RE: Atalanta Sports Tourer unveiled
RE: Atalanta Sports Tourer unveiled
Monday 19th March 2012

Atalanta Sports Tourer unveiled

Little-remembered Brit sports car marque gets a new lease of life 75 years on



A few months back we revealed that a Staffordshire-based entrepreneur by the name of Martyn Corfield had embarked upon plans to revive the Atalanta sports car marque.

The return of the brand, which made just 21 vehicles between 1937 and 1939, was intended to (in the words of Corfield) "sensitively bring the original Atalanta design up to date, delivering modern motoring needs of safety, reliability and performance but still remaining true in spirit to the Atalanta sports car ideals and deliver the quality of product that this marque deserves".


And this is the result. Launched a couple of weeks ago (exactly 75 years after the first Atalanta was shown to the public), the new car is certainly redolent of the 1930s original - right down to maintaining tall, narrow tyres for 'driver feel and ride comfort'.

There's a lot of new, bespoke stuff in it, however, with castings, stub axles, springs and the steering system unique to the car. In fact, its makers claim 85 per cent of the Atalanta is made from bespoke parts. Which, presumably, is why there's no word on the Atalanta's price, although you can order one now...

And if you want an Atalanta, ordering one is probably your best bet - of the 21 examples originally built only seven remain, and only four are in working order.

Author
Discussion

harryowl

Original Poster:

1,114 posts

201 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
At least tell us what the engine is!?

mybrainhurts

90,809 posts

275 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
More important, tell us it's not electric...smile

LotusOmega375D

8,979 posts

173 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
Can't stand head-restraints on old school roadsters. I guess they're required for type approval, but I'd whip them off straightaway. Otherwise looks nice.

ETA: Probably needs a pair of bumpers too.

Riggers

1,859 posts

198 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
It's not electric... but we don't know what it is!! (Will attempt to find out...)

kambites

70,286 posts

241 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
LotusOmega375D said:
Can't stand head-restraints on old school roadsters. I guess they're required for type approval, but I'd whip them off straightaway. Otherwise looks nice.

ETA: Probably needs a pair of bumpers too.
I doubt they'll build enough to require type approval.

Decent enough looking thing, but a bit nondescript.

RichTBiscuit

433 posts

171 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
Preeeety car.

*in my head i've said this in the voice of the Italian Mafioso in The Italian Job*

Repent

386 posts

193 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
Gave an 8, most likely would have been higher if I knew what powered it biggrin.

Beautiful thing though, looks perfectly composed. Far more composed than the V8 Morgan does on its stupid Jap style 6 spokes, still cant get my head around that.

PascalBuyens

2,868 posts

302 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
Riggers said:
It's not electric... but we don't know what it is!! (Will attempt to find out...)
Original cars seemed to have pretty interesting engines at the time...

4.4 V12 (112hp)

And on a Dutch site it says the 1.5 had 78hp, and the 2.0 98hp, which to be fair seems pretty high for a 1930's engine... (haven't found any confirmation yet)


If they continue that same trend... Looks interesting smile

Carfolio

1,124 posts

201 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
Riggers said:
It's not electric... but we don't know what it is!! (Will attempt to find out...)
It's going to be a Yank-sourced 2.5 litre 4 pot, supercharging an option.

Roman

2,032 posts

239 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
Gorgeous - deserves a straight 6

FlossyThePig

4,136 posts

263 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
kambites said:
LotusOmega375D said:
Can't stand head-restraints on old school roadsters. I guess they're required for type approval, but I'd whip them off straightaway. Otherwise looks nice.

ETA: Probably needs a pair of bumpers too.
I doubt they'll build enough to require type approval.
It will need IVA then on each car sold.

kambites

70,286 posts

241 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
FlossyThePig said:
It will need IVA then on each car sold.
Indeed, so it has to conform to a very different set of rules than type approval.

Nitro666

23 posts

166 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
See here for more details of past Atalanta cars:

http://carspector.com/marque/atalanta/

mneame

1,486 posts

231 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
Love the look of that. Very similar to a Lea Francis.

Dave Hedgehog

15,562 posts

224 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
stunning, simply stunning

its going to cost starship money ..

ugg10

681 posts

237 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
Looks like a good alternative to the Suffolk SS100, but will probably be more in the league of the Eagle Speedster/E Type pricewise I suspect.

Another vote for a straight 6 under the bonnet, nothing too stupid, around 200hp and a nice carb fed sound track would fit well with those look and tyres. Refurb BMW 2.8 (pre 1995) with a set of triple webbers (or 6 bike carbs !!) would do the job and be IVA compliant IIRC (was in SVA days).

Johnboy Mac

2,666 posts

198 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
ugg10 said:
Looks like a good alternative to the Suffolk SS100
^^^Exactly what crossed my mind.

It's nice looking car - elegant but suspect very costly. Another vote here too for a straight six.

soad

34,205 posts

196 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
Dave Hedgehog said:
stunning, simply stunning

its going to cost starship money ..
yes

Banjo47

178 posts

246 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
It is stunning in the flesh too. I saw it on display at the RAC and the quality is superb, superior to the Suffolk. The dash is beautifully finished and although these types of cars are not really my bag I thought this one really seems to capture that essence of vintage motoring that other makers seem to miss.

crmcatee

5,782 posts

247 months

Monday 19th March 2012
quotequote all
Ahem.

Is Atalanta a porn star ?


Article said said:
fist Atalanta