Many fine posts here guys. And I apologize for saying that "viscouse coupling is crap". I obviously stepped on some toes on here as many of you have the previous generation of Panda with this system. And I am really sure that the vc in the Panda is working great. And I am sure that it works great in some Subarus.
I was really burned by the Suzuki I had, and my friend who had a Baleno had to have the coupling replaced many times as it didn't work. And another acquaintance drove Impreza...bought a Suzuki SX4; but was unhappy with the way the SX4 performed in winter, and she went back to Impreza.

(keep in mind we have pretty nasty winters up here in Norway, and we have 6 months with snow and a good 4wd system is something we need just to get home up steep hills with a few inches of fresh wet heavy snow after a snowfall)
I have a Golf R32 with the haldex system now, and are really pleased with that. Stock controller diverts power to the rear after ecu detects 15 degrees of spin at the front wheels, that's about 4/100ths of a revolution; so it reacts very quickly, ramping full possible torque split with haldex coupling locked 50/50 to the rear in about 1/4 of a second. But I resently upgraded the haldex controller to a blue one that ramps power to the rear quicker, and ramps it down slower. It takes into account the rate of the throttle position, to "anticipate" the need for torque at the rear before you actually have wheel spin. And it all work together with the abs/esp system of course.
The new Fiat Panda is a possible car for my parents. And sure you can test drive it. But I just asked on here if anyone could give some detailed info on the system, because I have tried to find with no luck. I feel we as customers demands to be able to know how things work. To many people (over here at least) go off and buy a Suzuki Swift because it say 4x4 on the back and trust and believe 4x4 is 4x4 and think it is going to perform just as good as an Impreza or a new Golf 4motion...or a Panda for that matter.
I believe the previous Panda is great, and if anyone can explain more about the new Panda's awd system in detail, feel free on here - for everyones benefit.
