Alfa Brera race car?
Author
Discussion

ecain63

Original Poster:

10,633 posts

195 months

Saturday 22nd September 2012
quotequote all
Since selling the wifes fantastic SV6 I've had this niggle that maybe I should have kept it and geared it more toward track or race use. The stance to me looks perfect and I can't see many places where i'd need to do serious mods or metal work to get it to perform.

Things I think I should do:

Strip it and consider a full weld in cage.
Adjust and widen track all round for wider wheel base and cornering ability.
New and larger brakes on front and get existing front calipers and discs modded for fitting at the rear.
Bit of aero work (front splitter and rear wing, maybe an undertray). Rear wing really is a must i reckon due to the heavy nose.
Bucket seats and harnesses.
Fuel and brake lines.
Track rubber. Existing Prodrive wheels are fine.
Engine work (TBs?? and a manifold to match the existing prodrive system). Possibly supercharger if its reliable enough.

The problem lies here though, the fact I cannot find anywhere an example of an existing brera race car. This would at least give me a base to work on. The vision in my head looks ace, just need some realisation. To me the car looks like the perfect car for the Touring Car Championship but nowhere have i seen one.

Eddie

Edited by ecain63 on Saturday 22 September 10:02

ecain63

Original Poster:

10,633 posts

195 months

Saturday 22nd September 2012
quotequote all

crostonian

2,427 posts

192 months

Sunday 23rd September 2012
quotequote all
Does the fact that nobody has raced the Brera not tell you something??

Phil Dicky

7,193 posts

283 months

Sunday 23rd September 2012
quotequote all
I'm sure I've read somewhere they are very heavy cars, so not an ideal starting point.

rijmij99

423 posts

181 months

Sunday 23rd September 2012
quotequote all
they are mega heavy! i tried pushing one last winter during the snow, felt twice as heavy as my 164 that i ended up pulling it out with. i would suggest getting a 75 to cure the racing itch. successful career in pro series and parts are cheap and available.

ecain63

Original Poster:

10,633 posts

195 months

Sunday 23rd September 2012
quotequote all
Yeah, they are defo heavy cars. I think not short of 1800kg with all that leather and its fat arse. Was just an idea and wasnt really bothered about its wieght. Its not like im going to be entering any race series in it, just fancied something different.

Fantuzzi

3,297 posts

166 months

Wednesday 26th September 2012
quotequote all
ecain63 said:
Yeah, they are defo heavy cars. I think not short of 1800kg with all that leather and its fat arse. Was just an idea and wasnt really bothered about its wieght. Its not like im going to be entering any race series in it, just fancied something different.
Why spend a load of cash (it is a load I looked into caging cars for race use) on car that wont be ideal and will be pain in the neck to sort out?

I can see you obviously like the idea of a racing brera, nice in theory, just cant help feeling youd get more bang for your buck saving money on altering the car (plus making sure the seats are road legal ect) and getting something, well better on track!

Seems like youd be better off buying a 2nd hand car thats been raced in the Alfa Romeo championship 156,147 ect.

Given youd be getting 15kish from the Brera plus the 6k youd spend getting the stuff done why not get a 2nd hand Caterham or the like?



Edited by Fantuzzi on Wednesday 26th September 00:15

Alfaromeo939s

1 posts

99 months

Wednesday 27th September 2017
quotequote all
Hi there, I know this thread is old but i was just wondering if you ever did anything about it?

I am currently in the process of converting a Brera V6 S into a fully spec track only car

Thurbs

2,782 posts

242 months

Friday 6th October 2017
quotequote all
No idea mate.

You could ring these guys up: http://alfaracer.com/ They may know someone.

If you could get the weight down to 1100kg (ex driver & fuel), put a big blower on it and keep the 4wd I think it could be a quick car. You probably need to fibre glass the doors, wings, bonnet & boot + plexiglass. Flatten the floor and it should go well given it's low drag shape.

If you do intend to race it there are some dos and don'ts depending on what you want to do. For example, widening the track will instantly make it ineligible for a great deal of series. As will blowing an engine not blown from factory. Happy to help if you are interested.

I would be interested in how you get on with this, keep me posted!

ecain63

Original Poster:

10,633 posts

195 months

Friday 6th October 2017
quotequote all
Wow! That's a thread revival and a half!

Nope, never did anything with the Brera. The advice was that it was pointless due to many factors.

Vitorio

4,296 posts

163 months

Tuesday 10th October 2017
quotequote all
ecain63 said:
Wow! That's a thread revival and a half!

Nope, never did anything with the Brera. The advice was that it was pointless due to many factors.
I agree with that assessment, but if one were to be dead set on it, i do imagine a supercharger on an AWD stripped out brera could be lots of fun on track, even if its never going to win any class races.

RicksAlfas

14,208 posts

264 months

Friday 13th October 2017
quotequote all
Could you use an AWD chassis and make it RWD only?
scratchchin


davebem

747 posts

197 months

Friday 13th October 2017
quotequote all
I wander how light you could get the Brera to make it a fast good handling 4WD car, Id imagine it would be good in the wet at least. I read somewhere when Alfa/Abarth were replacing the 156 in group N/touring cars etc that the wrote off the 159 as a replacement because it was so unsuitable for racing. One thing that doesnt help it is the engine is quite a long way forward and theres lots of other heavy stuff stuck in the cars nose and the subframe hangs too low down and scrapes on anything with racing suspension. However it does have something going for it, the platform is very stong/stiff and they are incredibly stable and well handling at high speeds.

Edited by davebem on Friday 13th October 14:24

Thurbs

2,782 posts

242 months

Friday 13th October 2017
quotequote all
If you compare these to the Scirocco, that does quite well int he VW Cup against the Golfs. https://youtu.be/LbT4nEpIPa4

Scirocco kerb weight: 1,298 kg
Golf kerb weight: 1,322 kg

Brera kerb weight: 1,430 kg
159 kerb weight: 1,385 kg

As a base platform and "ultimate performance" the Scirocco would be a better bet. This matters on a race track when 1/10ths are key. For a track day it wont matter a jot and will be the best looking car out there.

Motorsport costs money. Spend it on somthing you love, hence my stupid choice of a race car (except when it rains).

Oh, and FWD & 4WD set up well can be just as fun, safer and often faster than RWD.

RicksAlfas

14,208 posts

264 months

Friday 13th October 2017
quotequote all
Take the glass roof out and you'll make a good weight saving.
They did exist in Italy with a metal roof. Goodness knows why Prodrive didn't use that for the S, rather than just headlining the glass. nuts

Thurbs

2,782 posts

242 months

Friday 13th October 2017
quotequote all