Very occasionally a manufacturer devotes itself entirely to a single car, such as the Tucker 48 or the Clan Crusader.
There will usually be one model which is the smallest the company has ever made.
So let’s have a look at them. Here, in descending order of length – or ascending order of shortness, if you prefer – are the cars from 30 brands which had the least distance between their fronts and rears.
We’re including only passenger vehicles from brands which still exist today, though our first example involves one which is now a sub-brand within GMC.
Hummer H3
Hummer is renowned for producing very large vehicles, but since its portfolio includes several models it stands to reason that one of them must be shorter than the others.
That model is the H3, based on a similar platform to the one used for the Chevrolet Colorado and GMC Canyon pickup trucks. In SUV, rather than pickup, form, it measured 4782mm (188.3in), figures whose like you won’t be seeing again in this article.
DS 3
The DS 3 first appeared in 2010 as a premium variant of the Citroen C3. Six years later, the Citroen badge was dropped when DS Automobiles was established as a separate brand.
Several new DS models have been introduced since then, including a second-generation 3, but the first remains the shortest at 3948mm (155.4in).
Volvo 66
Volvo’s first car was the 1927 ÖV4, which measured 4150mm (163.4in). No shorter Volvo was produced until nearly half a century later. The later vehicle was a slightly reworked DAF 66, designed and manufactured by the Dutch Daf company, which Volvo bought in the mid 1970s.
Volvo made very few changes, retaining the little Renault engine and the then extremely unusual continuously variable transmission, but in the interests of safety it added larger front and rear bumpers, extending the car’s length by a few inches. Despite that, it became – and still is – the shortest ever Volvo, at 3900mm (153.5in).
Alfa Romeo Giulietta Spider
Although it’s relatively rare, a few Alfa Romeos measuring less than four metres have gone into production. These include the Alfasud, the much more recent 4C and a version of the Renault Dauphine built under licence.
Shorter than all of these, however, is the Spider version of the 1950s Giulietta. According to the Museo Storico Alfa Romeo in Arese, which owns one, it measures 3860mm (152.0in).
Chrysler Sunbeam
The smallest Chrysler-badged car was a UK model built by Chrysler Europe at the Linwood factory in Scotland from 1977 to 1981. Latterly badged as a Talbot, it was 3830mm (150.8in) long from bumper to bumper, a measurement which would be inconceivable for any Chrysler built in the US.
A still smaller Linwood-built car known variously as the Hillman Imp, Singer Chamois and Sunbeam Stiletto was sometimes referred to (including on the covers of workshop manuals) as the Chrysler Imp, but it does not appear to have been sold under that name.
