Saturday, 30 August 2025

Tempra tempra

 


It’s easy to forget just how popular Fiat used to be. These days, the company occupies a quaint little niche in the automotive ecosystem - suppliers of bubbly, well-equipped hatchbacks to learners and the middle classes. If there’s ever a car to pass your test in, a 500e or a well-sorted Mk3 Panda is probably your safest bet.

Turn the clock back two-plus decades, however, and you’ll find Fiat poised for a mainstream push. Though the 131 and Regata’s reliability proved iffy at times, the Uno, Tipo and best-selling Panda proved the marque had the makings of a major player. A sleek new mid-size saloon was surely on the cards.

Arriving in 1990, the Tempra was a solid - if predictable - move from the manufacturer. After all, this was a time when the C-segment ruled supreme, and every carmaker had a point to prove and a family saloon to sell.

The Tempra’s impact in Ireland is perhaps more tangible than anywhere else - while the subsequent Marea/Brava/Bravo trio proved popular worldwide, the Tempra found work as an Irish police cruiser, soon scooping our Car of the Year award in 1991.

Seen here in Garda guise (Kinolibrary)

That’s not to say the car was completely without fault, however. A step up from previous Fiat fare it might have been, but electrical gremlins persisted, coupled with poor visibility from the rear and a thirst for oil.

This clearly wasn't enough to put off this Tempra buyer, however - and they're all the better for it. A rather crusty '94 model, it’s been off the road since at least 2011, with the nearby 131 and Croma becoming fixtures of this corner of Bray.

With a 1.9 litre turbodiesel engine under the lid, this Tempra wasn't exactly brimming with pep, only capable of 90bhp upon release. Still, its galvanised construction's worked a treat in the years since, with its only visible rust the result of a large dent on its rear flank.

​It could well be the last of its kind left in the country; though I suspect it doesn’t have long left. Pity.

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