A facelift 500 would de-value existing cars, which would give the first group of owners a bad experience in loss of residuals, and the second (new) group of owners will hardly notice the facelift anyway since there are few of the first cars around. Therefore I don't think a facelift is a good idea. A steady improvement in equipment and quality would be fine.
-Alex
Meanwhile the horrendously-expensive Tributo Ferrari (about 4x the price of a USA 500) comes with automated clutch manual, like Dualogic, so that could easily be an option on Abarth models. Reliability? Well at least Dualogic has had years of improvement since 1998's Selespeed - FIAT doesn't seem to have shied away from introducing the MultiAir technology in the USA and that hasn't been around very long anywhere in the world...
-Alex
Manufacturers take 2 approaches in car design - Revolutionary or evolutionary. Thinking of the E36 series in the BMW at the later end of its life it has some small changes to the grill, etc so it was evolutionary - I had one of those. That might have been referred to as a 'facelift'. The E46 was a revolutionary change...
, I live on Long Island and when I tap in my zip code I get only one dealer within 33 miles of my home.
In the US, JLo has no credibility of appeal outside of the hispanic market
- and they cannot afford the price of a new Fiat.
... but getting into the 25 to 26 K arena for a Gucci is absurd.
The Abarth will probably not sell well here because it is way over priced for small city-car; the styling, aerodynamics and handling are OK for a Fiat 500 econo-boxer but not a "performance car".
Fair points
My point is this however, JHO is a marmite celebrity, you either love her or you hate her. Fiat should have chosen someone with more of a universal appeal