RE: Alfa marks Quadrifoglio centenary with 520hp spree
RE: Alfa marks Quadrifoglio centenary with 520hp spree
Thursday 13th April 2023

Alfa marks Quadrifoglio centenary with 520hp spree

Limited edition Giulia and Stelvio 100th Anniversario models get more power and a new limited-slip diff


April 15th, 2023 will be a very significant day in the long and illustrious history of Alfa Romeo. It marks 100 years since the Quadrifoglio made its motorsport debut, Ugo Sivocci winning the 14th Targa Florio in an RL with the now-legendary four-leaf clover. And while it’s been found in the century since on a few undeserving Alfas, it currently resides on the Giulia saloon and Stelvio SUV which, despite a few years on sale now, remain about as exciting to drive as sports saloons and SUVs get. Just as Alfa Romeos ought to be.

To mark this momentous occasion, ‘Quadrifoglio 100th Anniversario’ editions of both cars have been announced. By and large, they follow the anniversary special edition script, with the new commemorative badges revealed earlier this year, gold calipers and gold stitching. However, this is Alfa Romeo, and this is a big birthday, so there’s a little more to this new Stelvio and Giulia than mere party glitter. Both get a power bump for the 2.9-litre, twin-turbo V6 to 520hp thanks to a standard Akrapovic exhaust (just 20 less than the GTA) and, perhaps more importantly, both also receive a new mechanical limited-slip differential for the rear axle.

It seemed like this might have been a mistranslation to begin with, but it’s there in black and white: ‘The V6 engine has been enhanced to 520 HP (for Europe, the UK and China) and is combined with the mechanical self-locking differential, a feature that makes its debut on this special launch series.’ Various helmsmen have complained over the years that the standard locking diff doesn’t do as advertised, occasionally leaving one wheel spinning and robbing the Giulia of the last bit of finesse when it comes to handling in extremis. This ought to resolve that, as well as giving additional confidence in the back end at more sensible speeds. And powerslide better, of course.

Alfa says the new unit borrows tuning from the GTA, and contributes to ‘improving the car’s behaviour and traction, optimizing torque transfer, and increasing stability, agility, and speed in bends.’ Very encouraging. Expect a similar if less pronounced effect for the diff on the four-wheel drive Stelvio.

Additional equipment for these Anniversarios includes 3D-printed carbon used inside and out, new look digital instruments and a few golden clovers dotted around. Both Giulia and Stelvio will be offered in Rosso Etna, Verde Montreal, or Nero Vulcano. Gotta go green, right?

As is Alfa tradition with limited versions of these cars - think about the NRING and the Alfa Romeo Racing Edition - there won’t be very many to go around. Just 100 Giulias and the same number of Stelvios will be made in total; some will come to the UK, but an exact number hasn’t yet been announced, and neither has a price. Expect both to nudge £100k, given those previous specials and the tiny number expected. Would fit nicely with the centenary, too…


 

Author
Discussion

Holgate86

Original Poster:

471 posts

56 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
Been thinking about a QF for a while now......but not at £100k.

ChrisCh86

1,047 posts

60 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
Phwoar. I still love the Guilia Quadrifoglio and that looks just right.

£100k does sound a bit steep though - but the Giulia won't be around for much longer...

Water Fairy

6,155 posts

171 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
This seems exceptional value right now..........


https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202302224...

anonymous-user

70 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
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For me, there aren't many more desirable cars on sale now than the Guilia Quadrifoglio. £100k does seem a lot though.

Kawasicki

13,771 posts

251 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
Fun cars to drive... really sorted dynamics. I like the looks too.

Wab1974uk

1,160 posts

43 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
Still great looking cars. I just don't think I'd be brave enough to buy one.

Gecko1978

11,541 posts

173 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
They look great are a change from M RS an AMG and in an Italian way not hampered by a pesky limiter for pub bragging rights. An the green looks great

DeltaEvo2

878 posts

208 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
Love the new lights.

MikeGTi

2,594 posts

217 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
The premium doesn't make it worth it over the standard car and a remap IMHO, still, nice to see them doing special editions biggrin

corcoran

632 posts

290 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
God. Please.

Augustus Windsock

3,631 posts

171 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
Seems like Alfa are extracting the liquid nitrogenous waste to me, especially when people like DMS (there are other brands available…) do a straight remap to 570bhp for a whole heap less £££
And I’m sure having a similar LSD fitted to your used QF would t cost much either (albeit if fitted to a new vehicle the warranty might be a bit of an issue, as would the remap I guess)

British Beef

2,526 posts

181 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
Holgate86 said:
Been thinking about a QF for a while now......but not at £100k.
In a world of £100k M3s, this seems fair pricing compared to competition.

But yes, anyway you cut it £100k is a lot of money for a fast 4 door motor.

This is where these things come unstuck in my man maths, for £100k I would rather an efficient and comfortable 4 door for commuting and not caring where I park it, then get something a little more unhinged and special to drive when roads and weather allow.

For me it feels a bit of a waste sitting on motorways in these kinds of cars for daily commutes, ive tried it with M5s and end up just thinking what a waste of 90% of the cars performance for 90% of the time, rewarded by high consumable costs and more frequent trips to petrol station.


Killer2005

20,232 posts

244 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
Wab1974uk said:
Still great looking cars. I just don't think I'd be brave enough to buy one.
Why?

urquattroGus

1,976 posts

206 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
I would be interested to see how this drives.

I had a 2017 car for 4.5 years and bought a 22 plate facelift car to replace it which I sold after just one month as they had watered the whole car down.

Would love it if this is the solution but not at 100K. The first two were bargains at £60k and £64k respectively new with Alfa Affinity discount.

Trebor1970

220 posts

36 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
Killer2005 said:
Why?
Unreliability of the brand is not a myth, and very poor dealership network (eg Mang*letsi).
I speak from bitter experience.

E90_M3Ross

36,226 posts

228 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
Those saying it's too expensive.... How much is an M3 or C63? Or is everything overpriced and you're living in 2003? hehe

FlukePlay

1,115 posts

161 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
Beautiful. 6 years on and that is still a very desirable looking car...Italians still know how to design cars to European tastes. £100K is bloody steep though...

Square Leg

15,418 posts

205 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
Augustus Windsock said:
Seems like Alfa are extracting the liquid nitrogenous waste to me, especially when people like DMS (there are other brands available…) do a straight remap to 570bhp for a whole heap less £££
And I’m sure having a similar LSD fitted to your used QF would t cost much either (albeit if fitted to a new vehicle the warranty might be a bit of an issue, as would the remap I guess)
Mine will be off to Celtic Tuning before long.
£495 for another 100bhp is quite the bargain.

mersontheperson

724 posts

181 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
For me the brilliance of the QF is most appealing in its stock standard form. You need a practical car, and it becomes all the performance and fun you are likely to need.
Whereas this higher cost ‘special editions’ just become too ostentatious and then there is a risk of being compared. To other special editions that might be better/faster/rarer.

to me it would be like having a choice between a stainless steel simple Rolex , to one in gold with diamonds on the face. The more standard and every day the car looks, the cooler it is in my eyes

RonnieHotdogs

1,063 posts

117 months

Thursday 13th April 2023
quotequote all
urquattroGus said:
The first two were bargains at £60k and £64k respectively new with Alfa Affinity discount.
Yep, I managed to get a new fully loaded MY19 for an absolute steal back in 2020 after Covid hit (£56k if I recall), as the facelift had been launched and they needed to rid themselves of stock. Got concerned about job security and sold it the next year ... unnecessarily so as it turned out. D'oh.

Then bought a new facelift a year or so ago, well spec'd for around £63k with the affinity scheme - wanted to move house and there was talk of me going onto a company car scheme / allowance scheme with a co2 limit, so that had to go either way.

Trying to get a quote for one now, but no dealers are able to quote on them, and haven't been told by Alfa when the MY23 will go into production. Prices have shot up and discounts are down. Chances are history would repeat and I'd have to sell it 6 months later anyway!!!

Doesn't look like I'll be getting another unfortunately.