Thursday, December 17, 2009

Alfa Giulietta by name

Alfa Giulietta
You should have been reading this last Friday but, at the last moment, there was an unusual hiccup with the announcement of the Alfa Romeo Giulietta.

It wasn't going to be called the Giulietta. It was going to be the Milano.

Trouble is, Alfa is moving to the nearby city of Torino and Alfa's workers weren't happy about calling the car Milano when it wasn't going to be made there. So Alfa had to make a change.

Fortunately this cock-up isn't likely to happen over here because Vauxhall is hardly likely to call a car the Ellesmere Port.

Anyway Alfa Romeo pulled a name out of the history books and is calling its 147 replacement the Giulietta. It's quite a nice name, if a bit tricky to spell.

It's a rival to the VW Golf but slightly longer -- by 130mm -- and has a 50mm longer wheelbase. Unlike the Golf and the 147 it'll only be available as a five-door model but like the 147 and 156 the rear-door handles are subtly disguised so it looks more like a three-door in any case.

Like the new Mito the Giulietta is a looker. The front has the classic Alfa grille in its sexiest form yet with two lateral air intakes above. But you can judge from the pictures whether it has the X factor.

Inside, and this is usually the bit where Alfa is brilliant (even in the 80s when Alfas weren't exactly reliable they were lovely to sit in while help came), the Giulietta is no exception.

There's a classic twin-binnacle for the important dials and novel trim textures together with body-coloured metal inserts.

All engines will be turbos -- they'll start with a 120bhp 1.4-litre petrol engine and carry through to a 170bhp 2.0-litre diesel.

Alfa reveals special-edition Brera

To release a special-edition version of the Brera, the Alfa Romeo has grouped with Italian fashion designer Italia Independent.

special-edition Brera

Further, only 900 numbers of the Alfa Romeo Brera Italy Independent Special Edition will be made. A source said that the model is expected to be released in the UK in the year 2010.

Matte black paint, 18-inch gloss black alloy wheels, red brake calipers and an aluminium fuel filler cap are the alterations that are made over a standard Brera.

Moreover, the new model comes with black leather sports seats with red stitching, a leather sports steering wheel and aluminium pedals. And the inside section has materials including linen, Kevlar, carbonfibre, Alcantara and cashmere. The power comes from either the 2.2-litre JTS unit or the 3.2-litre V6 that gives out 256bhp.

special-edition Brera

Also the car will be used on a tour of fashion boutiques in Rome, Zurich, Paris and London.

The price details are not unveiled however purchasers can take it for a virtual test drive on the Xbox’s Forza Motorsport 3 game.

Alfa Romeo is not for sale, says Chairman Luca di Montezemolo

Alfa Romeo
Fiat S. p.A. has denied any truth to a recent analyst report that suggested that Alfa Romeo could be bought by Volkswagen AG. Fiat S.p.A. Chairman Luca di Montezemolo puts any doubts to rest when he asserted that Alfa Romeo is not for sale “under any circumstances.”

In an interview with Reuters, Montezemolo said that the company will soon present the new Alfa that will replace the 147. In addition, he said that he sees “important opportunities” for Alfa Romeo in the US.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Alfa Romeo Favors Giulia Sedan




Alfa Romeo, the maker of small and sporty cars like the Duetto Spider, will probably choose a sedan for its first U.S. model in more than 15 years, Alfa Romeo Chief Executive Officer Sergio Cravero said.

Americans are more likely to buy the Giulia sedan, the successor to the 159 automobile that Alfa Romeo sells in Europe, rather than smaller hatchbacks such as the MiTo or the new Milano, Cravero said in an interview at the company’s Turin, Italy, headquarters.

“The Giulia is a car that could be the most interesting for the U.S. market,” he said. “We need to build cars together with Chrysler that have an Alfa Romeo soul.”

The money-losing division, whose Spider was driven by Dustin Hoffman in the film “The Graduate,” will restart Alfa Romeo sales in the U.S. in 2011 or 2012 to help reach its goal of breaking even. Fiat, which owns about 20 percent of Chrysler Group LLC, will build the Giulia at a Chrysler factory and design it on the same frame as a Chrysler to save money.

Alfa Romeo, which pulled out of the U.S. in 1995, must sell 250,000 cars a year to break even and plans to add a sport utility vehicle and a larger sedan, both models that could be jointly developed with Chrysler, Cravero said.

Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne, who also runs Chrysler, says a carmaker must produce about 1 million vehicles per platform to be profitable. Cravero aims to build the new Alfa Romeo model on the same chassis used by Chrysler to save costs and boost production the way Fiat did with its small car Panda. That model shares the underlying engineering of the Fiat 500 and Ford Ka.

Police Force

“We have to find a solution that makes sense economically,” Cravero said. “We can’t wait 10 years to see results.”

Fiat’s first car to be introduced in the U.S. since the Chrysler deal will be the 500 sub-compact, slated to be presented next year. The 500 is already undergoing tests to meet standards in that market. In June, Fiat obtained 20 percent of Chrysler and management control through an agreement that brought the U.S. No. 3 carmaker out of bankruptcy. Fiat’s mandate is to turn Chrysler around by sharing technology to build energy-efficient cars.

The 159 was introduced in 2005 and was a successor to the 1960s version used by Italy’s police force for its fleet. The new Giulia could be built on Alfa Romeo’s C-Evo platform or Chrysler’s 300C platform, with plans to be disclosed by September or October, Cravero said.

Too Heavy

The challenge is to find a platform that will work both for Chrysler and Alfa Romeo. The 300C platform, which was developed in 1995 with Mercedes-Benz, isn’t competitive enough because it’s too heavy and lacks the smooth handling of newer cars, according to Andrew Close, an auto analyst with IHS Global Insight in London. Retooling the C-Evo for a bigger car isn’t ideal either, he said.

“There are problems with both platforms,” said IHS Global Insight’s Close. “Chrysler’s 300C is very old and isn’t an ideal starting point, while the C-Evo is small and would have to be stretched for a segment that has high standards.”

The 300C platform is used in Chrysler’s Brampton, Ontario, plant. A Chrysler spokesman declined to comment on whether it plans to build Alfa Romeos there. The C-Evo, a previous version of which was used for Fiat’s Bravo and Lancia’s Delta, is made at Alfa Romeo’s plant in Pomigliano, Italy, and is being used for the new Milano model that will be introduced next year.

Extend Incentives

Cravero estimates Alfa Romeo may lift annual sales next year to as many as 145,000 cars, an increase of more than 20 percent, following the introduction of the Milano, a 5-door hatchback. Because governments have yet to decide whether to extend incentives to buy new cars, reaching that goal may be difficult, he said.

Fiat, which reported a first-quarter loss, owns the Fiat, Alfa Romeo and Lancia brands, in addition to Ferrari and Maserati. Alfa Romeo sold 103,000 vehicles last year, according to its Web site. Cravero estimates sales may reach 120,000 this year.

Alfa Romeo’s best-selling European cars may be too small for the tastes of U.S. drivers, Cravero said. The MiTo, a two- door hatchback that Alfa Romeo introduced last year priced at an average of 17,000 euros ($25,000), targets consumers between 18 and 30 years-old. The car is selling well in Europe, he said.

The Milano, scheduled to debut at the Geneva car show in March, isn’t likely to be offered in the U.S. because people prefer sedans there, Cravero said.

Dollar’s Weakness

Importing Alfa Romeos from Italy would make them too expensive because of the dollar’s weakness against the euro, which would add about 40 percent to the list price, Cravero said. The Alfa Romeo sedan would probably compete in the “premium” car segment that includes the Audi and BMW brands.

Alfa Romeo must overcome the American consumer’s memory of cars that broke down during its previous foray into the U.S. market, the second largest after China, Cravero said. Poor quality would be costly at a time when Alfa Romeo is seeking to become profitable.

It takes at least 18 months to develop a new model, Cravero said. Developing a new platform can cost at least $1 billion, according to Stefano Aversa, president of AlixPartners, who has done consulting work for Fiat and is currently advising General Motors Corp.

Alfa Romeo may be able to seduce consumers with images of its new high-performance 8C Spider “super car,” which was introduced this year and sells for 213,000 euros. More than 1,200 reservations were made for the 500 models built, Alfa Romeo officials said at a presentation last week. A total of 35 have been reserved by customers in the U.S.

‘Great Car’

Alfa Romeo, which was founded in 1910 and became famous for racing with its first autos, built the Spider and its predecessor, the 8C coupe, in Fiat’s Maserati factory in Modena, Italy.

The 8C Spider “is a great car, but there are only 500 of them,” said IHS Global Insight’s Close. “The question is how will Alfa Romeo be able to capitalize on the fact that the 8C super car exists and can it translate into sales of other vehicles.”

2010 Alfa Romeo 8C Spider

Within seconds of launching the Alfa Romeo 8C Spider out of pit lane at the company’s Balocco test track near Milan, in northern Italy, I’m grinning like an idiot. And I’m not even driving.

The first reason is the noise: a manic blare and bark from the 4.7-liter V-8. The sheer volume and ferocity of the sound beats even a Ferrari Scuderia’s or a Lamborghini LP560-4’s and makes one wonder how the 8C gets through tough European pass-by noise regulations.

The second is that Domenico Bagnasco, the car’s chief engineer, pitches the 8C Spider sideways into the first corner he approaches. He holds the car in a long, lurid slide, the rear tires wreathed in smoke. By the third corner, I’m convinced he’s totally expletive-deleted insane.

When Bagnasco hands over this $301,600 roadster to me, it takes all of two corners to see that this is one beautifully balanced car, with delightful, talkative steering. For a few bucks more than 300 large, the 8C Spider had better be special, but I’d rather have one of these than a Bugatti Veyron. The 8C Spider is not as fast, but it has soul. The Veyron, by comparison, lacks tactility and passion.

Like the 8C Competizione coupe, Alfa Romeo is making only 500 of these convertibles. Just 35 will make it to the U.S., compared with 84 coupes. As with the coupe, the Spider is underpinned by components filched from the Maserati parts bin, but all of the bodywork is made from carbon fiber.

The control-arm suspension is lifted from the GranTurismo, as is a dry-sump version of the Maserati 4.7-liter V-8 that produces 444 horsepower and 354 pound-feet of torque. It drives the rear wheels through a rear-mounted, six-speed automated manual transmission. Brembo carbon-ceramic brakes, 15.0 inches at the front and 14.2 out back, sit behind 20-inch wheels.

Alfa says the Spider weighs 198 pounds more than the coupe. To offset raising the center of gravity versus the coupe’s, the car has a powered cloth top (rather than a folding metal roof) and a carbon-fiber windshield surround. The claimed top speed of 181 mph is unchanged from the coupe’s, but the 0-to-60-mph performance will likely be 0.2 second slower, at 4.4 seconds.

The convertible is about 30 percent less rigid than the coupe, Bagnasco says, quickly adding that the “rigidity of the coupe is very, very high.” As a result, Alfa recalibrated the springs, anti-roll bars, and shocks. The coupe was criticized for its firmness, whereas the roadster is actually pretty civilized.

Until the man behind the wheel gets serious, of course. Press the sport button, use the column-mounted manual paddle shifters, and the Alfa becomes a beast that will torture its rear 285/35ZR-20 Pirelli P Zero tires. It’s fast in a straight line and exhibits the purest handling balance one could wish for: understeer on turn-in, neutrality with the application of power, and yee-haw oversteer with too much right foot. The brakes are sensational, and the gearshifts are superfast in manual mode.

The driving experience is one reason the car is special. Another is the way it looks. There are plenty of cars that are visually interesting and intriguing—the Veyron and the Audi R8 come to mind—yet very few that are truly beautiful. The 8C is utterly gorgeous whether the top is up or down. Like the Zagato- and Touring-bodied 8C-2300 and 8C-2900 Alfas from the 1930s, the 8C Spider will look fabulous on concours lawns 50 years from now.

The interior is lovely, too, carrying the perfume of Poltrona Frau leather. There’s a sense of old-fashioned artisanship that works toward justifying the price. For instance, the panels that surround the gauges and the heating and ventilation system are machined from billet aluminum just as in a high-end Chip Foose hot rod. The Recaro seats have manual adjustments and are constructed of carbon fiber, a material that also adorns the cabin.


Alfa Romeo 8C Spider

Alfa Romeo 8C

Alfa Romeo 8C Competizione

Alfa Romeo 8C Competizione  back view

The 8C Spider is a great car, if somewhat outside the Alfa mainstream. Like the coupe, it was built as a halo vehicle and marks a low-key return to the U.S. market, which Alfa abandoned in 1995. When the marque makes a full-blooded return in a few years, it may be with the stylish MiTo, the car furthest in price from the 8C Spider in the Alfa lineup. Alfa is perhaps the only brand that can credibly deliver both a budget subcompact and a $300,000 convertible. There’s a kind of artistry to that, too.

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Alfa Romeo 159 - sharp gets sharper

Geneva 2009: Alfa Romeo 159 - sharp gets sharper

Of all the cars in the world, the Alfa 159 is one of the last we would have thought needed a refresh. Unfortunately, the sedan's styling hasn't translated into a market success for the Italian automaker, so they've opted for a facelift. Thankfully they haven't messed with the near perfection of the 159's lines too much, sharpening up the already razor-sharp lines in the hope that the updated 159 will help the brand hold down the C-segment in Europe until the Giulia that's set to replace it rolls around late next year.

Alfa’s Quiet Comeback

8C Competizione
Alfa Romeo 8C Competizione.

It was a big deal when Alfa Romeo announced it would be selling the new 8C Competizione in the United States. Alfa hasn’t sold cars here since 1995.

But the landmark announcement didn’t come at a major auto show, or at any auto show for that matter. It happened at the Meadowbrook Concours d’Élégance in Rochester Hills, Mich. There would be only 84 examples of the 8C exotic, a $200,000 car, allotted for the United States (out of 500 total worldwide).

But I still expected major pomp and fanfare. After all, it’s Alfa, the brand of Tazio Nuvolari. So it came as quite a surprise when Jalopnik posted this photo taken at a train station in New York. It’s an Alfa 8C with the license plate 001 USA.

Alfa Romeo Brera

Unveiled on the Italdesign Giugiaro stand at the 2002 Geneva Motor Show as a concept car, the Alfa Romeo Brera stirred exciting international acclaim, whether from motoring journalists or the general public.

Alfa Romeo Brera

Alfa Romeo Brera concept rear
The 2+2 Alfa Romeo Brera is generous in size: 1830mm wide, 4413mm long and 1372mm high, with a 2525mm wheelbase. However the deeply tapered front and rear styling makes it look like a much more compact car.

The Brera was a concept car which made make it through to production. The first cars were produced in 2005.

Alfa Romeo 8c Competizione

Alfa Romeo 8C Competizione

Alfa Romeo 8C Competizione rear view

Alfa Romeo 8C Competizione concept side view
Designed and developed at the Alfa Romeo Style Centre, the 8c Competizione prototype pays homage to road racing Alfa's of the 30s and 40s which bore the 8c signature, while 'Competizione' refers to the 6C 2500 Competizione, a car driven by Fangio and Zanardi in the Mille Miglia race of 1950. (see 2006 BMW Mille Miglia concept)

The Alfa 8c is a retro design powered by a Maserati V8 engine
Alfa Romeo are well known for producing flamboyant and beautifully styled cars, sometimes overlooking reliability. The 8c Competizione concept takes this philosophy to another level, and is one of the most stunning designs to come from the Italian manufacturer.

The flowing graceful lines of the 8c Competizione are a trait shared with another Alfa concept, the Nuvola. Both cars are inspired and shaped by Alfa Romeo models of the past, and their aesthetic design reflects this retro influence.

Alfa Romeo Is Headed Back to America

Perhaps as soon as late next year, new Alfa Romeo cars will be available in United States, for the first time since the mid-1990s.

Alfa Romeo 8C Competizione
That’s why I journeyed to Turin, Italy, recently to drive a new Alfa Romeo MiTo, which I write about in this Sunday’s Automobiles section. The Beetle-sized MiTo will lead the Italian beachhead on American shores and should be in Chrysler showrooms in about 15 months.

This is a rather recent turn of events for Alfa, which has aspired to return to the United States almost since it left in 1995. But it lacked a dealer network and the means to start one up. Fiat’s recent acquisition of a large stake in Chrysler changed all that. Alfa is a part of the Fiat Group, which means that Alfa — not to mention Fiat — suddenly took over an existing distribution channel for its cars.

So, cars like the MiTo and four varieties of the Fiat 500 minicar have been fast-tracked to the United States. Other models could soon follow, despite denials by the Fiat Group. In the past month, spy photographers have snapped the upcoming Milano hatchback being prepped to American standards.

In a viability plan presented to the federal government last February, Chrysler revealed that the Milano was in the works and that it could be built in the United States. The Milano could make its official debut at the 2010 Geneva auto show.

Other new models reportedly in the offing are a flagship sedan, referred to as the 169, a cabriolet and a small S.U.V. Several current Alfas, like the 159 and the Brera (which are not coming to America), have been lauded for their styling; yet sales of the Alfa brand worldwide have been in a steady decline from a high of 213,638 in 2001, to just 103,097 last year.

Does Alfa Romeo have any Green Cars?

There are many people who as if the Alfa Romeo have any Green Cars? Ask them the meaning of green cars and they will not be able to say. Most people who drive cars know the terrible situation the CO2 emissions of their car are causing to the environment of the world. They also know that sooner or later, the natural oil resources of the world which has been helping them to drive their cars for decades will soon get exhausted and then there will be no way to drive their cars, unless they turn to green car fuels!

Hence, the scientists of most motor organizations are trying to find out alternative means and fuels of driving cars and some of these alternative means include the use of hydrogen fuel and also using electricity to drive cars. The cars that run on alternative fuels and who emission does not harm the environment as much as the natural fuels does are better known as green cars.

Check out with any car manufacturing company and you will find that they have one or more such model in their production lines. In fact a few of them have even successfully produced environment friendly cars. The Alfa Romeo is not far behind too and they too have produced cars that can be termed as green cars. The new Alfa Romeo Mi.To is a new generation of cars from the stables of Alfa Romeo. This compact car with a sporty look is the first green car to be produced by Alfa Romeo.

Alfa Romeo Milano spy video


Here is a spy video of the much anticipated Alfa Romeo Milano. The video was taken as the new Alfa hatchback undergoes testing at the Nurburgring. After many spy shots of the Alfa Milano, the video gives more of an idea as to the size and shape of the car, larger than the current 147 that it is replacing.

Of note is also the engine noise: a nice rumble. The Alfa Milano will feature some new engines, including the 1.4 litre MultiAir and, most likely, a 2.0 litre MultiJet twin turbo at 220 hp.

Alfa Romeo adds MultiAir system to Mito Hatch, increases Fuel Efficiency

Fiat is well-know for being on the forefront of developing diesel technologies but it still wants to conquer new grounds by adding fuel saving technology to petrol engines. Fiat will use the MultiAir system in the Mito Hatch from Alfa Romeo which is soon to debut in Europe.

MultiAir power plants is said to generate 10% more power and 15% more torque. Aside from these, car owners can also save about 10% more fuel and lower significantly their emissions.

The Mito 1.4L hatch will be the guinea pig for the MultiAir technology. This variant is will be released with engine options of 170hp, 135hp, or 105hp.

The MultiAir system relies on the breakthrough design of the electro-hydraulic valve which makes saving more fuel and decreasing emission possible. The combustion of the petrol engine and its ability to conserve fuel is dependent on the quality of the air charges in the cylinders.