1947? 6C2500 Cabriolet by Touring
The design of the Tipo 158, later developed into the Tipo 159, began in 1938 when Alfa assigned Gioaccino Colombo to handle its development at Scuderia Ferrari. The car was built to the 1500cc "voiturette" class which Alfa was trying to become competitive in as they were getting very strong competition in the Gran Prix three litre class from Mercedes. Interestingly, the block used for this 1500 cc straight eight was that of its three litre brother while using a much shorter stroke. The chassis was , also, a lightened GP design. The Tipo 158, in the prewar years was secondary to its bigger Gran Prix bretheren and, so, was christened the "Alfetta". It was by no means a little brother of a performer, however, having a very favorable power to weight ratio. Such was its potential that Alfa was putting more effort into its development than originally planned, eventually raising power from 195hp to 225 by 1939. As these cars were developing and getting a good string of wins, the world was going to war and racing outside of Italy came to a complete halt. Development of a series of promising GP cars was halted and the cars were locked in the racing garages at Monza. When Germany invaded Northern Italy after the fall of Mussolini and they were about to encamp at Monza, the secretay of the Milan Auto club towed them in the dead of night to the safety of an abandoned cheese factory. Effectively, it was these cars that put Alfa back into racing at war's end, because all the developmental cars had been destroyed. Though Alfa's immediate post war budget was limited in the extremeand their stock of racing cars was seven aging 158 Alfettas and two 512 GP cars, they won races and continued to win races in those just postwar years and became the winningest racing team of all time. By mid 1946, however their age began to show and it became evident that an upgrade was in order. Supercharging and suspension changes were the order of the day, giving an increase in horsepower to 275 and in top spead to 167 from 145 previously. Ultimately, the winning 158 Alfettas were producing 350 to 380 hp out of their 1500 ccs! The advent of the final iteration to this car, the 159, came in 1951. The 159 was both a refreshment and , to some extent, a redesign of the 158, with heavy attention to all details including installing needle roller bearings on the cranks and greatly improved breathing and suspensions. By the end of production, the 1500cc straight eight was putting out 450-plus horsepower. The 159s saw an impressive string of wins,including J.M. Fangio taking his first world's championship, but competition from other makes, especially that of it's former team manager, the man who supervised Colombo at its birth, also saw the end of the 158 / 159 story at the end of 1951, ending an unparalleled five year winning spree.(information gathered from "Viva Alfa Romeo" by David Owen)
In 1950 Alfa Romeo introduced the 1900. The 1900 was a revolutionary car
for the automaker. Not only was the 1900 smaller than previous models, but
it also featured a 4-cylinder engine. Although AR considered the car to
be for the mass market, they did not crimp on technology and brought all
their world-beating racing experience to bear on the design of the design and
chassis. The concept of bringing front line performance to all their models
was to become an Alfa trademark. The 1900 engine had a cast-iron block
topped with an aluminium-alloy head, combined with hemispherical combustion
chambers, and twin chain-driven, overhead cams. The engine was offered in two
states of tune, the standard set-up used a single down draft carburetor, while
the "veloce" version used higher comperssion, more agressive cam timing, and
twin 2-barrel side draft Weber carburetors. This concept too, was to be an
indicator of things to come.
Needless to say, the 1900 was a sucess. It was offered in Sedan and
Coupé form, and proved to be a favorite of the coachbuilders.
Quoted from the Summer 1994 issue of Auto Phlye.
If You want to see an extraordinary bodywork on the 1900, check out the
Bertone B.A.T. series!
1954 1900 Sprint
The first factory-generated special cars came in
1954... The engine had grown to 1975 cc with 115 bhp, there was a
five-speed gearbox and suspension was by coil springs, with double
wishbones at the front and a live rear axle located by trailing
arms and a triangulated link.
1900 SSZ by Zagato
Zagato version of the 1900. The "twin bubble roof" design was
employed from around this time.
Aprrox. 40 1900 Super Sprint chassis received special lightweight Zagato
coupe bodies that looked strikingly like the Zagato-bodied [Fiat] 8V from
the windshield back. But the 1900 was more upright than the 8V and had a
tall four-cylinder engine with DOHC which prevented the use of a low
hoodline. Zagato devised a brilliant and functional solution: a large rounded
blister for the engine, with low, tapering panels leading to the fender.
Text from A-Z of Sportscars
1900 Touring Sprint
????????
The 1900 proved to be not enough "down-market" so AR decided to buld a new
car. It was the Giulietta.
But before I introduce You the type, here are some racers, from the '50s:
1952 Disco Volante
The Disco Volante has generated far more interest and attention
that its production run (if one could call it that) warrants and
that shows just how succesful it was in its own way.
It was primarily a show car, a car to get Alfa noticed and talked
about, but secodnly it was built as a test-bed for a new 3-litre
six-cylinder power unit. It was also meant to earn its keep in
sports car racing, where it was intended that the model would gain
even more useful publicity for Alfa. It took its name (which
translates as "flying saucer") from its voluptuous two-seat
coachwork, built by Touring in association with Alfa engineers
Colombo and Satta.
Six were built and tested during 1952, two of 'em short-wheelbase
models with the 1900 four-cylinder engine. As a result of this
development programme, the car was extensively modified for 1952
when a team of four coupes was entereds in the Mille Miglia, one a
2-litre four the others powered by 3.6 litre six-cylinder engines.
The 2-litre retired early in the race, but the other three cars all
held the lead at some time during the event. However, engine
failure eliminated one car, a transmission oil leak another, while
the third car, driven by Fangio, suffered a partial steering
failure, only the righ-hand wheel responding. As a result, the car
could only be driven slowly round bends, was overtaken by a
Ferrari, and finished second...
One of the 1953 works cars was then sold to Jo Bonnier and fitted
with an open two-seater Zagato body, in which form it was raced
during 1955. It should be remembered that the copmetition models
did not have the same rather outrageous bodywork of Touring's
original, the car that everyone thinks of as the Disco Volante.
Quoted from A-Z of the car
France Scaglione (of Bertone fame) designed an open Sportive Spider sports
racer and a similar -but closed- Sportiva Coupe on the Disco Volante
space-frame chassis in addition to the Giulietta
Spider featured on the next page.
Sportiva coupe
Sportiva Spider
These models were intended as "customer-racers" but Alfa terminated the
project. Years later, Corvette and Ferrari were to discover that intakes
beneath the nose were more effective.
Scaglione really enjoyed this project, rising at 5: am to start work and
working until 10:00 at night for weeks on end.
However, he and Bertone had to negotiate a tricky moment with one of Alfa
Romeo's senior engineers. Scaglione felt that the chassis was too heavy, news
which the engineer took baldy enough for Bertone and Scaglione to turn pale.
As they returned by train from Turin, Scaglione said: Give me a clean sheet,
and I will build you a very light car, but it will cost a lot of money.
Bertone agreed. From these beginnings the Sportiva Coupe grew.
.. Its 136 mph was surpassed only by the Mercedes-Benz 300SL's 140 and the
Ferrari America 138 mph. Scaglione later addmitted that this was his favorite
work. Taken from a 1994 Automobile Quarterly article
1952 6C 3000 CM
Six were built.
This car was prepared to enter Sport Category races, using various
engine parts of the 3000 cc experimental prototype. In 1953 it took
overall 2nd in the Mille Miglia and overall 1st place in the
Supercortemaggiore GP.
6 cyl. 87-x98 cc. 246 bhp at 6500 rpm (in 1953, 275 hp at 6500 rpm
for the MM). Weight: 930 kg(spider) -2046 lbs, 960 kg (coupe) -
2112 lbs
Next stop: Giulietta
Copyright and Copy, December, 1995:
Paul Negyesi and the Okapi Publishing Ltd npaul@hu.inter.net