It looks similar a Lotus. It screams loud like you wouldn't believe. It definitely calls attention to itself. But exactly how does this exotic stack up? We slid behind the wheel to find out.
It looks similar a Lotus. It screams loud like you wouldn't believe. It definitely calls attention to itself. But exactly how does this exotic stack up? We slid behind the wheel to find out.
Every time I click the link in one of these Read the rest of the story threads, it just takes me back to the top of the page. Every time, on every one.
Yeah, it looks like that link is messed up. Go here instead:
https://grassrootsmotorsports.com/new-cars/2015-alfa-romeo-4c-spider/
This paragraph was the money shot for me: Just how light is this car? I was expecting under 2000lb for sure. Here in Canukland the car would be over $100,000 by the time it hit the driveway.
"The over $71,000 price tag of our Alfa 4C test car is supposedly largely because of the hand-laid carbon fiber tub. Carbon fiber is a good thing. Check the curb weights, and you will see the Alfa weighs about the same, if not a little more than the new plain old steel ND Miata, which sells for 1/3 the price. This bothers me somehow."
Personally, I think an Elise is prettier. As much as I want to like it, I just find something awkward about the front and rear. It's no 8C.
I still would love to drive one just for the experience.
I suspect that these will be a little like the $8,000 titanium mountain bike that spends most of its time in the garage... The guys who can afford them will largely be a little afraid of them, and unhappy that the missus doesn't want to come along. Too bad because it's sex on wheels.
It's Italian, what did you expect? Seriously, that describes almost every Italian car I've owned, well, except for the really fast part.
I was afraid this is how the car would turn out. Stupid. Something about poor design really grinds my gears.
This is the only real relevance to me: Apparently, by the time this falls into my price range in, say, 2031, the interior will be a jumbled mess of broken plastic and loose wires.
kazoospec wrote: This is the only real relevance to me: Apparently, by the time this falls into my price range in, say, 2031, the interior will be a jumbled mess of broken plastic and loose wires.
Its a alfa with a cruddy interior if it can get past the 3 year warranty without a major failure of the interior I would say they are getting better.
That price is laughable.
This one was hard to write. I felt old, as I didn't get it. No one else in our office liked it either. I also talked to a good buddy who writes for Motortrend. They struggled with the car too.
In reply to Tim Suddard:
Perhaps what you and the other reviewers are saying is that the minimum standard for a successful sports car is no longer a Triumph or Austin Healy with Lucas electrics, but more a Mazda Miata or a Corvette. Put another way, reliablility and comfort are as important to most users as a low 0 to 60 time.
Kreb wrote: I suspect that these will be a little like the $8,000 titanium mountain bike that spends most of its time in the garage... The guys who can afford them will largely be a little afraid of them, and unhappy that the missus doesn't want to come along. Too bad because it's sex on wheels.
Kinda sounds like the Elise when it first arrived here. Every one I saw at the track was tiptoeing around and the owners didn't seem particularly thrilled about running them hard.
Aren't these Alfas are being sold in very limited numbers? I don't get the niche car to vette/miata comparison here.
My TR6 is way more comfortable. I take 1000 mile tours with it all the time. Five minutes in the Alfa is all I could take.
Tim Suddard wrote: My TR6 is way more comfortable. I take 1000 mile tours with it all the time. Five minutes in the Alfa is all I could take.
I found that part about this drive really curious. As an old Alfisti, I worry that they lost their history. On original springs, my GTV was very comfortable to drive, and still handled really well- like how the Elise was (but not that soft with amazing handling).
And even the homologated race cars- the GTA and such- were very comfortable.
A car like this is obviously brilliant when that stiff. But how stiff does one need to be so that it's still great and comfortable. It's almost as if they thought- "well, since this car is so hard to get in and out of, nobody is going to use it every day..."
That recent review of the Miata illustrated that.
But I also really appreciated the small note that a carbon fiber chassis car that is made to be high tech weighs as much as a steel Miata. That's great!
In reply to Tim Suddard: I don't remember Motortrend saying that the interior is crappy in their video review.
Our local dealer says they are now to get the regular production cars (as opposed to the introductory model.) Base list is $54,900 but the next one they will get will have $12,000 of options. Like a $3500 leather package.
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