of my old car and it does have a 'Spider' name-plate on the back as I remembered; however, I found a couple of photos of other convertible Betas and they just say 'Lancia Beta 2000' with no reference to Spider. Either way, the majority of reviews I looked at called it 'Spider' rather than 'Spyder', so it does seem the better choice... given the confusion I guess either could work. Mark Grant (talk) 04:57, 7 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

It was indeed accused of being a Fiat, as it had the same engine as the Fiat 124 sport Coupe though with different carburation. However, my old 124 Sport was the quickest car I have owned and it was no disgrace to use such an engine in the Beta. Sadly the my early Beta Spyder was rust prone and needed remedial work year on year which detracted from the better handling compared with the Fiat. JDN —Preceding unsigned comment added by 216.31.202.145 (talk) 09:22, 2 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

The engine is not quite the same, as Lancia designed their own head for the Lampredi twin cam.Mr Tangle (talk) 15:32, 19 October 2014 (UTC)Reply

[citation needed] on the "Lancia head" (although the external cooling circuit was different). Also there were no production Montecarlos with twin sidedraught carbs. Fitting twin carbs to a Montecarlo was not easy and it made them awfully noisy to drive afterwards (at least in the UK, as the carbs were behind a RHD drivers ears). Most people avoided playing with the carbs on a road Montecarlo and went, if anything, straight for fuel injection just because of the limited space and awkward access. Andy Dingley (talk) 17:15, 19 October 2014 (UTC)Reply
I am almost certain this is just flat-out false (though it's been propagated across the net from this article, usually in the exact same words). I am deleting it, since no citation has been provided in the 8 years since this comment. Nonmouse (talk) 18:31, 20 November 2022 (UTC)Reply

Agreed, apols for my earlier error. I once had a Matra Murena to which someone had fitted twin Dellorto 45s in place of the standard single Solex,and it was a very noisy car, and I can imagine that a Montecarlo would be the same with twin carbs. Mr Tangle (talk) 05:57, 20 October 2014 (UTC)Reply

AFAIR the Murena wasn't quite so bad, as there was slightly more space. The Monte couldn't take the factory twin downdraughts from the 124 sport as the engine was tilted and would have put them through the firewall. DCOE would just about fit, but the trumpets pointed into the firewall from close up so there wasn't even much space for a good inlet trumpet. Airfrlow was thus turbulent and through a narrow gap. In common with the Murena, there was no space for sound deadening. I think the Monte 2 did have a thicker drivers-side felt blanket on the firewall than the 1 had. Andy Dingley (talk) 06:07, 20 October 2014 (UTC)Reply

Impartiality

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The Legacy section of this article is clearly sympathetic to the manufacturer, and not impartial. A morti (talk) 21:52, 29 November 2009 (UTC) AaronReply

Yeah great job turning the biggest recall of motor vehicles in european history into a vendetta by the media. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.27.118.108 (talk) 21:55, 29 November 2009 (UTC)Reply

"Biggest recall of motor vehicles in european history"? This is an inaccurate comment. There have been numerous recalls involving far greater numbers of vehicles. For example Vauxhall's recall in 2006/2007 involving over 300,000 vehicles due to potential ingress of water into ABS control units and the subsequent risk of a short circuit and potentially a fire (report on Motortrader.com 17th December 2007. (Bowjm (talk) 21:21, 18 January 2010 (UTC))Reply


I also agree with this - it certainly doesn't fit well with my memory of what happened. There are almost no citations - The section is only focused one one aspect of the legacy of the brand (probably in the UK - as it continued elsewhere in europe). I will therefore remove the section altogether, as it represents original research. Myredroom (talk) 10:23, 14 December 2009 (UTC)Reply

As the author of the original Legacy section (prior to additions), I understand and accept that the piece is sympathetic to the manufacturer. However, by deleting the Legacy section, you have removed all reference to the serious rust issue that was widely reported in the UK press in 1980. The UK was the largest export market for Lancia at that time and this matter deserves mentioning, provided that the section clearly identifies the country. The resulting article is now factually incomplete. (Bowjm (talk) 21:31, 18 January 2010 (UTC))Reply

Check your facts; the Legacy section cited not one, but two car magazines, entirely unrelated to each other. As it is now, with the "Legacy" section removed, it seems like the article is justifying the Daily Mirror scandal-mongering rag. Elp gr (talk) 23:26, 19 February 2010 (UTC)Reply
I brought back the Legacy section, with even more complete documentation, as there is ALSO a link to a downloadable PDF article documenting the history of the model, as well as the site of the Daily Mirror rag where you can buy the issue where the whole scandal was started. Elp gr (talk) 23:50, 19 February 2010 (UTC)Reply
I have deleted this section again. It still does not have enough good quality citations, and is not impartial. In places it looks like original research or POV. I suspect that the original authors seem to think that because the rust problem is common knowledge in the UK, that it belongs here. Verifiable facts are the only things which belong here. Myredroom (talk) 15:25, 20 February 2010 (UTC)Reply
The rust scandal is widely known not only in the UK, but also throughout Europe and even in the US. If you haven't heard of it, it doesn't make it any less important, especially knowing that this was one of the biggest factors in the company's downfall. And anyway, if you don't know what you're editing about, ask those who know better than you instead of removing content as you see fit. As for your "original research" and POV claims, they don't stand to scrutiny. This information has already been published in two British magazines (sadly, they don't release their back issues' content online; you have to buy them if they're still available), it has been published in the Betaboyz forum (which is dedicated to providing technical support for the Lancia Beta), there are even links to the original Daily Mirror article that started the scandal. What more do you want? Or is it perhaps an effort on your behalf to erase this incident from public memory and cement Daily Mirror's effort's as "facts"? Elp gr (talk) 23:10, 20 February 2010 (UTC)Reply



I've had to correct the bit about the Beta rust scandal about only Series 1 cars and saloons being affected. I was there at the time and can assure everyone that all models were affected and were scrapped - Series 11 cars, Coupes, HPE's and Spiders. I can vaguely recall a couple of Monte Carlo cars as well at the scrapyard but wouldn't put money on it! — Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.189.97.227 (talk) 19:09, 18 January 2015 (UTC)

Just came across this for the first time and thought I'd add some comments. I never worked at Abbey Hill, but knew many of the management there well. They were based in Yeovil and responsible for physical distribution of all Fiat group cars (including Eastern-bloc ones) in the UK. The business was owned by Roger Bastable, who had a record of taking business challenges head on. The Lancias were affecting the reputation of all Italian cars in Britain, and Fiat were concerned about sales. So they asked Bastable to fix the problem. He purchased Hallett Metals in Crewkerne (allegedly the purchase was funded by Fiat) who were then given the task of completely eradicating all physical trace of the Lancia brand in the UK. Fiat wanted a scorched earth - nothing left to remind customers of the problem. Hallett systematically purchased and scrapped every Lancia they could find. It wasn't a recall: it was a purge of all traces, irrespective of model. Nothing was broken for parts - everything was scrapped: it was intended that nothing should remain to enable cars to be repaired. Even the supposedly rust-proof late-model HPEs were included.

As to why the Betas rusted, it's conjecture but the saga of the Fiat 131 Mirafiori in the UK may be explanatory. When this model was introduced Fiat produced several years supply of UK-spec models in one production run and shipped them all to Abbey Hill, where they were stored on grass fields around Yeovil. Many (most?) of these remained without moving for several years, with grass growing in and around the bodies. Before a car could be moved it had to be made accessible by grass strimming. When preparing a car for sale the first job was to steam clean it to remove the protective wax underneath, along with the thousands of snails which got fat by eating the wax. In reality the wax waterproofing was useless after the snails got at it, the cars then sat in damp wet fields for years (where they were stored was notorious wet ground) with hidden rust behind the paint. It resulted in another publicity disaster for Fiat, except this time the problem was too big to hide. It resulted in Fiat introducing its 7-year anticorrosion policy.

I can't be sure that the Beta rust problem had the same origins, but it would not surprise me if there was a similar cause.Olddemdike (talk) 11:41, 3 September 2024 (UTC)Reply

File:Lancia Beta Coupe 2.0ie 1982.jpg Nominated for Deletion

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