FSO Polonez explained

FSO Polonez
Production:1978–2002
1988–2003 (pickup)
1983–1992 (Egypt)
1990–1995 (China)
Predecessor:FSO 125p
Class:Large family car[1]
Manufacturer:FSO
Layout:FR layout

The FSO Polonez is a motor vehicle that was developed in Poland in collaboration with Fiat and produced by Fabryka Samochodów Osobowych from 1978 to 2002. It was based on the Polski Fiat 125p platform with a new hatchback design by Zbigniew Watson, Walter de Silva and Giorgetto Giugiaro.[2] It was available in body styles that included two- and four-door compact-sized cars, station wagons, as well as commercial versions as pickup truck, cargo van, and ambulance. Production totaled more than one million units, excluding the pickup truck and van variants.[3] The Polonez was marketed in other nations and was popular in its domestic market until Poland joined the European Union in 2004.[4]

The car's name comes from the Polish dance, the polonaise, and was chosen through a readers' poll conducted by the newspaper Życie Warszawy.[5]

In 2021, about 33,000 vehicles were still registered in Poland.[6]

Background

The Polonez was based on the Polski Fiat 125p that Fabryka Samochodów Osobowych (FSO) built under license from Fiat. The internal components, including updated 1.3/1.5 Litre engines, (pistons and carburetor), the chassis, and other mechanicals, were from the Polski Fiat 125p. However, the body was an entirely new liftback initially designed in the early 1970s by Centro Stile Fiat as a prototype for Fiat.[7] After the Polish side started cooperation with Fiat over a new car, the original design was changed due to Polish requirements. The car was meant to be equipped with Fiat's 2.0 Litre DOHC engines in the 1980s, but financial problems at the time made it impossible to purchase a license from Fiat. This made producing the 125p alongside the Polonez possible for more than a decade. Moreover, mechanical improvements only occurred when they could be applied to both cars. This limitation changed after the production of the 125p ended in 1991.

An advantage of the FSO Polonez is its safety in an accident, especially compared to many of its rivals from the Eastern Bloc. In 1978, it was the only Eastern European car built to pass U.S. crash tests. Crash tests were performed in 1994 according to EU safety regulations, so the Polonez could be exported worldwide. They proved the car to be safe. The Caro 1.9 GLD hitting a concrete block (without an energy-absorbing metal cage) with 40% of the front at 500NaN0 survived very well. All doors could be opened without any difficulty, there were no critical injuries for passengers, and no fuel leakage occurred.[8]

Polonez (1978–1991)

FSO Polonez
Production:1978–1991
1988–1992 (pickup)
1983–1992 (Egypt)
1990–1995 (China)
Predecessor:Polski Fiat 125p
Successor:FSO Polonez Caro
Class:Large family car
Manufacturer:FSO
Wheelbase:NaN1NaN1
Length:42721NaN1 (hatchback)
46161NaN1 (station wagon/van and pickup)
50001NaN1 (extended cab pickup)
Layout:FR layout, MR layout (Stratopolonez)
Width:16501NaN1
Height:14201NaN1
Weight:1115kg (2,458lb)-1290kg (2,840lb)

Development

Debut

In May 1978, mass production commenced. The official premiere of the FSO Polonez 1500 and FSO Polonez 1300 took place. The FSO Polonez 2000 Rally with a 2-liter Fiat DOHC engine was displayed later. In 1979, the FSO Polonez 2000, sold mostly to government officials, appeared. The Polonez 2000 has a Fiat twin-cam engine with 1,995 cc, 820NaN0, a 5-speed gearbox, a 0–100 km/h acceleration of 12.0 seconds, and a 1750NaN0 top speed. The FSO Polonez 2000 Rally debuted in the Rallye Monte Carlo. In 1980, the FSO Polonez 1300 and 1500 three-door appeared. With the same short front doors as the five-door version, it was produced from 1979 until 1981 with about 300 units.

In 1981, a more economical version of the Polonez started being produced. This was sold without black side rubbing strips between the front and rear wheel, chrome bumper strips, rear window wiper-washer, fog lamps, luggage cover, and tachometer. Basic vinyl was used on the seats and in the luggage compartment. At the other end appeared the top version, FSO Polonez 1500 X. This was fitted with the AB 1,481 cc engine of 600NaN0, a five-speed gearbox (final drive ratio 4:3), and a radio. It was sold in the domestic market, usually for U.S. dollar payments.

In 1981 and 1983, the FSO Polonez Coupé, with three-door bodywork was introduced. It had the usual 1,481 cc engine with 600NaN0 and 2,0 DOHC Fiat. It was the first FSO model to feature electronic ignition and fuel economizer owing to a supply of pre-heated air to the suction manifold. Only a few dozen were produced.

In 1983, the Polski Fiat 125p was renamed FSO 125p, after FSO's licence rights to the Fiat badge expired. The new naming system for FSO's models was as follows:

Also in 1983, the FSO Polonez 2.0 D Turbo with an Italian VM Motori HR 488 engine of 1,995 cc appeared. It produces 620NaN0 at 4,300 rpm and 1630NaN0 at 2,500 rpm. Final drive ratio is 3,727, for a 0–100 km/h acceleration time of 20,0 s, and a top speed of 1460NaN0. Fuel consumption is 7.1/10.6/10.0 L/100 km, and approximately 100 cars were produced to this specification.

FSO Polonez - first cars with additional rear-side windows in the C-pillar.

In 1987, the FSO Polonez 1.6 LE appeared. It has a 1,598 cc inline-four with 640NaN0 at 5,200 rpm and 1320NaN0 at 3,800 rpm. Top speed is 1550NaN0. There was also the rare FSO 125p 1.6 ME, with the same engine but a top speed of 1570NaN0. Very few were made.

FSO Polonez modifications: stamped rear spoiler instead of plastic one, new model labels on the sticking foil, new version coding system with an 'S' supposedly meaning that the car had the additional rear-side windows in the C-pillar, a feature was often broken in practice. The versions available were:

1,3 SCE, 1.3 SL, 1.3 SLE, 1,5 CE, 1.5 L, 1,5 LE, 1,5 SCE, 1,5 SL, 1,5 SLE, 1,6 SLE, 2.0 SLE

In 1988, the FSO Polonez 1500 Turbo with AA 1,481 cc engine, 140kW at 7,000 rpm, 2400NaN0 at 3,200 rpm, 8,5 s, 2200NaN0 appeared. This was a rally version only, built to group A specifications. Following this competition version, the FSO Polonez 1.5 SLE Turbo with a turbocharged AA engine was introduced in December 1989. With a compression ratio of 8.5 to 1, the 1,481 cc inline-four produces 78kW at 6,000 rpm, and 1800NaN0 at 3,200 rpm. The zero to 100 km/h acceleration was in 11,0 s, and the top speed is 1800NaN0. A catalyzed version with 70kW was also available.[9] The Turbo Polonez' were built mainly in rally versions (group N), although on special order a Turbo-kit could be installed in mass-produced cars.

In 1989, the facelifted '89 FSO Polonez was introduced. Changes included a rear boot lid lowered to the bumper level, new rear lamps, a rear window wiper-washer placed horizontally, and side repeaters placed horizontally near the front doors. In January 1989, the first catalyzed Polonez (1500 only) was displayed at the Amsterdam Auto Show.[10] Simultaneously, a version with an Italian FNM-built (Fratelli Negri Motori) 13661NaN1 turbo-diesel and a five-speed manual appeared (called the "Polonez Piedra 1.3 Turbodiesel"), specifically for the Belgian market. This engine has 600NaN0at 4,500 rpm, enough for a top speed of 1550NaN0.

In 1990, the FSO Polonez 2.0 SLE appeared, fitted with Ford's 2.0-litre engine, 12.5 seconds acceleration to 100 km/h and a top speed of .

Stratopolonez

A unique version of FSO Polonez dubbed Stratopolonez (also known as FSO Polonez 2500 Racing) uses Lancia Stratos components salvaged from a crashed car that was driven by Andrzej Jaroszewicz, the son of Prime Minister Piotr Jaroszewicz in 1977 on Rally Poland. He failed to complete the rally because of crashing into a tree.

The resulting salvaged vehicle was designed by Ośrodek Badawczo-Rozwojowy FSO (FSO Research and Development Center) in 1978. The car uses an FSC Star radiator located in the front (as a counterweight due to the vehicle being now mid-engined), engine output was improved to 280 PS, and does not share spoilers with FSO Polonez 2000 Rally.

This car was raced until 1985. Drivers were Andrzej Jaroszewicz, Adam Polak, Maciej Stawowiak, and Marian Bublewicz. Marian made improvements, such as adding wider rear wheel arches and strengthening areas around the windshield. The vehicle went to Museum of Technology, Warsaw afterward. In 2000, the car was restored by Warsaw Motor Technical College students as part of their diploma thesis.

Gallery

Polonez Caro (1991–1997)

FSO Polonez Caro
Production:1991–1997
1992–1997 (pickup)
Predecessor:FSO Polonez
Successor:Daewoo-FSO Polonez Caro Plus
Class:Large family car
Manufacturer:FSO
Wheelbase:NaN1NaN1
Length:43181NaN1
46161NaN1 (station wagon/van and pickup)
50001NaN1 (extended cab pickup)
53001NaN1 (double cab pickup)
Layout:FR layout
Width:16501NaN1
Height:14201NaN118001NaN1(LAV)https://www.automobile-catalog.com/auta_details1.php#gsc.tab=0
Weight:1115kg (2,458lb)-1170kg (2,580lb)-1670kg (3,680lb)

1991 marked the end of FSO 125p production. Along with this, FSO's 1,295 cc engine ended production. FSO imports to the United Kingdom were temporarily stopped. On the other hand, the facelifted FSO Polonez Caro appeared. It had new headlamps and grille (similar to the design of the FSO Wars, a prototype car that was supposed to be the successor to Polonez), new front and rear bumpers, a steering wheel, new rooflet over instruments, and improved front crash safety. Also new was the FSO Polonez Caro 1.9 GLD with Citroën's 1,905 cc diesel engine, 500NaN0, 1200NaN0, and a top speed of 1500NaN0. The Caro GLD was sold across mainland Europe.

The other versions in pricelist:

FSO Polonez Caro 1.5 GLE - 600NaN0

FSO Polonez Caro 1.6 GLE - 640NaN0

FSO Polonez Caro 2.0 GLE - Ford's 770NaN0 engine and gearbox from the Ford Sierra (approx. 1,000 units)

(December) FSO Polonez 1.4 GLI 16V with Rover 1396 cc engine, 760NaN0 @ 6000 rpm, 1270NaN0 @ 5000 rpm, 11,9 s, 1780NaN0, with or without catalytic converter.

FSO Polonez Sedan prototype - later produced as the FSO Atu - with 4-door sedan bodywork, with a completely new dashboard and upholstery (project by FSO), new rear suspension: rigid rear axle with longitudinal wishbones, reaction bars, and coil springs. The rear lamps are the same as in the Caro version.

Two prototypes of the FSO Polonez Kombi (station wagon).The next prototype: FSO Analog 4WD, a light off-road car with 4-door pick-up bodywork and four-wheel drive.

Export to the UK restarted: FSO Caro (Polonez 1.6 and 1.9 D) and FSO Pick-up (Truck)

Girling-Lucas brakes were introduced.

Production of the FSO Polonez Caro 1.9 GLD stopped.

End of export to the Netherlands, the last foreign market for Polonez passenger versions; the final offering in the Netherlands consisted of:

FSO Prima (Polonez Caro) 1.6 GLI

FSO Prima (Polonez Caro) 1.4 GLI 16V

FSO Celina (Atu) 1.6 GLI

Engines

ModelEngineDisplacementValvetrainFuel systemMax. power at rpmMax. torque at rpmTop speedYears
Petrol engines
1.4 GLIK161398 ccDOHC 16vMulti-point fuel injection103NaN at 6000 rpm127NaN at 5000 rpm1760NaN01993–1997
1.5 GLEAB1481 ccOHV 8vCarburettor82NaN at 5200 rpm114NaN at 3400 rpm1550NaN01991–1994
1.5 GLIAE/AF1481 ccOHV 8vSingle-point fuel injection77NaN at 5400 rpm115NaN at 2800 rpm1580NaN01992–1995
1.6 GLECB1598 ccOHV 8vCarburettor87NaN at 5200 rpm132NaN at 3800 rpm1600NaN01991–1994
1.6 GLICE/CF1598 ccOHV 8vSingle-point fuel injection81NaN at 5200 rpm125NaN at 3200 rpm1630NaN01992–1997
2.0 GLEFord SOHC1993 ccSOHC 8vCarburettor105NaN at 5200 rpm157NaN at 4000 rpm1790NaN01991
Diesel engines
1.9 GLDXUD9A1905 ccSOHC 8vIndirect injection70NaN at 4600 rpm120NaN at 2000 rpm1530NaN01991–1997

Gallery

Polonez Caro Plus (1997–2003)

FSO Polonez Caro Plus
Production:1997–2002
1997–2003 (pickup)
Predecessor:FSO Polonez Caro
Class:Large family car
Manufacturer:Daewoo-FSO
Wheelbase:NaN1NaN1
Length:43691NaN1
46161NaN1 (station wagon/van and pickup)
50001NaN1 (extended cab pickup)
53001NaN1 (double cab pickup)
Layout:FR layout
Width:16501NaN1
Height:14201NaN1
Weight:1120kg (2,470lb)-1680kg (3,700lb)

(December) FSO Polonez Caro Plus and Atu Plus 1.6 GSI - with Delphi (Multec XM) multi-point fuel injection, 1598 cc 620NaN0, 1300NaN0, ca. 1550NaN0, new door handles introduced.

FSO Truck was marketed in Italy by the Daewoo dealer network.

Engines

ModelEngineDisplacementValvetrainFuel systemMax. power at rpmMax. torque at rpmTop speedYears
Petrol engines
1.4 GTIK161398 ccOHC 16vMulti-point fuel injection103NaN at 6000 rpm127NaN at 5000 rpm1760NaN01997–1998
1.6 GLIAB1581 ccOHV 8vSingle-point fuel injection76NaN at 5000 rpm121NaN at 3600 rpm1550NaN01997–2002
1.6 GSIAF1581 ccOHV 8vMulti-point fuel injection84NaN at 5000 rpm130NaN at 3800 rpm1660NaN01998–2002

Gallery

Polonez range

The Polonez range was expanded to encompass a wide range of bodies. These included:

There were also many prototypes, including a pickup made using the rear part of Polski Fiat 125p pick-up, chassis cab (without frame in the rear), 4x4 off-roader (Analog), hydro-pneumatic suspension, another sedan version (very different from Atu/Celina), 4x4 Truck w/o offroad suspension and van.

Export markets

In total, FSO total exported 226,966 cars to foreign markets, with China, UK, Egypt, and France being the main takers.

Complete knock down (CKD) cars were assembled by El Nasr (in conjunction with Arab American Vehicles[13]) in Egypt from 1983 until 1993, succeeding the locally assembled 125p in that market.[14] In some countries, the FSO Polonez was sold as Celina, Prima, Mistral, Piedra, Atou.

Imports to the UK ceased in 1997, though sales continued in some parts of Western Europe - including France - for at least a year afterward. They were withdrawn from those markets due to more stringent emissions requirements and declining demand.

Dongfanghong

In China, Polonez-based derivatives were produced by YTO Group as the Dongfanghong and Yituo. They were released with station wagon (LT5021) and sedan (LT5022) bodywork, though with many modifications. Trim pieces came from the Volkswagen Santana and were powered by locally produced engines, a carburetted 1.5-litre inline-four from Beijing Engine Factory. These cars were built with locally-made spare parts for imported Polonez, which were common in China then. Nevertheless, many other local parts were substituted (Dongfanghong was also working with Fiat at the time on tractor technology, which may have also influenced the choice of a car). A sales advantage for the vehicles was that their parts were easily interchangeable with Polonez.[15] These cars were not nearly as successful as their actual Polonez counterparts.[16] [17]

Legacy

The FSO Polonez suffered from relatively poor performance (except for those models equipped with the Fiat 2.0 DOHC, the Ford 2.0 SOHC, or the Rover 1.4 MPI 16V). Polonez parts were relatively cheap and readily available. After 1992, quality began to increase, especially after 1995 when Daewoo started cooperating with FSO. Since 1997, the last production models (the PLUS series) offered new features such as air conditioning.

Production ended in 2002, after 24 years. The relatively low price of the Polonez was seen as the main advantage over other cars. But demand slumped, and the last versions of the Polonez produced were the Truck versions, valued for their low price, reliability, and high load capability: up to 10000NaN0 depending on the version.

The Polonez was a common sight in Central and Eastern Europe, particularly in its home country of Poland. Once Poland became a member of the European Union on 1 May 2004, the car was rapidly replaced by cheap and tax-free used cars from Western Europe.

The Polonez has been a popular choice for participants in the Złombol Charity Rally. In 2018, around 300 teams, or approximately 40% of all racers, used versions of the Polonez in this event.[18]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Motor, no. 25 z 24 czerwca 1979.
  2. Book: Jacobs, Andrew James . Automotive FDI in Emerging Europe: Shifting Locales in the Motor Vehicle Industry . 2017 . Palgrave Macmillan . 9781137407863 . 45 . 8 October 2019.
  3. Web site: FSO Polonez . . 12 April 2018 . 8 October 2019.
  4. Web site: FSO Polonez . Polish Poland . 1 March 2010 . 8 October 2019.
  5. Web site: Famous Polish Cars from the Past . Poland Unraveled . 8 October 2019 . 17 May 2018 . 9 October 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191009000652/https://www.polandunraveled.com/famous-polish-cars-from-the-past/ . dead .
  6. Web site: Nietypowe fakty z historii Poloneza. Wiedziałeś? . Motory Jacza . 27 November 2022 . 12 May 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210512184533/https://motoryzacja.interia.pl/wiadomosci/ciekawostki/news-nietypowe-fakty-z-historii-poloneza-wiedziales,nId,5185625 . bot: unknown .
  7. Automobilista (217) 5/2018
  8. https://plfilm.net/v-fso-polonez-test-zderzeniowy-euro-ncap-FktuoMYA_dc.html plfilm.net FSO Polonez test zderzeniowy
  9. [#TAM90|''Tutte le Auto del Mondo 1990'']
  10. [#TAM90|''Tutte le Auto del Mondo 1990'']
  11. Web site: UkrAVTO Corporation. FSO . UkrAvto.ua . 2010-10-22 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090424025814/http://www.ukravto.ua/eng/production_fso.htm . 2009-04-24 .
  12. Web site: Daewoo Leganza . 27 November 2022.
  13. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20070327064702/http://www.aav.com.eg/Pathtosuccess.html . Path to Success . Arab American Vehicles . 2007-03-27 . 2019-08-15 . live .
  14. Book: Katalog Samochody Świata 2003 . World Car Catalogue 2003 . Eligiusz . Mazur . Print Shops Prego . Warsaw, Poland . 95 . 2002 . 1234-8198 .
  15. Web site: Yituo LT5021, LT5022 Specialized Vehicle. buidea.com . Xuchang General Machinery Plant . 16 September 2017 . zh . With its low cost of entry of 45k RMB and parts interchangeability with Polonez, the car is suited for the needs of small-medium sized businesses, rural enterprises, and private owners..
  16. Web site: De Feijter. Tycho. History Updated: were the Dongfanghong Yituo cars copies of the FSO Polonez?. Car News China . 16 September 2017.
  17. Web site: De Feijter. Tycho. History: the Dongfanghong cars from China. Car News China . 16 September 2017.
  18. Web site: Official Złombol Statistics (pl). 2019-01-30.