| 2-door convertible | 3/5-door hatchback | 4-door sedan | 2-door panel van | 3/5-door SUV }} | Lada Carlota (Belgium) | Lada Cevaro (Australia) | Lada Diva | Lada EuroSamara | Lada Forma (saloon) | Lada Natasha (convertible) | Lada Sable | Lada Sagona (saloon) | Lada Zarya | Lada Sputnik | Lada Tarzan (Compact SUV) | Lada Volante (Australia) | VAZ 2108 (1984–2003) | VAZ 2109 (1987–2011) | VAZ 21099 (1990–2011) }} |
VAZ-2105 (VAZ 21099) }} |
VAZ-2113 (VAZ 2108) |
VAZ-2114 (VAZ 2109) |
VAZ-2115 (VAZ 21099) }} }} The Samara was a car that combined a robust build and ease of maintenance with a modern style. It was produced in various three, four and five-door designs with 1.1, 1.3 and 1.5-litre petrol engines. VAZ had hoped that the Samara would enable it to compete for sales in the mainstream European car market, where the company's traditional
Fiat 124-based "
Zhiguli" models were looked upon as increasingly outmoded and out of date. It was the second autonomous design from VAZ (the first was the
Niva SUV), and the first model not based on the Fiat 124 mechanicals.
Development VAZ had made their first front-wheel drive prototype, the VAZ-1101, in the early 1970s. The engine from the
Fiat 127 was used. Further development of this project led to the
Ladoga three-door
hatchback prototype in 1976. The decision to build the Samara was taken on 16 September 1978, the intention being to build a car with strong potential sales in Western European export markets. Proposals for a distinctive saloon, four-door, and both three- and five-door hatchback were considered; it was decided instead the saloon should share the three-door hatchback's sheetmetal forward of the C-pillar. (Design work on the four-door went toward the
VAZ-2110 instead.) During its development, VAZ
designers paid careful attention to the contemporary
Renault 9,
Volkswagen Golf,
Ford Escort Mark III,
Opel Kadett, and
Volvo 340, which would be the new VAZ-2108's main competitors. Front suspension was
MacPherson struts, rear by
torsion bar. It also had
rack and pinion steering, another Soviet first. On 31 December 1979, the first VAZ-2108 prototype was completed. It strongly resembled the earlier Ladoga, and the VAZ-1106
saloon. While named
Sputnik at home, it was more commonly known as the Vos'merka ("Eighth") after the last digit in the model code. The export version was named after the
Samara River, a tributary to the
Volga. The first cars left the production line on 18 December 1984. These, the three-door hatchbacks (the only model available at first), were powered by a belt-driven
SOHC 1,288 cc
inline-four with , and were fitted with a four-speed gearbox. The three-door was joined by a five-door, and by models with 1,099 cc (a destroked version of the 1.3) or 1,499 cc (a bored-out 1288) engines. (The head was developed in co-operation with
Porsche, though most Western observers assumed Porsche's involvement went beyond just engines, and the
carburetors in connection with
Solex.) File:Lada_%287906566374%29_%282%29.jpg|VAZ 2108 Samara (3-door), shorter hood and fender of initial design File:Lada_Samara_1500_S_1995_%2815270177066%29.jpg|Lada Samara 1500S five-door hatchback, later version with longer hood and revised fenders File:1990 Lada Samara 1500 (Helsinki, Finland) (2).jpg|Lada Samara 5-door (rear view) File:2003 VAZ 21099 blue rear.jpg|VAZ 21099 (Lada Sagona) four-door saloon (rear view) In 1987, the
model range was joined by the 21083, with a 1,499 cc engine and five-speed gearbox, and the 21081, with a , 1,099 cc engine. The 1.1 was an export-only variant. Top speeds were (1.1), (1.3) and (1.5); fuel economy was (1099), (1288), or (1499). VAZ also debuted the 2109 five-door
hatchback that year, also available with the 1.1, 1.3, and 1.5-litre engines. In 1989, the 21099 saloon followed, which had a new
bonnet, grille,
wings, and -longer rear overhang, as well as an improved
dashboard. The 21099's front-end styling was adopted on the 2109 in 1992 and the 2108 in 1994. A number of other minor alterations followed, including fuel-injected engines to meet emissions regulations in export markets. On the earlier Samaras the front clip had been a separate piece, surrounding the headlights. On the sedan version, the fenders go all the way up to the headlights and the lip of the bonnet dips between the headlights and meets the slimmer grille. Full production of the 21099 began in December 1990, with models 210993 (1288), 21099 (1499). The saloon, intended as a premium model compared to the hatchback, was given a distinctive branding in some export markets: Diva (Belgium), Sagona (France), Forma (Germany). Belgium also offered a locally built
convertible. The 1.1 and 1.3 were eventually taken out of production, having already been withdrawn from export markets, while the 1.5's power increased to .
Special models A
Wankel engined Samara three-door hatchback, the 2108–91, powered by a two-rotor
VAZ-415 (with two 654 cc rotors) was sold in Russia only, and only in very small numbers. With a five-speed gearbox, it was priced at 56,000 rubles. Due to severe reliability problems, this remained rare, most commonly bought by police and other agencies to use as a pursuit vehicle, for which its top speed was ideal; it was capable of in eight seconds. The subsequent 2109-91 five-door hatchback had the same VAZ-415 and gearbox. There was also a rear-engined Samara 4x4 rally car, also known as the NAMI 0290, built for the 1985 Soyuz Rally; it had permanent four-wheel drive and a 1,568 cc
Zhiguli-based engine, over the rear axle. It was nicknamed Appelsin ("orange", for its paint), and used
ZAZ-1102 doors (though the body was mostly fiberglass, weighing only ) and still using factory Samara wheels. The 1987 mid-engined Samara-EVA had a
turbocharged 16-valve 1,860 cc engine (with electronic fuel injection) of ; a naturally-aspirated version produced . The only component left untouched was the original Zhuguli 2106 block. An even more powerful Samara S-Proto appeared in 1989, putting out . Most notably, the Samara T3 came seventh in class in the 1990
Paris-Dakar Rally and fifth in 1991, piloted by
Jacky Ickx. The T3 did not contain many Samara parts however, using the
Porsche 959's four-wheel drive system and a 3.6-litre Porsche flat-six. It was developed by French concessionaire Lada-Poch together with NAMI and the
Tupolev aircraft factory. In the mid-1980s Lada developed its first ever convertible car on its own, then actually entering production and quickly exported to most European countries, called the Lada Natasha Cabriolet, a four-seater convertible that was based on the popular Samara 1300/1500 models with a manual opening and closing canvas roof. Also in some European car markets the LADA Niva 4X4 1600 cc engine was also available for both the Lada Natasha and Lada Samara cars during the 1990s. The
AvtoVAZ division VIS-AVTO produced special commercial vans and refrigerated trucks for various purposes on the VAZ 2108 platform. == Exports ==