World’s NARROWEST car is unveiled: Ultra-slim Fiat Panda is just 20 inches wide – and is fully functional (if you can fit in it!)

It looks like a cartoon or Harry Potter film where the size of a normal car is crushed in a funny way.
However, this ultra slim electric vehicle introduced in Italy is a real passenger tool that works completely.
Fiat panda, which is only 19.6 inches (50 cm) wide, fits a driver and a passenger in the back – as long as they are thin enough.
It can direct the left and right, even at slow speeds, like other cars can stand forward and backward.
Since the car can fit into the most tight gaps, it will appeal to those who are infuriated by the area spent in a parking lot.
However, they receive a mixed response on social media, the commentators call it ‘practical’, ‘ugly’ and ‘hazelnut’.
A Reddit user joke: ‘There are a lighter stones where you put your feet on the ground to stabilize yourself.’
Another said: ‘The only car allowed on the bicycle strip’, while someone else wrote: ‘I can see Mr. Bean driving.’
The remarkable car is handcrafted by Andrea Marazzi, an Italian mechanic who uses materials from the original 1993 model Fiat Panda
There are a few more frustrating spaces in a parking lot in a parking lot – but the new ultra slim vehicle can fit into the most tight gaps
A fourth Reddit user published: ‘The average American does not fit, the fifth said:’ Clostrophobic is just looking at him. ‘
Another said: ‘I would be shocked if this was designed with something like health and security regulations.’
The remarkable vehicle is handcrafted by the 30 -year -old Italian mechanic Andrea Marazzi, who uses original materials from the 1993 model Fiat Panda.
He showed a last 45 -year -old Fiat Panda in Pandino, the Italian town in southeast of Milan.
And in response to the suggestions, the vehicle could fall from the slightest wind, and the Marazzi stable with a solid push.
In a video sent to Instagram translated by Italian, “ Many people think that they will be overthrown only by blowing, but mistakes, ” he said.
‘Look here – you have to push a little and it will shake but it won’t happen [fall over]. ‘
Only 19.6 inches (50 cm) wide, the car weighs 264 kg, has a height of 57 inches (145 cm) and is 133 inches (340 cm) length. Design explosion Reports.
Only 19.6 inches (50 cm) wide Fiat Panda, as long as they are thin enough to fit into one person
Mr. Marazzi showed a last 45 -year -old Fiat Panda in Pandino, the Italian town in southeast of Milan.
Despite its thin structure, it has several features of normal cars, including four wheels, two rearview mirrors and two passenger gates on both sides of the driver.
In the back, there is a very short and thin structure, a small area for a passenger that should be an ideal child.
The car also offers a single headlight for a steering wheel, indicator lights and at night, but there is no plate.
And instead of packing a gas motor under the hood, it operates in a 24V electric battery and an engine from an E-SCOOT, ie nine miles per hour (15 km / h), which is too slow to go on the roads.
However, Mr. Marazzi is in the process of sending the car for a Guinness world record as the finest operating tool ever made.
Gaurav Soood, Consumer Electronics Specialist Yango designMore ‘transport solution’ ‘art installation’ called it.
‘Dar Panda invites viewers to rethink the proportions, functionality and volatility in mechanical design’.
‘This is a rolling experiment – partly engineering struggle, partly tribute and partly public show.’
Fiat Panda is a city car that has been produced and marketed by the Italian company Fiat since 1980.
Although this is a completely functional car, it is not registered for driving on roads, not for sale or legally on public roads.
However, Slim Fiat Panda gives an idea of how close future cars can look to take advantage of the empty space in blockage parking lots and roadside.
Electric cars working in batteries such as smartphones are launched as the future of personal transportation, but some experts expect flying cars to take them to the sky.
The widespread adoption of flying vehicles will use a large empty space in the air, while greatly reduces blockage on roads.




