Alfa Giulia

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wirelessjunkie

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Nelson, This is for you. The 60s Giulia is more aerodynamic than your E30.. Looks like you are buying BKT :) The article is below (www.carsfromitaly.com)Alfa Romeo GiuliaThis covers the Giulia Berlinas and the rebadged Giulietta Coupes/Spiders.There are separate pages for the Bertone Coupes, Junior Zagato, TZ and the Spider Duetto. June 1962 saw the introduction of the new 105 series, or Giulia, to replace the highly successful Giulietta. Powered by a 1570cc derivative of the Giulietta engine with 92bhp the standard three box, four door berlina (Giulia TI) was a considerably more boxy design than the outgoing Giulietta. It nevertheless had excellent aerodynamics with a drag coefficient of just 0.33 and could reach 166kph (103mph). It was also fitted with a five speed gearbox, still controlled by a column mounted shift. The suspension remained mostly the same as the Giulietta, although the rear was modified to improve the handling.The other variants on the Giulietta theme, the Spider, Sprint and Sprint Speciale were continued, albeit with the larger engine, and simply rebadged. In the same year, 1962, the Giulia TZ (for Tubolare Zagato) was introduced with a tubular frame supporting the light alloy body, disc brakes all round and independent rear suspension. This was aimed at motorsport where it scored several successes. The following year saw the release of the Giulia TI Super, just 500 examples of this were built with 112bhp, discs brakes on all wheels, individual front seats and a floor mounted shift. The four wheel disc brakes became standard on the normal cars in the same year, whilst the floor mounted shift became optional in 1964.1964 saw several new variants being introduced. The 1300 Sprint was brought out, which was the old 1600 Sprint fitted with the 1300 engine and disc brakes at the front. This was released to fill a gap for a cheaper coupe than the new Sprint GT.The 1300 Giulia berlina was introduced, this being a Giulia TI fitted with the 78bhp 1300 engine from the Giulietta TI. It was easily recogniseable since it had only two headlights as well as having individual front seats and a floor mounted gearshift. The Giulia 1300 TI arrived a bit later in 1966, with 82bhp and a five speed gearbox. And finally the Giulia 1600 Spider Veloce saw the 1600 engine with 112bhp from the SS being fitted into the old Spider body.The saloons received a boost in 1965 with the introduction of the new Giulia Super with 98bhp, positioned mid way between the standard TI and the TI Super. Apart from the engine there were numerous small changes made to the detail design, both internally and externally.Brief mention should also be made of the Giulia GS 4R Zagato, a replica of the vintage 1750 Zagato Gran Sport Spider made on the Giulia base. A total of 92 were constructed. Another low volume version of the Giulia was the Giardinetta or estate.A Giulia 1300 Super appeared for the first time in 1970, which then replaced both the Giulia 1300 and 1300 TI.1971 saw the Giulia Super get a floor mounted handbrake, dual circuit brakes, 102bhp and numerous other changes before in 1974 it was relaunched as the Nuova Super. In 1976 there appeared one of the last versions when a 1760cc Perkins diesel engine with 55bhp was fitted to the Nuova Super. A total of 177,897 Giulia Supers were built between 1965 and 1978 when production stopped, as well as 6,572 diesel powered versions.Production figures were approximately : 1300 Berlina 28,358 1300 TI 144,213 1300 & 1300 Super 153,274 TI 71,148 TI Super 501 Super 177,897 1300 Spider 7,237 1600 Spider (& Veloce) 18,504 Back to the top--------------------------------------------------------------------------------Technical Details Driveline longitudinal engine at front with rear wheel drive Engines 1570cc (78x82mm) dohc four-cylinder in-line with : TI : 92bhp @ 6,000rpm TI Super : 112bhp @ 6,500rpm Super : 98bhp @ 5,500rpm S : 95bhp @ 5,500rpm1290cc (74x75mm) dohc four-cylinder in-line with : 1300 : 78bhp @ 6,000rpm 1300 TI : 82bhp @ 6,000rpm Super : 89bhp @ 6,000rpm1760cc (79.4x88.9mm) Perkins sohc four-cyl diesel with 55bhp @ 4,000rpm Suspension front : independent with telescopic dampers and coil springs plus anti-roll barrear : live axle with telescopic dampers and coil springswheelbase : 2510mmfront track : 1310mm (TI, TI Super, 1300, 1300 TI); 1324mm (Super)rear track : 1270mm (TI, TI Super, 1300, 1300 TI); 1274mm (Super) Brakes front : discs (drums on some early models)rear : drums (discs on some models)handbrake operating on the rear via cable Gearbox 4 or 5 speed manual Steering worm and roller Kerb weight TI : 998kgSpider : 883kg1300 : 978kg Back to the top-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------Identification Model No. Details Engine No. Variant(s) 105.14 Giulia T.I., 1570cc, column shift, from 1962 AR00514 105.16 Giulia T.I. Super, 1570cc, from 1963 AR00516 105.06 Giulia 1300, 1290cc, from 1964 AR00506 105.08 Giulia T.I, 1570cc, floor shift, from 1964 AR00514 105.26 Giulia Super, 1570cc, from 1965 AR00526 105.39 Giulia 1300 T.I., 1290cc, from 1965 AR00539 105.40 rhd 105.85 Giulia 1600S, 1570cc, from 1968 AR00585 105.87 rhd 105.26 Giulia Super, 1570cc, from 1969 AR00526/A 115.09 Giulia 1300 Super, 1290cc, from 1970 AR00530 115.10 rhd 115.09 Giulia Super 1.3, 1290cc, from 1972 AR00530 115.10 rhd 115.09S Nuova Super 1.3, 1290cc, from 1974 AR00530*S 105.26S Nuova Super 1.6, 1570cc, from 1974 AR00526A*S 115.40 Giulia Diesel, 1760cc, from 1976 108U Back to the top--------------------------------------------------------------------------------LinksA Giulia Super website.A Giulia register.-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Copyright © 2000 to 2004 CarsfromItaly.com
 
WJ
no point of saying CD.......now ondays is speed and handling.....
cant compare with it
 
Originally posted by nelsone30@Dec 26 2005, 11:29 PM
WJ
no point of saying CD.......now ondays is speed and handling.....
cant compare with it
still dun get it.....????? :) E30 sucks la... :blush: :D
 
Originally posted by nelsone30@Dec 26 2005, 09:59 PM
WJ
no point of saying CD.......now ondays is speed and handling.....
cant compare with it
CD and speed goes hand in hand. 2 cars of equal horsepower, weight and gearing, the one with the less drag will have the higher top speed.
 
Ther goes WJ again... spreading the word that is of old alfas and their superiority... dude, trying to shake up some demand for them alfas and push them prices up is it?! Hahaha.

Cars are all about personal preference la... if we all only wanted the best, we wouldn't be riding around in our father's rustbucket alfas anyways. We'd all be in either pre '72 911s or 993s (that is if you listen to the press)! (hehehe)

Nelson, don't take it so hard le, just buy everyone a BKT and forget about it. An e30 having a worse CD than a 20-gods knows how old- alfa does not make your dick any smaller than it already is, and vice versa.
 
No money no tok la....... :aggressive: Nelsone scared ma.... :aggressive:


come lar.... scared ah...!!!??? :aggressive: :p
 
Yipee. Free BKT as planned :)

The CD for the Giulia was remarkable in its day. Audi took another 20 years to introduce the super smooth Audi 100 with the same CD in the late 80s. That sparked off the CD race.
 
Originally posted by bmwky@Dec 28 2005, 09:34 AM
keep in mind when cd goes down, cl goes up..... :D
heh? where do u get that idea? when Cd goes down, CL goes up? nonsense. they are forces acting in two totally different axis. one has nothing to do with the other.

redd
 
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