RE: New Alfa Quadrifoglio Collezione 'instant classic'
RE: New Alfa Quadrifoglio Collezione 'instant classic'
Monday 1st December

New Alfa Quadrifoglio Collezione 'instant classic'

Special colours for limited edition homage to Alfa's cloverleaf - and serious exclusivity too


While Alfa's been playing footsie with its electric future (and recoiling from some of it, unsurprisingly), it still lives in hope that you’ll consider taking its current ICE wares seriously. Happily, for now, this stable still includes the Giulia and Stelvio Quadrifoglio, models that we’d cheerily recommend to anyone partial to charismatic internal combustion. Which is obviously everyone reading this. 

To further gild the lily, Alfa has issued a new global limited edition - pre-certified as Instant Classics, obviously - dubbed the Collezione. This is intended to celebrate ‘one of the brand’s most famous symbols’: namely, the logo that Ugo Sivocci’s car wore when it won the Targa Florio back in 1923. Celebrate it very narrowly, mind: just 63 units (spread between both Quadrifoglio variants) will be made available, and that’s for the entire planet. 

Accordingly, we’re talking about the kind of exclusivity that makes Willy Wonka’s golden tickets seem impossibly numerous. Word is that just two examples of the Giulia Collezione will arrive in the UK - and none at all of the Stelvio, so if you’re not already hammering on the doors of your local Alfa dealer as you ponder this, chances are you might already be out of luck. 

Is that a bad thing? Well, if you were hoping for the kind of special sauce that Alfa brought to the GTAm, then you can rest easy: this is mostly about paint. Yep, that’s right, the firm has brewed up a unique shade of its famous red (Rosso Villa d'Este) called, predictably, Rosso Collezione Giulia. Or Rosso Collezione Stelvio. The former is said to indulge ‘darker, almost black shades, in tune with its soul of extreme sportiness’ while the latter is a wee bit brighter. 

If this description has you staring at the pictures like a shepherd in a snowstorm, we get it - but we’ll take Alfa’s word for it. Elsewhere you get "1 di 63 Collezione" embroidered on the Sparco seats, which ought to look right at home next to all the exposed carbon fibre, and carbon-ceramic stoppers and the Akrapovic exhaust system are standard. As is the default 520hp you get with the current iteration of 2.9-litre V6. 

And that’s about it. Making the overriding theme of the Collezione less about what it is, but what it isn’t - which is widely available. Or cheap. Alfa doesn’t mention a price, though it hardly needs to: the cars bound for the UK (or indeed, anywhere else) are clearly meant only for the most earnest and deep-pocketed Alfisti. It’s all about bragging rights, which is fine for the few, given the confetti is plastered to a terrific saloon car. For everyone else, used prices start at a terrifically reasonable £25k


Author
Discussion

nismo48

5,859 posts

227 months

Monday 1st December
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Favaloso thumbup

fantheman80

Original Poster:

2,265 posts

69 months

Monday 1st December
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Lovely but seems they got around a table, went er…different red, badges…is that lunch?

Bill

56,610 posts

275 months

Monday 1st December
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I'm enjoying the tongue in cheek underwhelmed feel to the article. hehe

X27

62 posts

185 months

Monday 1st December
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fantheman80 said:
Lovely but seems they got around a table, went er different red, badges is that lunch?
Ve bene!

TA14

13,742 posts

278 months

Monday 1st December
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Nice but so little difference it makes you wonder why bother. (A few more £ and publicity, I suppose.)

disco666

470 posts

166 months

Monday 1st December
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Waste of time.

m62tu

115 posts

59 months

Monday 1st December
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I got the feeling they axed the Quadrofoglio Giulia and Stelvio was to give the Maserati Grecale Trofeo a chance at the market. The Alfa was and is a better bang for your buck. Good to see it back despite the low numbers. They need to bring out some two tone interiors or offer an exclusive program like Germans do.

Twinair

967 posts

162 months

Monday 1st December
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When you pull into the Daylesford car park, it’s literally a sea of light grey - through darker grey - to black vehicles…

It’s like no colour is actually allowed in the paint process these days - probably a green thing? Idk…?!?

So any colour is to be applauded - well done Alfa…

Also - I can’t help thinking - these used Alfa quads (Possibility of mechanical malady aside - but hey - 14 year old XKR-S at fifty grand? Anyone…?) represent corking value - surely with all the white goods EV’s and non colour everything else - they would be a go to over the next couple of years?

Before all the ‘good ones’ are gone… we can make a list of ‘good ones’ of various sectors - since say 2000 - that are now nearly all gone? Nissan Pulsar £50k…

It made that Rallye the other day look pretty good value?

Idk?

GreatScott2016

2,075 posts

108 months

Monday 1st December
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I do like the look of these, menacing in a kind of understated way (saloon that is) smile

jimmytheone

1,836 posts

238 months

Monday 1st December
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Looks great in that colour, Rich and vibrant like the owners biggrin
glad to see something other than greyscale

Clivey

5,438 posts

224 months

Monday 1st December
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A genuinely sleek and attractive car with a pure ICE 6-cylinder powertrain, RWD, good ratio of physical controls to screens *and* in an actual colour? Yeah, I'd take this over any of the new German offerings!

CarlosSainz100

667 posts

140 months

Monday 1st December
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You'd have to be insane to buy one of these new when the depreciation is so steep.

Mackofthejungle

1,200 posts

215 months

Monday 1st December
quotequote all
Oh dear. A few dodgy badges and an exhaust from a 10 year old Fiat 500.

If these sell, it's because there's only a couple of them and you only need a couple of morons to buy them. But they won't sell, they won't discount them, and they'll still be available from your local Arnold Clark Alfa in 2 years time. PCP it for £1000 a month. Nah.

GTRene

20,295 posts

244 months

Monday 1st December
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Ido like the 63 stitching, what a year smile


Mr E

22,622 posts

279 months

Monday 1st December
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I’ve remembered that I fancy one of these.

I’d never owned a hot hatch, and sorted that with a cheap hot Alfa.
I’ve never owned a saloon…

However, the early ones not being 5 seaters is a bit of a non starter.

pSyCoSiS

4,032 posts

225 months

Monday 1st December
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Very sexy car. Looks stunning. Beautiful colour. Front end is very 159-esque, with that offset number plate.

fflump

2,710 posts

58 months

Tuesday
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CarlosSainz100 said:
You'd have to be insane to buy one of these new when the depreciation is so steep.
I disagree that it’s depreciation is steep for a fast saloon.

You can buy one of the last new ones for under £80k and if you want a low ish mileage (<50k) used one then you will need £35k for a pre-facelift 7/8 year old model- that’s a couple of thousand more than a similar age/mileage M3.That’s pretty good by most measures and amazing for an Alfa.

I remember picking up a low mileage 8 yr old 159 V6 Q4 Sportwagon for £5,000 which was over £30k new. Now that’s the type of Alfa depreciation that drew me to the marque!

Jon_S_Rally

4,160 posts

108 months

Tuesday
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disco666 said:
Waste of time.
Not really. It's called marketing, and it's how businesses sell products. They know they'll sell all the special editions, but the real purpose is likely using it as a means of getting the car back into the media to remind people that it still exists. That way they might shift a few more of the normal ones too.

Andy86GT

769 posts

85 months

Tuesday
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Looks similar to the Mazda Soul Red, lovely.

Robertb

3,052 posts

258 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Proof that no car is improved by black wheels.