Alfa Romeo 147 GTA: Spotted
Pick up the European Car of the Year 2001 with a few tweaks for £3,500
It was the 147, and it carried on some of the promise of the breadvan-like 145, the first small Alfa to display any flair since the dear old Alfasud. It was available as a three-door car or a five-door one or, if you preferred, you could simply have this extraordinary 250hp 3.2-litre V6-engined GTA version - think 0 to 60mph in just 6.3 seconds. Think it, though, but don't try it - the GTA was front-wheel drive only, so to do it successfully was nigh-on impossible, as was trying to keep it pointing in the right direction. In standard form, it simply had too much power for its chassis.
A pity, because inside the GTA was enticing. It was all stitched leather, drilled pedals and sports seats, and if it was a little unruly it at least had the passion and the brio of a true Alfa.
There was, however, a solution to some of its ills, and it came in the form of the tuning firm Autodelta, who could not only give your Alfa more oomph but also cure some of its traction issues. For example, you could specify from them a limited-slip differential for the GTA that, among other tweaks, could turn your torque-steering monster into a snake-hipped groover.
Alas this car doesn't mention chassis tweaks among its upgrades, despite the seller's comprehensive and honest appraisal of the thing. It's had an engine remap and a fancy carbon intake set-up from Autodelta that, if anything, should add a bit more hp, which is not really what's wanted. It has a sports exhaust and a high mileage and no brakes and third gear is on the way out, too, so it's definitely not a car for the faint-hearted, this one.
However, it is about half the price of a regular 147 GTA in good condition, so if you know someone who's got the dosh and the time and inclination for applying a bit of TLC you've still got time to snap it up as a last-minute stocking filler
SPECIFICATION - ALFA ROMEO 147 GTA
Engine: 3,179cc, V6
Transmission: six-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Power (hp): 250@6,200rpm
Torque (lb ft): 221@4,800rpm
MPG: 23.3
CO2: N/A
First registered: 2005
Recorded mileage: 154,000miles
Price new: N/A
Yours for: £3,500
See the original advert here
Mark Pearson
Sorry this is too far gone, gearbox will need a rebuild at £600 odd, cambelts will need doing on top of everything else.
Colours not great and the car looks more than tatty.
I'm oooottt.
I reckon it could make a decent fixer upper if you can keep costs down, but for me it would need to be nearer £2.5k if not even cheaper. The gearbox is the big bill, but it needs proper teledials too and once you've sourced a set, perhaps even having to have them refurbed, and wrapped in rubber, that's going to be a big bill as well.
Silver on black is not really a loin twitching combo for a GTA either.
but I imagine half of the GTAs on the road today have had the Q2 diff fitted as it does transform the car
could also fit the gearbox from the 2.5 V6 156 as the ratios are shorter which for me would make it even more fun
No GTA wheel was 18" there was an 18" replica teledial.
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