zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Buying
/
Feel the Sting of the Scorpion for $1,500!
Feel the Sting of the Scorpion for $1,500!-October 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:10:17

Three of the sweetest words to many auto enthusiasts are mid-engine-Italian. But, as has found out, those words sometimes can sting.

Bitter sweet was yesterday's vote. When the dust settled, it was 50/50 for the . Bitter came and went in the U.S. market leaving behind a few orphan cars scattered like Lose Weight Now, Ask Me How! flyers littering a Hometown Buffet parking lot. Another brand that gave America a drive-by, peppering the landscape with cars that began rustling even before they left the assembly line was Lancia. The Beta series, introduced here in the states after Fiat swallowed the company whole, was an attempt to create a brand that would slot between Fiat and Alfa Romeo. The Betas- fastback sedan, three box coupe and HPE two-door wagon brought Fiat levels of quality with an even smaller and more disinterested dealer base. Added in 1976, the mid-engine Scorpion shared the 1776-cc 81-bhp wheezer with its front-drive brothers, but the Pininfarina-styled body was much more appealing.

In German, Bitte means please. As Nice Price or Crack Pipe knows, Bitter means rare and cool…

The Scorpion had debuted at the Geneva Auto Show a year earlier as the , celebrating Lancia's win at that venue. The Monte Carlo was initially going to be a Fiat- a replacement for the 124 Spider. Envisioned as a bigger brother to the X1/9, the car was to carry an X1/20 badge. Fiat realized that people were still buying the Spider, so they gave the X1/20 to Lancia. A lot of owners eventually came to wish that Lancia had given it back.

The differences between Monte Carlo and Scorpion are numerous and most evident in both bumper design and engine bay. The Scorpion eschews composite lamps and wrap-around bumpers for raising-eyebrow sealed beams and battering rams. Also, while the Monte gets a 1995-cc 120-bhp DOHC four, that engine's dirty rotten scoundrel-ness required it to stay home while the Fiat 1776-cc engine made the 1801 U.S.-destined Scorpions emissions compliant.

One thing that the American cars shared with their European-sold brethren was horribly over-boosted brakes which made driving the car treacherous and forced a halt to production for a couple of years until Lancia could figure out how to put a positive spin to understeering into a tree. Other problems were shift-linkage wear, interiors that fell apart like a Chippendale's dancer's pants and rust, oh the rust. The cars were assembled by Pininfarina who added the rust as a sort of planned obsolescence- like the replicant's end date in Blade Runner.

This has managed to make it 33 years without acting like a giant alka seltzer tablet in the rain. Despite its apparent survival against the tim worm, it has been lain siege by other vermin and is offered with the Hantavirus at no extra cost. The large nest in the front trunk may be that of a large family of rats or a single angry troll, it's difficult to say. Other than the need to have someone in a haz-mat suit literally blow the crap out of it, the car looks like a good starter for a project. The Pininfarina body remains molto bello and no one would look at you with distain should you choose to drop an MR2 turbo under that cross-ways hood. I'm just saying.

So, $1,500 for a mid engine, low-production, Italian sports car from a company with a long history. Does that price make you want to be the Scorpion King? Or do you think that for $1,500, you'd be the one getting stung?

You decide!

()

or go if the ad disappears.

Help me out with NPOCP. Click to send a me a tip, and remember to include your commenter handle.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Buying
At $5,900, Is This 1984 Nissan 720 4X4 A Solid Deal?
At $5,900, Is This 1984 Nissan 720 4X4 A Solid Deal?
According to its seller, today’s Nissan 4X4 shows “pride of ownership.” Let’s see if it would take swallowing one’s pride to pay its asking price. Opinions were split on how well the design of yesterday’s has held up over the years. Some of you commented that the design still...
Oct 22, 2024
Someone Willingly Paid $16,000 For A Maserati Ghibli On Cars & Bids. Don’t Make The Same Mistake
Someone Willingly Paid $16,000 For A Maserati Ghibli On Cars & Bids. Don’t Make The Same Mistake
Let’s cut right to the chase: buying a is not a good idea unless you have deep enough pockets for the upkeep. For those not in the know, they’re sirens. They draw you in with their premium Italian image and sweet songs of and then go in for the...
Oct 22, 2024
At $8,600, Would You Go Topless In This 1994 Cadillac Eldorado?
At $8,600, Would You Go Topless In This 1994 Cadillac Eldorado?
The seller of today’s Caddy claims they should be selling it at auction but says who’s got time for that? Let’s see if we have the time for this custom convertible at its non-auction price. Many of you agreed that the $950 asked for yesterday’s was “chump change.” Even...
Oct 22, 2024
At $950, Would You Go All-In On This 1984 Plymouth Colt GTS Turbo Project?
At $950, Would You Go All-In On This 1984 Plymouth Colt GTS Turbo Project?
One of the calling cards of today’s Plymouth Colt is its “Twin Stick” overdrive gear change, which gives the car eight speeds going forward and two in reverse. Let’s see if this project car has anything else to offer. Just as Goldilocks discovered when appropriating Papa Bear’s lifestyle and...
Oct 22, 2024
Which One Of You Suckers Is Going To Pay Over $32,000 For A 25-Year-Old Toyota 4Runner
Which One Of You Suckers Is Going To Pay Over $32,000 For A 25-Year-Old Toyota 4Runner
The (and Tacoma) have a death grip on used values. It’s been this way for years. Go ahead, go try and buy any TRD trim that’s a couple of years old; it’ll cost you as much as a new one — not that you could buy a new one...
Oct 22, 2024
At $18,500, Would You Lean Toward Buying This 2022 Ford Mustang?
At $18,500, Would You Lean Toward Buying This 2022 Ford Mustang?
Today’s Mustang is being sold by a towing yard, which means it’s probably a lien sale. Let’s see if this clean title convertible is priced to put a new buyer on the hook. The general consensus on last Friday’s was that it would be the perfect car for someone...
Oct 22, 2024
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved