North American model The coupé and Spider were marketed in Canada and the US beginning in 1968. In 1969, the Spider featured four-wheel disc brakes, double overhead cams, hesitation wipers, steering column-mounted lighting controls, radial-ply tyres, and a five-speed
manual transmission. An optional three-speed
automatic transmission from General Motors was available from 1979 through 1985 for North America and Japan. The Spider's convertible top was known for its simplicity of use—allowing a seated driver to quickly raise or lower the top. When the engine was upgraded to 2.0 L, the model was renamed the Fiat Spider 2000. For the 1980 model year, a version with a catalytic converter and
Bosch L-Jetronic fuel injection was introduced for California and optional in the other 49 states. For 1981, this engine, with , became standard fitment in North America. In the US, Fiat turned over marketing and support of the Spider and the
X1/9 to International Automobile Importers, Inc., headed by
Malcolm Bricklin.
Fiat Abarth 124 Rally The Fiat Abarth 124 Rally is a homologated version of the 124 Sport Spider, known also as "124 Abarth Stradale", introduced in November 1972. It received
Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile homologation in the
special grand touring cars (group 4) racing class, and replaced the 1.6-litre Fiat Sport Spider rally cars, which were then being campaigned. At the time, 124 had already won the 1972
European Rally Championship at the hands of
Raffaele Pinto and Gino Macaluso. by replacing the standard twin-choke
carburettor with double vertical twin-choke
Weber 44 IDFs, and by fitting an Abarth exhaust with a dual exit muffler. The 9.8:1 compression ratio was left unchanged. The transmission is the all-synchronised five-speed optional on the other Sport Spider models, and brakes are
discs on all four corners. Despite the four-point
roll bar fitted,
kerb weight is , roughly less than the regular 1.8-litre Sport Spider. The engine bonnet, boot lid, and fixed hard top are
fibreglass, painted matt black; the rear window is
perspex and the doors are aluminium. Front and rear bumpers were deleted and replaced by simple rubber bumperettes. A single matte-black
wing mirror was fitted. Matte-black wheel-arch extensions house
Pirelli CN 36 tyres on four-spoke
alloy wheels. Inside, the
centre console, rear occasional seats, and glovebox lid were eliminated; its new features were anodised aluminium dashboard trim, a small, three-spoke, leather-covered Abarth
steering wheel, and
Recaro corduroy-and-leather
bucket seats as an extra-cost option. The car carries Fiat badging front and rear, Abarth badges, and "Fiat Abarth" scripts on the
front wings, and Abarth wheel-centre caps. Only three paint colours were available: Corsa red, white, and light blue. ==Rallying==