RE: Alfa Romeo Brera S Prodrive | Spotted

RE: Alfa Romeo Brera S Prodrive | Spotted

Thursday 28th September 2023

Alfa Romeo Brera S Prodrive | Spotted

Quirky coupe never gelled with UK roads. Then Prodrive took the reins...


The Alfa Romeo renaissance is still going strong. Sure, the Giulia is getting on a bit (it is, after all, in its eighth year), but it still has its merits as a legitimate alternative to the German establishment.  And while the Italian marque isn’t a historical bastion for reliability, Alfa Romeo ownership doesn’t come with nearly as many caveats as it used to.

However, it wasn’t that long ago when Alfa’s eye-popping designs were easily the most compelling reason to seek its cars out. The 4C, for example, was a stunner held back by a chassis that was too easily unnerved by ragged British B-roads. Then there was the Brera, which promised so much yet was thwarted by a familiar accusation - it just wasn't as exciting to drive as it was to look at. Unless, of course, you find yourself a one-of-500 Brera S.

The Brera S story supposedly begins with Alfa’s then-UK marketing chief, Nicholas Bernard, who concurred with the consensus opinion at the time, and believed new coupe was suffering from something of an identity crisis. Not as plush as a grand tourer, nor as sharp as a sports car. Somehow, he managed to convince the higher-ups in Italy to give Prodrive a ring and commission it to build a limited-run performance model specifically designed for the UK market.

This wasn’t just a simple rejig of the geometry and a stickier set of tyres either, but rather a major overhaul that righted many of the Brera’s perceived wrongs. Chief among them were bespoke Bilstein dampers paired with 50 per cent stiffer Eibach springs, and a chassis setup happened upon after nearly a year spent developing the car on British B-roads. Beefier Brembo brakes aided stopping power, while new 19-inch wheels saved 2kg per corner while still retaining Alfa’s signature telephone dial coolness. The S upgrade was available with either the 185hp 2.2-litre four-pot motor - which is what we have right here - or with the 3.2-litre V6, which ditched the associated all-wheel drive system for a 100kg saving.

Whether it’s the four or six, Prodrive's upgrades were transformative. The motorsport giants had taken a car that was utterly lacklustre on local roads and turned it into the sports GT it should have been from the start. Reviews at the time praised the vast improvements to body control, steering and overall grip. Admittedly, it wasn’t as dynamically interesting as its rear-wheel drive counterparts, such as the BMW Z4, though comparisons drawn between the Brera and Porsche Cayman in period seem a touch unfair – especially as the latter came at a £15,000 premium. The S, meanwhile, cost only £1,450 more than the base car, with the 2.2 costing a very reasonable £24,950 when new.

You won’t be paying anywhere near that for this example, you’ll be pleased to hear. This 2.2 is number 126 of 500, and looks good for its 15 years and 102,000 miles. And at £7,995, it’s around half the price of the 3.2 S variants to have recently sold. Sure, you miss out on the sound of a V6 (though not the Busso) and a bit of poke, but you still benefit from all that Prodrive goodness. Now, just imagine what Banbury would have made of the 4C...


SPECIFICATION | ALFA ROMEO BRERA S

Engine: 2,198cc four-cylinder
Transmission: six-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Power (hp): 185@6,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 170@4,500rpm
MPG: 30.7
CO2: 218g/km
Year registered: 2008
Recorded mileage: 102,000
Price new: £24,950
Yours for: £7,995 

See the original advert here

Author
Discussion

Silvanus

Original Poster:

6,783 posts

36 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
Have a soft spot for the Brera, though not quite enough to actually buy one, bout a V6 GT instead.

Does anyone know why Prodrive went for the 2.2 rather than the V6. I'm assuming it was a weight thing?

Silvanus

Original Poster:

6,783 posts

36 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
Silvanus said:
I have a soft spot for the Brera, though not quite enough to actually buy one, I bought a V6 GT instead.

Does anyone know why Prodrive went for the 2.2 rather than the V6. I'm assuming it was a weight thing?

Oily76

222 posts

124 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
One of my favourite designs, I was so disappointed when I found out it was fwd. I fantasise about dropping the bodyshell on to a modified Giulia QV chassis!

JuiceTerry

137 posts

105 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
Didn’t know that Prodrive had been involved with these, always considered the Berra as a great looking thing

JuiceTerry

137 posts

105 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
Brera

sixor8

6,897 posts

281 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
That's actually a bit pricey compared to an auction, but best of luck if it sells. Manor Park sold one on 16th Sept with 88k miles on it, and it fetched under £6k:

https://www.manorparkclassics.com/auction/lot/lot-...

wal 45

806 posts

193 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
Silvanus said:
Have a soft spot for the Brera, though not quite enough to actually buy one, bout a V6 GT instead.

Does anyone know why Prodrive went for the 2.2 rather than the V6. I'm assuming it was a weight thing?
They did a 3.2 S Prodrive too so you've got a choice of which one you want your timing chain to expensively stretch in.

Personally I'm not a fan (had a few Alfa including a 159 TBi) and just don't like the shape at all especially the rear. I'd stick with a 916 or a GT if I was looking for something like this.

Master Bean

4,333 posts

133 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
I absolutely love the bum on these.

J4CKO

43,938 posts

213 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
8 grand, there is a red V6 S on AT for £4,489.

Every other 2.2 Brera is in the 2 to 5 grand market, do they have much of a following ?


I like the wheels but they are a bit dumpy and have a bit of the Chrysler Crossfire problem at the back.

kambites

69,236 posts

234 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
The Prodrive car is meant to be a massive improvement over the base.

redroadster

1,845 posts

245 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
Tough looking thing ,they did a 5 cylinder diesel which was supposed to be OK but a heavy beast ,never driven one the electrics are a bit iffy on this model I've heard .

Hackney

7,218 posts

221 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
I looked at this when launched and while I liked the looks I couldn’t see the benefits over a GT which looked as good and had usable back seats.

jezb1

20 posts

81 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
I love Alfas and wanted to like the Brera, but they're just too slow to be remotely sporty in any guise.

Justin-ow582

380 posts

118 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
Hackney said:
I looked at this when launched and while I liked the looks I couldn’t see the benefits over a GT which looked as good and had usable back seats.
Plus the GT v6 had a "proper" Alfa engine wink

chrispmartha

18,349 posts

142 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
Most disappointing car Ive ever owned, the perfect phrase is ‘all fur coat and no knickers’


MotorSpeak

142 posts

46 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
I’ve looked long and hard at buying one of these. I find them very colour dependent, tricky to track down preferred colours and many of them seem to be specces in ‘sorbet black’ which looks naff. Holy grail for me is the 1.7 petrol last of the line but rare as hens’ teeth.

GreatScott2016

1,784 posts

101 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
chrispmartha said:
Most disappointing car Ive ever owned, the perfect phrase is ‘all fur coat and no knickers’
biglaugh

Art Keller

824 posts

92 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
Beautifull car let down by woefull engines

nismo48

5,025 posts

220 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
Master Bean said:
I absolutely love the bum on these.
Nah that arse end ain't pretty wink

DamnKraut

485 posts

112 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
Master Bean said:
I absolutely love the bum on these.
Very purposeful indeed, 4 pipes indicating the fierce power of 185 mighty Italian steeds letting that 1800 kg featherweight fly hehe