Showing posts with label Alfa Romeo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alfa Romeo. Show all posts

24 Feb 2015

Driving Five Classic Cars In One Day

Recently I attended a classic car rally with of Great Escape Cars where I got to drive five bone-fide classics in one day


I've hired a car from Great Escape classic cars before. It was a 1971 Jaguar E-Type Series 3 V12 convertible and was huge fun to drive over a 24 hour period. This time out I was to spend a day with their fleet of classic motors, driving five olde English (and American and Italian) beauties.

At 9am on a cold but clear winter's day 25 of us arrived at Great Escape's Cotswold base. There were 25 cars available and to save arguing it was decreed that the choice of car would be decided by picking them from a hat - well, actually a hub cap.

Graham Eason, owner of Great Escapes, talked us through the various cars available for the day. The final one was a 1981 Austin Allegro 1.1. Graham had included it because it made for a good talking point, and because I think he secretly has a soft spot for it and hoped some of us would too.

I hoped it wouldn't be on the card as I reached into the hubcap. I'd brought my son, Eddie, along for the day and he wouldn't be too impressed if dad got the Allegro!

Eddie hadn't wanted to go with me, saying it would be boring just driving cars all day. Unlike his dad he isn't a petrolhead but he cheered up a bit when I showed him what car would be our first drive. No, not the Allegro but a 1983 Audi Quattro. Fabulous.

The air wasfilled with white smoke as 25 classics were fired up all at once in the morning chill. Rumbling V8s, shrill V12s, smooth inline-6s, a few inline-4s and my own turbocharged 2.1 Audi.

The Quattro's interior was clad in luscious, almost tiger-stripe, material that shows its age much more than the sharp, boxy exterior that still looks fab today. The engine is eager once the turbo has kicked in and whistles excitedly when the throttle is pressed hard.

What made it successful in its day, as well as those looks, are its handling and grip and the one I drove was still sharp round corners, although the brakes took some getting used to.

Eddie enjoyed that drive and took more of an interest in the fleet when we stopped at a cafe atop a hill, with a glorious view of the Cotswolds.

After tea and cake Graham once more flourished his hubcap and I picked a bright blue 1976 MGB convertible replete with 1.8 litre flat-4 with not many horsepowers at all.

The hood stayed down and we set off, following another car as Eddie's map reading skills are not up to much. Yes, the Great Escape's old school adage filters right down to using maps instead of satnav. Much more satisfying and in this day and age I rediscovered that getting lost really can add to the experience.

The MGB's interior was much more basic than the Audi's. So too was the engine and gearbox. With a crunch as I selected reverse instead of first (not for the last time) we were away.

This time Eddie's face really lit up. He's been a passenger in more than a few powerful and expensive cars but we had real fun for that hour in the humble MGB. Mind you we were getting seriously cold towards towards the end. We wished we'd brought some gloves and hats.

Lunch was held at a posh hotel after which Graham once again brought out the hubcap. Eddie had his sights set on a 1980 Corvette C3 in white but with a bright red interior and whilst I waited patiently he ran round the back and asked if we could drive it.

Triumphant he waved the Corvette card at me and we clambered in. White is perhaps my least favourite car colour but the Corvette in white looks sensational. Climb inside and those razor sharp lines around the front wheel arches look a million dollars.

The cabin is a snug fit but extremely comfortable. Despite being from the early 80s it was fitted with all the mod cons you'd expect from a car today - except for a touch screen. Electric seats, mirrors and windows, cruise control, air conditioning and, as a bonus, flip up headlights.

The Corvette's piece de resistance is its V8 which sounds deep and raw. This doesn't really translate into vast reserves of power but it does ride along well on a swell of torque, which is a good job because the 3-speed auto doesn't change down from 3rd unless you press the throttle really hard.

We had set off with the targa roof panels in the boot and the wind in our hair but after 30 minutes big lumps of hail started to come down. It took about 2 minutes to suss out how they fitted and to lock them into place.

Glad we weren't in the MG any more we set off once again. The hail was coming down in huge volumes and pretty soon the roads were very slippery. The Corvette is confidence inspiring and has light controls but as we drove up a steep hill at 20mph the rear wheels slipped and slid, although it did keep going to the top.

Half an hour later we stopped in a lay-by to drive car number four. The rally was running late so instead of the hubcap we merely swapped cars and jumped into a 1992 Alfa Romeo Spider.

Hail had turned to rain so we kept the hood up and set off. I'm not much of an Alfa fan and the Spider confirmed my prejudice. The switchgear is all over the place and the driving position odd but the car we drove was well maintained and reliable so if Alfas are your thing you'll enjoy a spin in it. I sort of did.

The day's final car was a 1965 Jaguar Mk2 3.4 (not the Allegro - yay!). This was the oldest car we'd driven. The interior is timeless and classic with bakelite switches, proper wood panelling, comfortable seats and the thinnest rimmed steering wheel I've ever experienced.

The Mk2 was smooth and the pace was lazy. It doesn't like being hurried. You just cruise around and soak up the atmosphere. Mind you the steering isn't that tight so you do have to keep your wits about you.

And so we arrived back at the base, bade our goodbyes and thank yous and left. Eddie had had a wonderful day and loved the variety of experiences.  He might not be a petrolhead but he does now have a soft spot for old cars, and the Corvette in particular.

So do I. I got in my modern TT and the steering wheel felt weirdly fat and the controls light as a feather.  Classic cars might be great fun but you really do have to drive them with due respect, and that makes you a better driver.




By Matt Hubbard







25 Jun 2014

Here's Every Press Release I Could Find About The 2014 Goodwood FOS

If you're headed to Goodwood this weekend there'll be plenty to see and do.  I've trawled the various press releases issued so far and copied them all to the Speedmonkey Facebook page.


Below the Renault 40CV photo are links to them all


BMW


Maserati


Williams F1


Fiat


Renault


Honda


Ford


Alfa Romeo


By Matt Hubbard




3 Jun 2014

Alfa Romeo 4C Review

Colin Hubbard reviews Alfa Romeo's lightweight sportscar, the 4C

Alfa Romeo 4C

This little Alfa with a 1.7 litre engine costs a staggering £45,000, that's bang on Porsche Boxster S money. It had better pull some surprises out of the bag.

To start with let's see why the price is so high and consider the driving experience a little later.

It was planned from the outset as a mid-engined car and high up on the brief was a very low weight, somewhere south of 1000 kilos. This would ensure it was nimble on its feet and could be a strong performer despite using a modest powerplant.

The design brief forced Alfa engineers down the carbon fibre tub route which brings in benefits of very light weight and a very strong chassis so it doesn't need to be firmly sprung to be a fine handler. The downside of the carbon technology is the cost, hence a Porsche price tag for a 4 cylinder car. This must have been quite a decision for Alfa's accountants but the engineers appear to have made their case well.

Don't let this put you off in any way, think of it as a down-sized supercar bringing exotic materials and dizzying performance to those who enjoy motoring and are prepared to spend every free penny on 4 wheels rather than those who happened to stumble upon 6 lucky numbers. This may well be the everyday man’s supercar.

With the chassis decision box ticked the next one was the engine. Do they go for a powerful naturally aspirated V6 like in the Honda NSX or to an emissions led 4 cylinder turbocharged motor? In the current environment and to keep weight down it just had to be the green engine and so development a new 1750cc turbocharged  engine began.

The final production statistics are exceptional with a dry weight of 895kg, 0-62 time of 4.5 seconds, and an average mpg of 41.5.
Alfa Romeo 4C

When I first set eyes on the car it looked stunning. It has a very low and wide stance but with a short length.  To put it into perspective it is some 35 cm shorter, 10cm lower but 31cm wider than a Boxster.

The bodywork design language is unmistakably Alfa and the look heavily influenced by the 8C (and why not!) but managed in a different way due to the car's differing engine location. From the way the creases unfold diagonally across the bonnet to the swooping lines up and over the side flanks it is an exciting car to just stand and stare at.

At the rear there's a serious diffuser beneath the bumper but no obvious aero enhancements at the front. It has those controversial headlights and I have to admit I am not a fan.

Every 4C comes with larger diameter rear wheels than the front.  On the test car they were 18' front and 19' rear. I love the kind of Hot Wheels effect they give the car, as the body increases in size toward the rear so do the wheels. The wheels are borrowed from the 8C Competizione and the telephone dial style suits the muscular bodywork.

To get into the 4C you have to lower yourself onto the sill and then drop into the well bolstered leather chair. First impressions were of a plush Elise with more creature comforts and Italian style. It is a small cabin but feels quite cosy.
Alfa Romeo 4C

The steering wheel is a chunky flat-bottomed affair and has sufficient reach adjustment to suit my favourite rally driving position with the wheel close to driver and arms bent.

The instruments are a single TFT digital display showing all the information you need in an instant, including which gear you are in.  This is not a car for posers but a serious drivers car, and my earlier Lotus reference is a compliment to its intentions.

The carbon tub is blatantly visible within the cockpit and in the boot area is almost shouting its exotic status.

The engine starts with a keen buzz and ticks over keenly while it warms up, with the sports exhaust making itself known from the off. There’s no manual gearbox option so to set off I pull on the right paddle and release the handbrake, giving it some gas to get going.

The first thing I notice when setting off is the steering weight as there is no power assistance, and even with the low kerb weight wrestling with the 205 section front tyres takes a little getting used to.

The brakes are servo-assisted but when I first go for the pedal they feel heavy and dead, however after a short while I got used to them and appreciate their feel and power.

While on the way to the Millbrook Hill Course I am briefed on the adjustability of the 4C’s set-up via the DNA toggle switch on the centre console. D is for Dynamic, N for Natural and A for All-weather although there is also a Race setting if you hold Dynamic for a few seconds.

As we enter the course I switch from Natural to Dynamic which drops the gearbox down a cog or two to get the engine into the power band and bumps up the boost ready for instant acceleration. The affect this has on the car is like the affect two cans of Red Bull has to a human being.  It gets fidgety, excited and ready for action.

Automatically I look over my right shoulder ready to move to the right lane and can see nothing but interior trim and engine cover. The rear three quarter view is none existent due to those high flanks so you have to rely on the well positioned and proportioned door mirrors.

I am coerced into accelerating hard down toward the first corner and it feels very stable, the corner feeds right, all the time the body remaining flat as I accelerate hard up the hill. In the left lane are rumble strips to test NVH (noise, vibration and harshness) which don’t upset the car as the ride isn’t that harsh.
Alfa Romeo 4C

The next corner is a tight left hander with a wall close to the right. As I wrestle with the non-assisted steering my escort enquires as to whether I have driven a LHD car recently.  When I ask why he says ‘you are very close to the wall’, so I apply a little more anti-clockwise pressure to the wheel and the car turns in tidily while very I Britishly apologise for our close shave.

Over the course the 4C reacts to corners like a proper sports car showing little sign of roll while remaining composed. The fixed rate aluminium suspension components are bolted directly onto the carbon tub to save the weight of subframes which helps their reaction to bumps and undulations and doesn't rely on stiff damping for good handling.

The weight distribution is rear biased with a 40:60 split and the square stance with wide front end gives a good balance entering and exiting corners. Alfa's Q2 electronic diff is standard fitment and ensures a clean getaway exiting corners so it's seriously capable and entertaining on track.

The engine in Dynamic mode is as buzzy as a bee in a cup and is keen to rev whenever pressure is applied to the throttle. When you back off even slightly the dump-valve chuffs and chirps to reduce pressure in the turbo, making it ready for instant acceleration. The engine being so close to the cockpit means it’s an intense aural experience and makes the occasion a special one. The sports exhaust is loud but bearable for short bursts and constantly blats, braapps and whirrs just behind your head.

The gearbox is easy to work via the paddles and in Dynamic mode it lets the engine rev higher and shift times are super quick when you pull on the right paddle. Coming down the gears you are met with a nice throttle blip.

After the Hill Course we head out onto the high speed bowl to check out the acceleration, which can't be tested out fully on a twisty, undulating circuit. As I accelerate towards the outside line it revs quickly and rapidly picks up speed - part down to the fizzy engine but massively down to the light weight of the car.
Alfa Romeo 4C

It cruises at a steady 110mph quite easily, the wide track giving added stability and in Natural mode the engine calms down a little and so does the exhaust. You can feel the undulations of the track and hear the tyre roar, which is a good thing in this type of car which should feel alive at all times. 

Toward the end of first lap I check the mirrors and give the brakes a hearty push and the vented discs and 4 piston front calipers rapidly retard speed, my confidence in them growing the more I use them.

As we eventually head back to the paddock I drop the DNA toggle down to All Weather and the engine, exhaust and gearchange severity all calm down, further enhancing the cars appeal as a daily driver. I would quite happily commute in the car in this mode and its 110 litre rear boot would swallow a fair amount of shopping making it every day usable.

Overall Alfa have been very clever with the 4C. They have stuck to their guns over the weight and by opting for a small, perky turbo unit have made a car that is not only great fun to drive but offers performance and looks that punch above the price range. In addition being turbocharged has meant they can play with the mapping for all out head-rush turbo-fun or for just a light entertaining torque-rich driving experience.

So back to my original thought and is it worthy of that £45,000 price tag. Absolutely, every penny!

Stats


Price - £45,000
Engine - 1.7 litre, inline-4, turbocharged, petrol
Transmission - 6-speed twin clutch semi automatic
0-62mph - 4.5 seconds
Top speed - 155 mph
Power - 237 bhp
Torque - 258 lb ft
Economy - 41.5 mpg
CO2 - 157 g/km
Kerb weight - 895 kg (dry)
Alfa Romeo 4C

Alfa Romeo 4C

Alfa Romeo 4C

Alfa Romeo 4C

Alfa Romeo 4C

Review by Colin Hubbard


14 Mar 2014

Geneva Motor Show - Mercedes, Audi, McLaren, Alfa, Renault and Infiniti

You've seen our coverage of my favourite cars at the 2014 Geneva Motor Show over the past few days.  This is the best of the rest.

The new Mercedes C Class was on display at Geneva

The new Mercedes C Class was on display at Geneva.  I didn't get a poke around inside but the exterior, some say a mini-S Class, looks great.
Mercedes C Class at Geneva Motor Show
The Audi TT was another new car on show.  Most people I've shown the photos to have said it looks boring but the TT 420 on display at Geneva looked fantastic, as you can see below.
Audi TT 420 at Geneva Motor Show

Audi TT 420 at Geneva Motor Show
The Alfa 4C Spider was on display.  It looks wide and squat - and beautiful.  The new headlights are much better than those in the coupe and it suits a targa shape more than a coupe too.
Alfa 4C Spider
The Renault Twingo was my favourite small car. It's rear engined, rear wheel drive and looks pretty cool.
Renault Twingo

Infiniti showed off its new Q50 Eau Rouge concept in a deep sparkly red that looked awesome under the lights.
Infiniti Q50 Eau Rouge concept at Geneva
McLaren's 650S Spider was on display.  Yep, it's a looker.
McLaren's 650S Spider
This is the new BMW M4. Great colour!
 BMW M4 at Geneva

By Matt Hubbard


4 Mar 2014

2014 Alfa Romeo 4C Spider

This is the Alfa Romeo 4C Spider and it'll enter production in 2015

2014 Alfa Romeo 4C Spider

The Alfa Romeo 4C Spider, which is more of a targa than convertible, will be displayed on the Alfa stand at the Geneva Motor Show.  It has a canvas roof, weighs 60kg more than the coupe and has a few new features over the hard top model.

The most apparent is the headlights.  The 4C is a gorgeous looking car but the headlights were never going to win any beauty contests.  This appears to have been resolved with a pair of xenon beams behind a glass cover.

Also new is an Akrapovic exhaust which improves efficiency and performance, and enhances the exhaust note.  The performance of the Spider is almost identical to that of the coupe.  The 1.7 litre, turbocharged engine takes it from 0-60mph in 4.5 seconds.
2014 Alfa Romeo 4C Spider

2014 Alfa Romeo 4C Spider

2014 Alfa Romeo 4C Spider

2014 Alfa Romeo 4C Spider

2014 Alfa Romeo 4C Spider

By Matt Hubbard


8 Nov 2013

Alfa 4C vs Lotus Elise S - How The Stats Compare


The Alfa Romeo 4C looks a pretty awesome car.  I've yet to drove one and probably won't, given my recent drubbing of the Giulietta.

Almost all reviews of the 4C say it's a return to form for Alfa and a unique car on the market with its light weight and great look - and no power steering which gives razor sharp handling.

Auto Express said:
"...you can buy and run one safe in the knowledge that there really is nothing quite like the 4C on sale today."
Which is a view aired in many reviews.  Except the reviewers seem to have been dazzled by the 4C's beauty and forgotten all about the good old British Lotus Elise S.

Let's look at the stats:

Price:  Alfa 4C £45,000 - Lotus Elise S £36,200

Engine: Alfa 4C 1.8 litre turbo - Lotus Elise S 1.8 litre supercharged

Gearbox: Alfa 4C 6-speed automatic - Lotus Elise S 6-speed manual

Power: Alfa 4C 240bhp - Lotus Elise S 217bhp

Torque: Alfa 4C 248 lb ft - Lotus Elise S 184 lb ft

Weight: Alfa 4C 895kg (although US spec version are 1,100kg) - Lotus Elise S 925kg

0-60 mph: Alfa 4C 4.5 seconds - Lotus Elise S 4.3 seconds

Top Speed: Alfa 4C 160mph - Lotus Elise S 146mph

Economy: Alfa 4C - 41.5 mpg - Lotus Elise S 37.5 mpg

Emissions: Alfa 4C - 157 g/km CO2 - Lotus Elise S 175 g/km

For £8,800 less than the 4C the Elise S performs almost at the same level in all categories and beats it in 0-60 mph.  And it has a manual gearbox, and no power steering.

If you are prepared to pay £52,900 the Lotus Exige S trounces the Alfa 4C in every category except weight.

The Alfa 4C does look like an exceptional car, but let's not forget that the Elise S is too, and for a lot less cash.

Article by Matt Hubbard




23 Oct 2013

Living with - Alfa Romeo GT

The car - 2005 Alfa Romeo GT JTD
Owner - Stu Rush

I promised to do an honest non-biased write up of owning and driving daily my Alfa GT JTD. I suppose if I had to use a phrase, it would be "Living with", quite fortunate then that this is exactly what it is.




A little history

I'm fortunate that I've known my GT since new as it was first owned by my Alfa-fanatic boss. She had it serviced on the dot and never went above 2000 revs when the engine was cold. It was their third car on the driveway, so had lower than average miles. It was well maintained, hence why I bought it as soon as she mentioned she was thinking about selling. I bought this in September 2011 with 51000 miles on the clock, the car was first registered on January 1st 2006.

First Impressions

The Alfa Romeo GT was launched in 2004, making it nine years old now.  So how does the exterior styling hold up? Has the Italian bella lost her looks? This depends on where you stand, literally. Viewed from the front the headlights are similar to the hatchback cousin the 147 and Great Aunt the 156, dating it as far back then as 1998 and yes, it's looking a little tired.

No multi LEDs here or even blue tinted halogens, but the grille is still unique, that great big Alfa shield taking centre stage like a knight's standard, which is exactly how it was intended to be. This makes it easily identifiable and with the registration plate out on the left hand side it makes a change from the norm.

I have discovered a drawback to this, if you enter the prepay parking car park at *London Olympia, you will still have to get out and speak to the attendant as the automatic number plate recognition cameras cannot see the whole of the plate.  Not a big inconvenience, unless you were one of the several cars stuck behind me the other day.

*other car parks are available





From the sides though this car is still simply gorgeous, not at all dated. The panels and doors that look like they were sculpted from Italian marble by Michelangelo on his victory lap are wonderful, but are also magnets for supermarket shopping trolleys and people-carrier passenger doors, due to the lack of protective strip. Which had they been there would have ruined the aforementioned handy work of Mr Angelo. The rear is, erm...tidy. The high boot does cause some slight visibility issues when reversing, coupled with the smallish rear window, but hey, you spend 99% of the time going forwards right? And it does have rear parking sensors for the squeamish.

Inside, and the toys

Now, opinions are split between us GT owners on this. Yes, leather seats were standard and jolly good they are too with firm sports style bum holders with good lumbar support and after a few hours you still feel pretty much ok. I've owned a 2005 Mondeo and a 2002 Volvo V40 and both had better comfort on long journeys but I think Alfa got the mix of style and substance right considering this is a GT coupe and not a large repmobile or mini cab. The downside though is the plastic dashboard, looking old and even a tad cheap, which is a shame when I think of what they could have done for the same money. Let's remember though that the interior also shares a lot with the 147 and it was cheaper and easier to 'borrow' that rather than start all over again. Poor show there from the purse holders at Fiat.

So what do you get in the GT? Mine is the first batch, not a special edition Blackline or Cloverleaf or even a Q2, so no Bose sound system. The stereo headunit is functional, CD player, 18 presets etc etc. On the plus side, stereo control from the steering wheel is standard, very handy as the head unit buttons are obviously designed for delicate Italian hands and not the rest of us, who bizarrely may actually want to change stations on the motorway at 70mph!

Standard again are aircon and heated front & rear screens and now this is good - individual heater settings. So should your passenger insist that they cannot travel below 25.5°C they can, whilst you relax at a chilly 24°C. Genius. Of course, I'm being sarcastic.  Why bother with that but not improve the dash? I know what I would prefer. The layout of the dials and gauges really is superb for the driver - sporty, easy to read and at night when illuminated, just damn sexy.

The trip computer is basic but useful and has fuel consumption, temperature and tells you the amount of miles left in the tank, though experience tells me to advise you not to trust that. Imagine being in the foot hills of Tuscany at 3am and asking a friendly Italian chap if he thinks you have enough fuel to get to the nearest petrol station -  lots of arm waving & Si Si but you're still not convinced he's telling you the truth or the football scores from Serie A.

Also as standard are ABS and traction control, which can be switched off for erm.. fun.

I digress. The rear seats collapse forward, making the inside huge, thus revealing what many already guessed. The GT is based on the 156 saloon running gear, giving you a very large two door coupe with saloon car boot space. I've had two greyhounds and two suitcases in there on a 3 hour journey, with the dogs stretched out fully and there's still space for your girlfriends shoes, so you know I'm talking serious cavern back there.

Engine and other oily bits

Mine is the 1.9 JTD 16v. This is shared with the Fiat Ducato and Vauxhall Vectra, making it a little cheaper for some parts then going to an Alfa dealer (please note that I would never recommend going to an Alfa dealer for an out of warranty service or part, unless you have more time than God and more money than a high street coffee shop chain on tax returns day). The engine gave 150bhp from the factory and it's pretty torquey, with lots of low down power throughout the six gears. Aside from typical diesel turbo lag, it's a great if a little noisy power plant - and on the motorway is a lot quieter.

You can easily cruise at 90mph (not in this country, and of course that is hearsay) all day long. I've had mine remapped to 190bhp, which got rid of a lot of the turbo lag and gives me smoother acceleration in higher gears. I'm no boy racer any longer but it's nice to have. Of course, this can lead to early turbo and transmission/clutch woes but it was my choice. There are several recommended tuning houses with Alfa experience.

This engine in the JTD Alfa's is noted for EGR clogging issues, but it can be removed by a competent DIYer and cleaned, replaced and as good as new. Mine failed but I bought a new one that was fitted by my local indy Alfa/Fiat garage, not too cheap but my skills and patience are limited. Other than that, it's a good strong engine and unless you have ragged it, even the turbo is known to last a long time.

One important tip though is to check when the timing belt is due to be changed. Alfa handbook says 72000 miles, however owners will tell you from experience that 50,000, or even 35,000 miles is the max. The main reason is that the the water pump is connected to this same pulleys, and this has a notoriously bad plastic design, which can give way therefore taking your timing belt and valves with it. Ignore this advice at your peril!

The gearbox is good, with usual diesel short ratio 1st gear but great leggy higher gears for long pulls throughout the rev range. It's worth noting that the GT has a heavy clutch as normal, but you soon get used to this.

The Fun Stuff

OK, so is it worth the niggles of owning an ageing Alfa Romeo? Yes. What? I have to explain more? OK, let's talk grin factor. Huge, huge amounts for a non supercar or high spec Beamer or Audi. It handles fantastically on corners, even the heavier oil burner. It's a firm ride sure, but it's a GT coupe after all.

On a safe, smooth (yeah, good luck finding one) country lane on a quiet afternoon you can give the impression to other motorists that you are on various happy pills and have possibly just escaped from an institution for the mentally unstable because all they will see is your dumb, grinning face as you exit a bend or crest a hill. This is the main reason to buy the GT, it is so much fun to drive, even on busier roads. I have had many cars but this is the most fun. The double wishbone suspension is efficient and feels safe and firm in a turn. The turbo diesel gives a nice pace, and I'm talking the standard 150bhp here. Not a great car to race from the lights, with an official time for 0-60 at a shade over 9 seconds but when you get going it's plenty for legal use. I cannot praise the torque on this car enough, it feels like it will last for ever.

Daily Driving

I use my GT every day to work and back and weekends, like the rest of you for trips to the shops. I do around 140 miles per week and return on average 42mpg. Of course on motorway journey it goes way way higher, in to the 50's. My commute is 10 miles each way at 50-60mph, which is nice as it keeps that EGR clean with regular driving to flush out those nasty carbon deposits. Oil use is surprisingly low, I had the 2.0 twinspark 156 petrol previously and that uses a lot more than the diesel during it's healthy state. Oh, and avoid potholes, as the firm ride acerbates these and this can result in early demise of your suspension, see Niggles below.

Niggles and What To Look For

Apart from the aforementioned timing belt (and I cannot stress enough the need to check that on this engine) there are not too may notable regular failings. The biggest is probably the suspension - the upper wishbones are notorious for failing early, sometimes as little as 15-20,000 miles and the lower wishbones are not much better, with bushes coming a close third. This is annoying because it's a quality issue Alfa knew about way before the GT was designed. It was first noted on the 156, which you recall has the same running gear as the GT and 147. Again, bad form from Alfa on that one. To get my uppers and track control arm replaced cost around £300. Finally, lower turbo hose is a common failure, as there's a screw or bolt on the gearbox that can rub against it and pierce it. Easily fixed by getting a silicon one with lifetime guarantee for around £50, which is what I did before mine failed, as a preventative measure.

And in conclusion...

Of course I love it, it's why I keep it on the road. It's far from perfect of course but touch wood, it's never let me down in 18 months and 15000 miles. Would I change anything? Yes, I''d get the V6 with it's 3.2 petrol engine. However that's not practical for my wallet, so as a daily driver this car is great. Diesel frugality with sports handling and Italian goddess looks, all for 5k. Feel free to ask me anything about this and I'll be honest with you.

Ciao!

22 Oct 2013

The Alfisti Turn Out To Be A Reasonable Bunch, Aside From A Couple Of Delusionals

My Alfa Romeo Giulietta review published yesterday on Speedmonkey and Jalopnik (thanks for the share, Travis).  It was a negative review of the car, about which I said:

"Alfistis are so passionate about Alfas I was really looking forward to driving the Giulietta in order to experience the sheer devotion to the brand myself.

But instead I felt conned. The Alfa Giulietta is a terrible car with no redeeming features, except its beauty."


It got a ton of comments on Twitter and Kinja.

What was interesting was that aside from a couple of people who sought to tear the review, and me, to shreds most Alfisti weren't surprised.  I was told the Guilietta isn't a true Alfa but a Fiat in disguise.  They told me about the older models that attract them to the brand - and said the 4C, not the Giulietta, was a true Alfa.

Here are some sample comments:

"Forget that pile of crap. Test drive a 4C & put an Alfa smile back on your face"
"Good read but was slightly disappointed with ur findings. I/you/usThe world,expected good things from the ride,Not so!"
"Can you give the 4C a try? You'll see what real Alfa fans love"
"This just proves what everyone knew all along: The 164 is the last Alfa. After the 164, there are only impostors"
"I drove the diesel 1.6 a few but furious miles ( with big phone wheels ) and it was not a drivers car. The engine managment was weird, too laggy and then too abrupt like the early tdis. Like you maybe i was expecting too much."


See?  Alfa fans know that modern Alfas aren't real Alfas, but that the 4C seems to be a return to form.  They have more realism and resilience than I give them credit for.  I wanted the Giulietta to be great but it wasn't, which was disappointing.

What was also disappointing were the two idiots who saw a bad review of a car they like and sought to sully the review with cheap shots:

"Some people are just made to drive Golfs, & other soulless boxes. Oh, and copying @JeremyClarkson is getting old."

"Speedmonkey you are dead wrong. Claiming the ride got worse in Dynamic shows you don't know what you are talking about. The DNA switch doesn't affect the ride. I'll just leave you with a review of a professional at Evo Magazine: http://bit.ly/aV1x6u"


I asked the first commenter exactly how I was copying Jeremy Clarkson, given I don't read other reviews of a car before I write my own, for exactly the reason I might subconsciously copy some aspects.  His response was "Whole section about annual servicing is something that TG mentiones every time they talk about AR", which is rather silly.

The second commenter was right in that the ride doesn't change when you press D, but the Alfa press guy told me the car "hunkers down" when you press the button, which is what made me think it did.  My mistake.  His point about the Evo review being professional was laughable.  Evo has a massive base cost, to print magazines, for which it relies on advertising from car companies.  Evo cannot completely slate a poor car because that company might withdraw advertising.  My poor review has no commercial implication simply because Speedmonkey does not rely on advertising to exist.

Aside from these two delusional chaps the Alfa community turned out to be a thoroughly reasonable bunch.

I'll leave you with this fantastic video of Alfa GTA engine noise, as recorded by @brizinorth.  Turn it up loud and listen to the 3.2 V6.  It'll make the hairs on the back of your neck stand up.  A true Alfa indeed.
Article by Matt Hubbard




21 Oct 2013

Alfa Romeo Giulietta first drive review

Matt Hubbard reviews the 2013 Alfa Giulietta 1.4 TB MultiAir 170bhp

Alfa Romeo Giulietta
It's very easy to offend people when you write about things on a regular basis.  Some groups are more sensitive to criticism than others.

6 Aug 2013

Spotted - Alfa Romeo 8C

I was dragged along to a car boot sale last weekend by Mrs Speedmonkey.  The 'event' took place in a hospital car park and the only thing of interest to me was this Alfa Romeo 8C.
Alfa Romeo 8C

I heard it before I saw it.  The sound was familiar, and obviously Italian.  Then the 8C turned into the car park and I knew why it sounded familiar.  It shares the 4.7 litre V8 with the Maserati GranTurismo Sport I tested a few months ago.

It's a wonderful, evocative noise.  At the time of the review I said how superlatives can't be attached to it - it simply sounds like the high-revving Ferrari-built unit that it is.  Here's a clip:


See, wonderful.

The 8C was built by Maserati and is achingly beautiful.  The shape of the body, the details, the wheels - all are exquisite.

The owner parked it in a disabled space.  Without excusing his behaviour I can kind of understand his reasoning.  It's a wide car, and a 2 door with long doors.  Getting out in a normal parking space is difficult.
Alfa Romeo 8C

24 Jun 2013

It's Alfa Romeo's 103rd birthday today

Alfa Romeo birthday
On 24 June 1910 Alfa Romeo was founded.  The company was initially called ALFA, which stands for Anonima Lombardo Fabbrica Automobili (Lombard automobile factory).

Happy Birthday Alfa Romeo.

21 Jun 2013

The Alfa Romeo 4C is massively wide

When the Alfa Romeo 4C was first announced the image above was released as part of a portfolio of photos.  At the time I thought it looked quite square.  The Alfa 4C is 1183mm tall by 3989mm long by 2090mm wide.

In other words it is hugely, massively wide.  I recently drove the Maserati GranTurismo Sport and commented how big it was.  Normal parking spaces were almost impossible to use due to it's 1915mm width and long doors.  The GranTurismo is 175mm narrower than the Alfa.

Think of big cars and the Alfa out-wides them all.  Range Rover - 2073mm, Rolls Royce Phantom - 1990mm, Ferrari FF - 1953, Mercedes SLS - 2075mm.  The widest car on the road today is the Lamborghini Aventador and that is a mere 2030mm.  The Alfa 4C will be 60mm (2 inches) wider than the Lambo.

Yet the Alfa is being touted as a small, lightweight coupe.  Yes it is lightweight at 895kg but it's about as practical as Tamara Ecclestone.  The Jaguar F-Type is 1923mm wide and the Porsche 911 Turbo is 1880mm wide.

The widest production car ever was the 1954 Chrysler Crown Imperial, at 2105mm.  The Alfa 4C is just 2/3 inch off being the widest car ever.


29 Apr 2013

Living With - An Alfa Romeo 159 Ti

Geoff Maxted reviews his Alfa Romeo 159 Ti - a loveable, pretty car that ate tyres for breakfast

It is said that a man cannot be a true petrol head until he has owned an Alfa Romeo. I have had two. Don’t ask me why. Oh all right then, but it’s not a pretty story. It culminated in my wife suggesting that ‘petrol’ was not quite the right word to precede ‘head’.

I once owned an Alfa that, when the mood took me, I could watch rust away in real time, It was true love - whilst it lasted; but love is a fleeting thing and my head was turned by a shiny harlot beckoning to me from a car showroom. That’s all in the past now. Best forgotten.

Moving on, I actually sold a Porsche Cayman to get the Alfa 159. That’s how crazy and mixed up I was. I thought I needed a motorway express to tote stuff around the country although that’s not how things worked out as it happens. There is no doubt however that the recently defunct 159 is a seriously beautiful car. Even the door handles are sculptural delights. More ardent admirers have been known to experience - how to put this delicately - strong emotions in the trousering department.

I selected a Ti because it had lowered suspension and 19” wheels - more on that later - and a 2.4L diesel for economy. The colour was flecked ‘Carbonio Black’. It changed with the light. For leather fetishists the interior was like their favourite club. Black leather throughout embellished with brushed aluminium trim. That’s it in the picture. The number plate is obscured to protect the new owner, poor bloke.

Best of all was starting the thing. It had a slot-in key and a real, actual, genuine start button with ‘Start’ engraved on it. It just doesn’t get any better than that. The pleasure I got from saying “Gentlemen, starrrrt yurrrrr engines” in what, I felt, was a very accurate American drawl was beyond measure and remained so until my wife said, “For heaven’s sake will you stop doing that!”. She didn’t say “for heaven’s sake”.

That’s the good news. The bad news is that Alfa, at that point at least, had not really sorted the reliability issues that plagued the brand: they just thought they had. Electrical gremlins began creeping in within the year. Batteries were exchanged and excuses were made but the worse thing was the aforementioned wheels. Nineteen inch wheels need big tyres. Big tyres are expensive; especially when the Alfa did for a set of front hoops in just over six thousand miles.

The car was delivered with an amount of negative camber to make the driver believe he was better at cornering than he really was. This was adjusted. Zero camber did not solve the issue. The fact is, a stonking great diesel engine suspended over the front driving wheels of what is a heavy, powerful car equals tyre wear and that’s all there is to it.

The problems became too much. The Alfa had to go. Since a mile-muncher was no longer required I selected a hot hatch. Boy, what a mistake that was….

13 Feb 2013

Alfa Romeo 4C - Specs, UK price and pictures

Alfa Romeo have revealed details and pictures of their new sportscar, the 4C.

Here it is, the new Alfa Romeo 4C, the latest entrant into the 2 seater sports car sector - where prices vary wildly from the £25,000 Toyota GT86 (OK, it's a 2+2) to the expected £80,000 Jaguar F-Type V8.

Where have Alfa pitched the 4C?  

Prices aren't official yet but it'll start at £40,000 in the UK.  Which means Alfa Romeo has shot itself in the foot even before the 4C is officially on sale.

Why?  

Because the Porsche Cayman costs £40,000, and that's the best 2 seater sportscar money can buy - and it's pretty.  And it won't break down, or rust.

What do you get for your £40,000?

The 4C based on experience and lessons learned from the 8C Competitizione, is less than 4 metres long, 200cm wide, 118cm high and has a wheelbase of less than 2.4 metres.  Basically that's short, wide and low.  It's light too as it's made from aluminium and carbon fibre.  Alfa haven't released weight figures but expect it to be in the 1,000kg region.

The engine is a 1.7 litre, turbocharged, aluminium, 4 cylinder petrol unit mated to a twin clutch automatic with flappy paddles and should produce 240bhp.  The engine is based on the one already found in the Giulietta.  0-60mph will be in the region of 5 seconds.

The car looks almost identical to the concept 4C released last year although the bodywork has been honed in the wind tunnel for aerodynamic efficiency.

What else?

The Alfa Romeo 4C will be built in the Maserati factory in Modena where Alfa expect to produce 2500 units a year.  Maserati also have plans for the car - they intend sticking a 3 litre engine in it and rebadging it for themselves.

The 4C looks quite pretty but Alfa obviously don't remember the Jaguar XJ220 debacle.  It didn't sell because it was a vastly overpriced, premium supercar with a piddling V6 engine.  The Alfa 4C would sell in droves if pitched at £35,000.  At £40,000 the Cayman will kill it with it's flat 6 and driving dynamics honed over the years - and it's German build quality.  The 4C will appeal to a hardcore bunch of Alfistas whilst everyone else will buy a Porsche.

The Alfa Romeo 4C will go on show at the Geneva Motor Show in March and will be released for sale shortly afterwards.