RE: Alfa Romeo Montreal | Spotted

RE: Alfa Romeo Montreal | Spotted

Thursday 17th October 2019

Alfa Romeo Montreal | Spotted

Nearly 50 years on from its debut, the Montreal is looking better than ever



What do the BMW 2002 Turbo, Jaguar XJ220, Renault Megane R26.R and Alfa Romeo Montreal have in common? They are all excellent cars - in one way or another - which were unfortunately launched at terrible times. 'Terrible times' in these instances meaning industry downturns, global recessions and oil crises, or in the case of today's Spotted, all of the above.

Having originally debuted as an unnamed concept at Montreal's Expo '67, the 2+2 coupe garnered plenty of admirers, and by the time it made its production bow at the 1970 Geneva show had come to be known by the Canadian city's moniker. Plenty had changed in the interceding years, though. The concept's Giulia-borrowed 1.6 had been replaced with a 2.6-litre cross-plane V8, derived from that found in the 33 Stradale and Tipo 33 racers. Dry-sumped and with temperamental SPICA fuel injection, the Montreal put its 200hp and 173lb ft to the road a five-speed manual transmission with limited-slip diff.

Those numbers were enough to see the Montreal from 0-62mph in as little as 7.1 seconds and on to a top speed of 139mph. Sharing a chassis with the Giulia GTV and featuring double wishbone suspension with coil springs and dampers, it had all the ingredients to be a truly wonderful steer, though on paper the Montreal was probably a better driving car than reality dictated.


But you didn't buy a 70s supercar on performance alone, did you? The Montreal was as stunningly pretty in the metal as it appeared on the printed page; the low-slung, swooping shape of it all gloriously detailed with those slatted headlight covers - which retract when the lamps are lit - the single NACA duct on the bonnet and the vented C-pillar toward the rear. The Montreal was, is, and ever will be, a thing of immense beauty.

But that beauty came at a price, and a dearer one than many of the Montreal's rivals. This placed it in an even more precarious position when an oil crisis struck in 1973, tipping many Western economies into recession. Unlike many of its other poorly-timed partners, however, the Montreal soldiered on, remaining on sale throughout most of the '70s until Alfa eventually called it quits in 1977. By then just 3,925 examples had been produced, although only a tiny fraction of that number survive today.

And this is one of them. Not just a beautiful example, but a well-used one too. The surest way to condemn a classic Alfa is to leave it sitting, and thankfully the 59,000 miles (94,000km) showing on this one's odometer indicate quite the opposite. In original condition with immaculate bodywork that - according to the ad - shows no signs of rust, it's also said to be "perfectly maintained and therefore also exceptionally well working and driving". Excellent. And better still, at just over £70,000, you may not need to trigger a financial crisis of your own to make it yours.




SPECIFICATION - ALFA ROMEO MONTREAL
Engine:
2,593cc, V8
Transmission: 5-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 200@6,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 173@4,750rpm
MPG: N/A
CO2: N/A
First registered: 1973
Recorded mileage: 59,000
Price new: £5,549
Yours for: £70,000

See the full ad here.

 

 

Author
Discussion

mrpenks

Original Poster:

368 posts

155 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
70s supercars were the high point of styling and design to my eyes. How did so many manufacturers get their styling so right?

Evilex

512 posts

104 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
mrpenks said:
70s supercars were the high point of styling and design to my eyes. How did so many manufacturers get their styling so right?
I agree.
Aerodynamics, Crash and pedestrian safety regulations are probably mostly to blame for the homogenisation of car design.

SmartVenom

462 posts

169 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
Ah yes, so well used at just over a 1000 miles a year...

rider73

3,040 posts

77 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
.. that is... stunning!

A1VDY

3,575 posts

127 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
Great looking Alfa but even this 'low mileage' one needs looking over very carefully underneath as these were epic rot boxes and many will/would have had patch over patch welding along with buckets of filler and several resprays in its life, very much like any alfa of its day.

What is it with some dealers with the tyre slick, looks layered on...

s m

23,225 posts

203 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
Just the thing for doing a contract in Marseilles....

https://youtu.be/80ecPj1TkYo

Edited by s m on Thursday 17th October 08:20

aeropilot

34,594 posts

227 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
Fabulous things.......always had a soft spot for them, as used to see a metallic green one parked up near my school in West London on a regular basis in the late 70's, and we all used to longingly look at it when walking past, no doubt due to it being featured in many sets of Tops Trumps that we'd all be playing in break time back then.


Tcooc168

44 posts

56 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
I must be the only one that don’t like it...

anonymous-user

54 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
Beautiful car!

anonymous-user

54 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
Old, old story I know but these were relatively cheap 15 years ago and since then have become a very desirable car quite rightly.

AMGSee55

634 posts

102 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
Epic soundtrack to go with those looks too. I’d have one tomorrow if I had the means.

Alfahol Addict

1,350 posts

165 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
There's Giulia's and GTV's, no such thing as Giulia GTV.

Turbobanana

6,269 posts

201 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
Love these, and came here to say that they have one of my favourite interiors, but that one looks really dull. Needs leather, preferably 70s tan leather.

s m

23,225 posts

203 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
Break the motorway speed limit in 2nd



J4CKO

41,560 posts

200 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
Tcooc168 said:
I must be the only one that don’t like it...
Its alright, but there does tend to be an over eulogisation of anything old, rare and the right brand.

Looks like a sort of Glam Rock Manta A, in fact the Manta is better looking, this is a bit awkward from certain angles and sits a bit funny (as a lot of old cars do) and has an air of being mid engined and front engined at the same time.

Rozzers

1,726 posts

75 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
I do love Alfa’s, but these have always just looked, well, a little odd, body always looked smaller than the chassis.

Edited by Rozzers on Thursday 17th October 09:06

generationx

6,742 posts

105 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
Magnificent madness. I remember seeing a silver one regularly parked at the side of the road in the Barbican (London) area.

Don Roque

17,996 posts

159 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
What a ghastly looking machine. The ride height is ridiculous.

s m

23,225 posts

203 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
J4CKO said:
Its alright, but there does tend to be an over eulogisation of anything old, rare and the right brand.
Jacko, Jacko, Jacko.......


It’s rwd
It’s an Alfa
It’s a V8

Does it get any better for many ?

smile

can't remember

1,078 posts

128 months

Thursday 17th October 2019
quotequote all
Love this car and definitely one for the lottery list. In fact my lottery list would be most of the contents of the book Supercars Of The 70s which I must have read cover to cover a hundred times as a child.