Škoda 1202 STW
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| Manufacturer | AZNP |
|---|---|
| Production | 1961 to 1973 |
| Produced | 60,141 produced |
| Class | Comercial, Motor car |
| Body style | 4-door estate 3-door van 2-door pick-up |
| Layout | FR layout |
| Engine | 1.2 L I4 |
| Wheel base | 105.79 in, 2685 mm |
| Length | 176.71 in, 4485 mm |
| Height | 62.25 in. 1580 mm (estate) |
| Dry weight | 2370 1b, 1075 kg (estate) |
The Škoda 1202 This two basic body styles, the open bed pick-up and the STW station wagon. It was either a five-seater passenger four-door car, used as a family car produced as a station wagon with a distribution of weight for all roads with 35.3% front axle, and larger 64.7 % at rear axle, or Commercial vehicle light panel van and pick-up (Utility) and also special builds by Czechoslovakian automaker AZNP at their subsidiary plant in Vrchlabí.
The station wagon had an unusual body with one door on the driver's side and two doors on the passenger side. A saloon (sedan) version was never produced. It was introduced in 1961 as a successor to the station wagon and pick-up versions of the Škoda 1201 and closely resembled the slightly smaller Octavia Combi.
The car was powered by a 1221 cc four-cylinder ohv water-cooled engine delivering 34.5 kW (47 PS) of output, inherited from its predecessor, and which later also found its way into the company’s Octavia model. The four-speed gear-box included synchromesh on the top three ratios, power being delivered to the rear wheels via a jointed prop shaft the final drive as spiral bevel with final ratio of 5.25:1. A top speed of 100 km/h (63 mph) was quoted as from 1969, the engine now had higher power.
PERFORMANCE: (Early)
- Engine capacity: 74.68 cu in, 1221 cu cm
- Fuel consumption: 29.7 m imp gal, 24.7 m US gal, 9.5 1 x 100 km
- Max speed: 68.3 mph, 110 km h
- Max power (SAE): 47 hp at 4500 rpm
- Max torque (SAE): 63 1b ft. 8.7 kgm at 3000 rpm
- Max number of engine rpm: 5000
- Specific power: 38.5 hp/l
- Power-weight ratio: 50.5 lb/hp. 22.9 kg/hp
- Acceleration: 0—50 mph (0—80 km/h) 25 sec

Although volumes were never high, the model remained in production until 1973. More modern models Škoda 1000 MB and Škoda 100, produced in main plant in Mladá Boleslav, featured rear engine configuration, which was not suitable for station wagon and van bodies.The car was produced in Vrchlabí where a total of 60,141 units were produced. It replaced the Type 1201 STW and was later replaced by the regular delivery 1203.It was exported to Soviet Union and was the only privately-owned foreign car there until 1990.













