Bunteg - Fiat is relaunching the long-lasting Alfa Romeo brand with the brand new mid-engined, rear-drive Alfa 4C compact sports activities car. The stunning new lightweight mannequin, seen right here officially for the primary time on the Geneva motor present, would be the first of a spread of new Alfas over the following few years, and can spearhead the Italian agency’s return to the US market.
The
production two-seater 4C coupé, complete with its carbonfibre chassis,
returns to the Geneva show two years after a concept of the same name
was introduced.
Power for the new sub-1000kg model, which is
tipped to cost less than £50,000 when it launches in the UK at the end
of the year, comes from an all-aluminium turbocharged 1.7-litre engine.
Alfa is keeping exact technical details of the 4C under wraps until
Geneva on 5 March, only confirming figure being a power to weight ratio
of less than 4kg for every 1bhp.
Information leaked by Alfa
dealers in Switzerland suggests the 4C will be offered with 237bhp in
its initial launch guise, which would mean the 4C would weigh 950kg, a
figure that’s likely given the concept weighed 850kg and a
production-spec interior is now fitted. A 0-62mph time of around 4.5sec
has been mooted, with a top speed limited to 155mph.
The four-cylinder engine known as 1750 TBi is familiar from recent Alfas, including the Giulietta,
but the block is now cast aluminium instead of iron, saving around
25kg. The engine gets direct-injection, MultiAir dual continuous
variable valve timing and a new scavenging system that “gets rid” of any
turbo lag. Bespoke intake and exhaust systems have also been developed
for the 4C.
The result of these technologies is an engine with the
potential performance of a 3.0-litre six-cylinder unit, but with the
fuel economy and CO2 emissions of a smaller four-cylinder engine.
The
1742cc engine powers the rear wheels through Alfa’s own twin dry clutch
automatic transmission, adapted from its application on the Giulietta
and Mito.
The transmission has a sequential mode that can be controlled through
paddle shifters mounted on the steering wheel. No manual option will be
offered.
The 4C is just less than 4000mm long, is 2000mm wide and
1180mm high. The wheelbase is 2400mm in length. These dimensions place
it between a Lotus Elise and Evora in length, height and wheelbase.
Underpinning
the 4C is a carbonfibre monocoque chassis, something previously
reserved for supercars like the McLaren MP4-12C and only seen on a small
number of sports cars at this price.
Tub-mounted aluminium
frames carry the 4C’s running gear and engine, with the front assembly
carrying a double-wishbone, coil-sprung suspension set-up, and
MacPherson strut suspension features at the rear.
Alfa’s DNA
driving mode selector also makes an appearance on the 4C with Dynamic,
Natural and All Weather modes now being joined by a new track-focused
Race mode.
Production of the 4C will start in the summer at
Maserati’s Modena plant, with 2500 units set to be the annual output
from 2014. Europe and North America will get 1000 units per year each.
The remaining 500 being distributed around the rest of Alfa’s global
markets.
This production run will include the other models in the
4C’s range that the Swiss dealer source revealed. In 2014, a track-only
Racing version of the car will be introduced, with a road-going Stradale
version of that car set to follow with 266bhp. A convertible will crown
the line-up later in 2014.
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