Simca 1100

Simca 1100
Overview
ManufacturerSimca
Also called
  • Simca 1200
  • Simca 1118/1204 (US)
  • Simca VF
  • Talbot 1100
  • Talbot 1200
  • Dodge 1100
Production1967–1985
Assembly
Body and chassis
ClassC-segment compact family car
Body style3/5-door hatchback
5-door estate
2-door coupe utility (pickup)
3-door van
LayoutFront engine, front-wheel drive
RelatedMatra Rancho
Powertrain
Engine
Dimensions
Wheelbase2,520 mm (99.2 in)
Length3,937 mm (155.0 in)
Width1,587 mm (62.5 in)
Height1,460 mm (57.5 in)
Kerb weight918 kg (2,024 lb)
Chronology
SuccessorTalbot Horizon

The Simca 1100 is a series of French compact family cars – mainly C-segment hatchbacks, but also a compact wagon and popular delivery vans – built for over 15 years by French car-maker Simca, from 1967 through 1982/1985. There was even a very early 'hot hatchback', and a family cross-over: the Matra Simca Rancho. The hatchbacks were replaced by the Simca-Talbot Horizon.

The 1967 Simca 1100 series was historically significant for combining numerous modern design features – in affordable cars with numerous available engines. The 1100 series were the first unibody family hatchbacks and compact estate car, to integrate a transversely mounted engine and front-wheel drive, with all-around, modern independent suspensions with anti-roll bars (double wishbones up front, and rear semi-trailing arms), and disc brakes, rack and pinion steering, and folding rear seats, for maximum space utilisation and practicality.

The front-wheel drive Simca 1100 hatchback range, introduced in 1967 was a top seller across Europe, and was said to have influenced Volkswagen to succeed its range of rear-engined and rear-drive air-cooled vehicles, with a front-engined, front-drive, water cooled range, leading to the Mk 1 VW Polo, Golf and Passat series.

At just under four metres in length (3.94 m (12.9 ft)), the 1967 Simca 1100 series hatchbacks practically set the blueprint for European and Japanese C-Segment hatchbacks, defining most of their core design traits for several of the following decades.