Posts Tagged ‘Alfa Romeo’

Car Crush No. 7: Alfa TZ3 Corsa

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

Not sure how we missed it at the time, but back in April at the exceed­ingly posh Villa D’Este car show, an incredible one-​​off special was announced that celeb­rated Alfa’s 100th year.

Just as well we didn’t spot it at the time, because we would have spend a whole summer lusting hopelessly after this beauty, mind-​​driving it through the workaday motoring moments of the week. The collab­or­ation between Alfa and Zagato has always for us been a lovely bit of car-​​type coöper­ation, both the original TZ and the TZ2 being gorgeous pieces of breadvan-​​like sleekitude — crossed of course with the angular quirk of the Zagato pen.

The TZ3 Corsa is a one off built by Zagato for jammy git car collector Martin Kapp, and no, you will never own one. It is, however, based on the already other­worldly 8C Compezione, but has a super light weight carbon frame and that hand-​​wrought steel panel loveliness that the Z-​​cars are known for.

Fast, light and incredible to behold. It’s tuesday, I’m in Love.

Show Girls

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

With the Paris car show looming in the headlights, we thought it timely to devote a daily post to our occasional study of automotive marketing.

One the the great and enduring peren­nials of any car industry event is, of course, the Promotional Girl.

And despite the fact that Beauty Contest –baiting political correctness is a little long-​​in-​​the-​​tooth and that even liberated laddettism seems quaint and sort of nineties-​​ish these days, there seems to be no sign of car companies slowing down there search for the perfect female figure to sell their product.

Fashions change of course, and the looks sported by promo people ebbs and flows with the cultural currents — but our favourite era remains the late sixties and early seventies, a time when a naïve sort of psyche­delia seemed to infuse everything and knee-​​high boots were par for the course.

The concept cars from that era – all wedgy and space-​​aged — were fairly out there, and the look of the girls were pretty alien too. Here is a little selection of our faves.

Definitive Cars of the 1980s

Friday, September 17th, 2010

Escort XR3i
Image: Chris Taylor

Near ubiquitous in the suburban environs of Britain in the mid eighties, Ford’s everyman classic is possibly Britain’s most instantly recog­nisable eighties motor.

Porsche 911 (959)

Spookily locked in tight to the aesthetic of the age, the 959 was Porsche’s group B rally homolog­ation special, and pioneered the company’s all wheel drive system.

Ferrari F40

The F40 was last car that the great Enzo Ferrari would personally commission, built to commem­orate the first four decades of the Prancing Horse. This ultimate in race bred road-​​legal motoring, it brought track and road exper­ience together in a legendarily lean, turbocharged package.

Honda CR-​​X

Nippy, light and to this day an accessible cult of enthu­si­astic motoring, we still desire one of these eminently chuckable Civic variants.

E30 M3 EVO.

Lusted after these last quarter of a century for its boxy mechan­icity, the E30 3 series makes you wish the world was the Green Hell.

Aston Martin V8 Vantage Zagato

Imagined in steel, wood and leather in the fusty workshops of Newport Pagnall, but bodied by the single minded Zagato in Milano. This was an unholy fusion of the old-​​world Aston and Italianate angularity. Decadent, faintly ridiculous, like the decade itself.

Audi Sport Quattro

No, Gene Hunt didn’t drive one of these. This was the short, stubby Group B Homologation car, one that no copper could ever afford. The Quattro expressed the twin obses­sions of the era  – all wheel drive and forced induction – in a geomet­rically appro­priate form that perfectly fitted the temper of the times.

Peugeot 205GTi

The defin­itive hot hatch of the eighties, the 205 GTi had front wheel drive but oversteered pleas­urably with lift-​​off going into the corner. This car is, to this day, stripped down, simple fun. Its success is as responsible as any car for the near ubiquity of the Front Wheel Drive form in current everyman motors.

Alfasud Ti Cloverleaf

We think some editions of Alfa’s ‘Sud are plain ugly: but the cloverleaf later versions with the twin carb 1500 Boxer and the bits of plastic trim scream eighties cool, and having recently driven one (thanks Scott) we are convinced. Some say they are even more fun to drive than the 205.

Thirty Reasons...

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Alfa Anniversary

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

If you’re even vaguely inter­ested in car culture, you must have realised by now that Alfa Romeo has recently celeb­rated its Centenary. There’s already been an acreage of coverage of stuff about the great marque, whose fortunes of late have been rising again thanks to the successes of the broader FIAT group. But we thought we should add our penneth­worth anyway.

For us, Alfa’s success and enduring appeal to lovers of cool motors comes from an essential integrity of purpose. When you look at the broad sweep of Alfa Romeo’s history, there’s an incredible through-​​line of design values. There’s something distinct about the tenets in-​​bred into every car they have ever produced. There’s no mistaking a true Alfa: and we can think of very few cars they have produced that didn’t warrant its badge.

It’s a bit of a cliché to bang on about them — you know, how you’re not really a petrol head unless you’ve owned one etc. But when you look at the cars and how they have been presented, you can’t help but agree that that essential Alfa-​​ness is a true yardstick of passionate motoring.

Even the relat­ively plug-​​ugly Alfasud had something about it that screamed a sort of tin pot Italian aristo­cracy about it. Numerous Influx readers pointed out to us that it’s a brilliantly handling small car. We’re even feeling the beauty of later cars, like the weirdly rakish 166, which you can pick up for a song these days. This almost waftish four door defied the push to practic­ality and design conver­gence that has plagued so many mid-​​range models.

The latest manifest­ation of the 8C is of course, painfully beautiful to behold, and we’ve always fetishised the stripped-​​down badness of the 105 series cars, partic­u­larly the Guilia GTAs.

But get an Alfa Saloon in race mode, and it’s appeal increases still. To us a tinge of moody phatness turns them into the automotive equivalent of the fragrant Latin lothario — with a deviant glint in his eye and a scar on his cheek. The 33 Stradale is in our opinion a contender for the most beautiful car ever produced – and as for the current Guilietta what can we say. We want one.

Many happy returns Alfa Romeo. Keep on doing what you do.

Alfa Romeo Montreal

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

It never ceases to cheer us up to see look at the gorgeous lines of the Alfa Romeo Montréal, which was penned by Lamborghini Muira designer Marcello Gandini whilst working at the Bertone Carrozzeria toward the end of the sixties.

Cutaways are always appealing; especially when they reveal the Montreal's beautiful innards

The production car was launched at Geneva in 1970, and was loved by almost everyone who lay eyes on her. But in it’s pretty body beat a powerful heart: a 2 litre V8 derived from the one that had been used in the Tipo 33 Stradale. It was therefore not only a lovely looking thing, it went like stink and had some serious aural grunt as well as a futur­istic ergonom­ically efficient interior.

A little under 4000 of the cars were produced until 1977, and the car remains one of the all-​​time most popular dream rides here at Influx towers.

The Bertone-penned Alfa exotic didn't need floppy hatted booth babes to look killer

Something for the Weekend

Friday, April 23rd, 2010