Alfa Romeo Giulietta Sprint

From WOI Encyclopedia Italia

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Alfa Romeo Giulietta Sprint
Alfa Romeo Giulietta
Manufacturer Alfa Romeo
Parent_company
Aka
Production 1954–1965
Assembly
Predecessor Alfa Romeo 1900
Successor Alfa Romeo Giulia
Class
Body_style Berlina (sedan)
Spider (convertible)
Sprint (coupe)
Layout FR/RWD
Platform
Engine 1.3 L I4
Transmission
Wheelbase Berlina/Sprint/Spider
2390/2380/2250 mm
(94.1/93.7/88.6 in.)
Length 3990/3920/3400 mm
(157.1/154.3/133.9 in.)
Width 1550/1543/1540 mm
(61/60.7/60.6 in.)
Height 1485/1320/1180 mm
(58.5/52/46.5 in.)
Weight 876/800/858 kg
(1931/1764/1892 lb)
Ground_clearance
Front_track
Rear_track
Top_speed
Fuel_capacity
Related
Similar
Designer Sprint Bertone
Spider Pininfarina
Sprint Speciale Bertone


An exhibition celebrating 50 years of the Alfa Romeo Giulietta in Milano, 2004-06-09
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An exhibition celebrating 50 years of the Alfa Romeo Giulietta in Milano, 2004-06-09

The Alfa Romeo Giulietta (series 750 and 101) was an automobile manufactured by the Italian car maker Alfa Romeo from 1954 to 1965.

The first Giulietta model was a coupé, the Giulietta Sprint, introduced in late 1954. This was followed by a sedan in spring 1955 and in mid 1955, the open two-seat Giulietta Spider, featuring convertible bodywork by Pininfarina.

Carrozzeria Colli made also Giulietta station wagon variant called Giulietta Promiscua. This version was built 91 examples. Carrozzeria Boneschi made also few station wagon examples called Weekendina.

Contents

Giulietta engines

The Giulietta used an Alfa Romeo Twin Cam engine of 1290 cc, with light alloy cylinder block and alloy cylinder head with twin overhead camshafts. The original Giulietta engine produced a power output of 53 bhp in the sedan and 80 bhp in the Giulietta Sprint. This was to be increased to 100 bhp in later sporting models such as the Giulietta Sprint Speciale and the Giulietta Sprint SZ (Sprint Zagato).

  • 1290 cc, 53 bhp (Berlina)
  • 1290 cc, 65 bhp (Giulietta T.I.)
  • 1290 cc, 80 bhp (Giulietta Sprint)
  • 1290 cc, 90 bhp (Sprint Veloce)
  • 1290 cc, 100 bhp (Sprint Speciale (SS), Sprint Zagato (SZ))

Giulietta models

Nuova Giulietta


In 1977, Alfa Romeo introduced the Nuova Giulietta. This was not a development of the original Giulietta of 1954-1965, but a design based on the Alfa Romeo Alfetta chassis (including its rear mounted transaxle).


References

External links



Alfa Romeo S.P.A.
1910-1920 24hp | 40-60hp | Castagna | Torpedo | RL | RM | P2 | 6c 1500 | 6c 1750
1920-1940 1750 Drophead | 8c 2300 | 6c | 6c 1900 | 6c 2300 | 8c 2900 | 12 cylinder | P3 | 1935 Twin-engine
1940-1950 158 | 6c 2500
1950-1960 1900 | AR 51 The 'Matta' off road 4WD. | Disco Volante | Giulietta | 1.3 | 2000
1960-1970 Giulia | Super 1600 | TI | Sprint Speciale | Alfa Romeo TZ | Alfa Romeo GTA | Alfa Romeo 2600 | Alfa Romeo Tipo 33/3 | Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale | Spider Veloce | 1750
1970-1980 Montreal (1970–1977) | Alfasud (1972–1983) | Alfetta (1972–1977) | Arna | Berlina | GTV | Guilia Nuova Super 1300
1980-1990 GTV | GTV6 | Sprint | 33 (1983–1994) | Alfa 6 (1979-1984)| 90 (1984–1986) | Alfa Romeo Milano (Euro 75) (1985–1992) | 164 (1987–1998)
1990-2000 SZ | GTV (1995–present) | Spider (1998–present) | 145 (1995–2001) | 146 (1995–2001) | 155 (1992–1998) | 156 - GTA (1997–present) | 166 (1998–present)
2000 onwards GT (2004–present) | 147 - GTA (2001–present) | 159 | 167 (2007?) | Brera (Preview-2005) | Spyder (2007?) | Kamal (Expected-2007)
Fiat Group brands Abarth | Alfa Romeo | Autobianchi | Ferrari | Fiat | Lancia | Innocenti | Maserati
Fiat Group Corporate Website | Fiat Auto Website