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1959 Alfa Romeo Giulietta

The Alfa Romeo Giulietta Sprint 2+2 Coupe was shown in 1954 at the Turin Motor Show. It wore a design by Franco Scaglione at Bertone, used unibody construction, and was powered by a straight-four Twin Cam engine displacing 1290cc. It had an aluminum alloy block and cast iron inserted sleeves and hemispherical combustion chambers. The double overhead camshafts were driven by two-timing chains and acted on two valves per cylinder. The front suspension used control arms, with coaxial coil springs and hydraulic dampers. The rear setup used a solid axle on coil springs with hydraulic dampers. Hydraulic drum brakes on all four corners provided the stopping power.

A four-door saloon Berlina joined the lineup in April of 1955. An open two-seat Giulietta Spider was added in mid-1955, with the convertible coachwork provided by Pinin Farina. It was built at the insistence of New York importer Max Hoffman, who had witnessed the popularity of the small British and German sports cars in America. With nearly a 100 mph top speed, the Giulietta Spider offered brisk performance from its all-alloy, free-revving, 1.3-liter twin-cam four-cylinder engine mounted in the steel unibody chassis and weighed less than 1900 lbs. During its production lifespan, approximately 14,300 examples of the Spider were built, along with 2,796 of the Spider Veloce.

The Giulietta T.I. (Turismo Internazionale) was added in 1957. An additional ninety-one examples were built by Carrozzeria Colli as station wagons. Carrozzeria Boneschi also made a few station wagon examples called Weekendina. The Giulietta Sprint Speciale wore sleek coupe coachwork designed by Franco Scaglione at Bertone. Between 1957 and 1962, a total of 1,366 examples were built. They had a steel body and were based on a short-wheelbase Giulietta chassis. The lightweight Alfa Romeo Giulietta SZ had aluminum-bodied Berlinetta coachwork, built by Zagato for competition.

Alfa Romeo used the 1959 Frankfurt Motor Show to introduce a new version of the Giulietta Berlina. The previously exposed fuel filler cap was relocated from the tail to the right rear wing, under a flap. The fuel pump was also moved from the cylinder head to a lower position below the distributor. On the exterior, the front was revised with recessed headlights, more rounded wings, and a new grille design incorporating chrome frames and two horizontal bars. The back was also updated, with larger tail lights on the vestigial fins. The interior received new cloth material and a redesigned dashboard. With these changes, it was given a new type designation from 750 and 753 to 101.

Another restyling occurred in 1961. Production of the Alfa Romeo Giulietta (Tipo 750 and Tipo 101, meaning 'Type 750' and 'Type 101') was built from 1954 through 1965 with a total of 177,690 examples built. 39,057 were Berlina body styles, 92,728 were the T.I. models, and 24,084 were Sprints. 14,300 were Spiders and 3,058 were Sprint Veloce.

The popularity of the Alfa Romeo Giulietta helped establish it as a high-volume manufacturer. The Alfa Romeo Giulia was introduced in June of 1962 and would eventually replace the Giulietta. Production of the standard Berlina ended in 1963, with the T.I. continuing for another year. The Sprint, Sprint Special and Spider would continue with the larger 1.6-liter engine and were sold under the Giulia name until they were replaced by all-new Giulia-based models during 1965.

by Dan Vaughan


Roadster
Chassis number: AR 1495 05617
Engine number: AR 1315 43796

The Alfa Romeo Giulietta Spider and the Sprint Coupe were the company's first mass-produced post-war automobile. Just like the preceding 1900 series, were built on a unibody chassis. The Spider version was very successful, partly due to its elegant and attractive styling courtesy of Pinin Farina. More than 132,000 examples left the Portello factory in Milan between 1955 and 1965, with only a mild restyling partway through the run in 1959.

The current owner acquired this Spider in the mid-2000s. It was the subject of a comprehensive nut-and-bolt restoration in 2011. It was repainted in the correct Alfa Red (AR505). Power is from a 1290cc dual overhead cam inline four-cylinder engine fitted with a single Solex carburetor. The 80 horsepower is sent to the rear wheels via a 4-speed manual gearbox. There are four-wheel hydraulic drum brakes and an independent front suspension setup with a live rear axle.

by Dan Vaughan


Roadster

This 1959 Pininfarina Giulietta Spider Veloce has been repainted and re-upholstered but otherwise is un-restored. It was purchased new on January 4, 1960, and the owners used this car for their wedding trip in September 1960 with a stop at Watkins Glen to race. It was street driven, SCCA raced and auto-crossed through 1966.

The car is powered by a double-overhead cam, 1290 cc (1.29 L), in-line 4-cylinder, 90-horsepower engine coupled to a 4-speed transmission. The chassis has coil-spring suspension, with front wheels independent, rigid live rear axle, hydraulic drum brakes, and weighs just over 1,800 pounds.


Roadster
Chassis number: 1495.06373
Engine number: 1315.32565

The Alfa Romeo Giulietta was introduction in 1954 and demand soon outstripped supply, causing the company to rethink its production strategy and become a high-volume manufacturer. Wearing a design by Pinin Farina on a modified Sprint Coupe chassis, the Alfa Romeo Giulietta Spider was the company's second post-war model. Introduced in 1955 at the insistence of New York importer Max Hoffman, the two-seat Sports Spider offered brisk performance from its all-alloy, 1.3-liter twin-cam four-cylinder engine mounted in a steel unibody chassis that weighed less than 1900lbs at the curb.

The Sprint and Spider offered an exhilarating combination of character and performance. Just like the pre-war Alfa Romeos, the dealers soon saw a demand for an updated version for buyers with competition in mind. Satisfying their demands, Alfa Romeo introduced the Giulietta Sprint and Spider Veloces in 1956, with a horsepower increase by about 15-percent. Performance was improved, with a top speed of 115 mph.

In total, just 2,796 examples of the Giulietta Spider Veloces were built.

This Giulietta Spider Veloce 750F was completed at the Milanese Alfa Romeo plant in 1959, as a left-hand-drive Spider in full Veloce trim. It was built in the last year of the Type 750 Veloces (750F), and features fixed wing windows, which are rare and seldom seen on a Type-750.

Power is from a twin-cam engine with dual Weber carburetors. It is believed that the car was delivered new to the United States, possibly to Kentucky, where it has spent the majority of its life. In the late 2000s, the Alfa Romeo Spider Veloce was found by its current caretaker having lost its drive train. An exhaustive search revealed a correct type and series Veloce spec engine and transmission. The Veloce was soon after treated to a comprehensive restoration. The body was finished in its correct shade of white and the interior was re-trimmed in the original red.

The 2-year, no expense spared restoration brought the car back to its factory specifications. Two updates were adopted, namely stainless steel bumpers and fuel tank.

by Dan Vaughan


Sedan
Chassis number: AR1468 17109
Engine number: AR1315 97558

This early-series Alfa Romeo Giulietta T.I. is in original condition with just over 35,000 kilometers on the odometer. Martin Swig acquired it in Italy in 2002, in a deal facilitated by former Ferrari and Maserati Works racing driver Gino Munaron. It was later imported to California and remained in the Swig family collection for the past 17 years. Prior to the Swig ownership, it had been purchased in 1987. It was given its first 'targa' license number 56529 in the Cuneo province on August 4th of 1959.

This Alfa Romeo has factory plaid upholstery, T.I.-specific tachometer, 15-inch Fergat wheels, and the small Carello taillights.

by Dan Vaughan


Coupe

Designed to transport driver, passenger, and luggage in comfort over long distances with minimal fuel use, this model originally sold at a cost of $4,200. Marco Fazio of Alfa Romeo Centro Storico states that this Giulietta Sprint was first sold to Max Hoffman's New York City distributorship in 1959. The car appears to have last been on the road in the state of Washington in 1981, before its recent resurrection. There are photos of the body shell being sandblasted in Florida, perhaps in the 1990s, and the current owners purchased the car in 2014 as a primered shell in Tennessee, with its parts on the shop floor. With plenty of help, the car was reassembled in the owners' garage in Charlottesville, Virginia, over a period of three years.


Coupe
Chassis number: 1493 22967
Engine number: AR 00102

The Giulietta Sprint Coupe, penned by Bertone's Orazio Satta Puliga, helped establish Alfa Romeo as a manufacturing force in the small car with big performance market. The unibody was powered by a light alloy, twin-cam four of 1,290 cc, it was capable of 102 mph in basic form, and 110 mph in the more powerful Sprint Veloce iteration, introduced in 1956.


Roadster

This Giulietta is truly 'abnormal,' having been modified to compete in high elevation 1,000-mile road rallies, such as the Colorado 1000 and the Copper State 1000. It has a non-original modified two-liter engine purpose-built for sustained high performance at alpine elevations and necessitating novel cooling modifications.


Prior to World War II, Alfa Romeo was blessed with a mystique that few companies have ever been able to duplicate. Perhaps the easiest way to describe prewar Alfa Romeo is to compare it with postwar Ferrari, a company whose relentless dominance on the racetrack and in the garages of millionaires has become a familiar fact of life. It was, after all, with Alfa Romeo that Enzo Ferrari began in earnest his famous career.

Suggesting that the two brands are entirely analogous is far too simple a conclusion, though. Ferrari did, in a sense, pick up where prewar Alfa left off, building glorious cars that were created first and foremost to win races. But the Ferrari company was a relative latecomer to auto racing, while Alfa Romeo was involved from nearly the start of the sport. Alfa Romeo built its reputation with some of the finest drivers, finest engineers, and finest automobiles known to the world. An Alfa won every Mille Miglia from 1928 to 1938, with the exception of the 1931 race that was won by a Mercedes-Benz SSK. Alfas won Le Mans in 1931, 1932, 1933, and 1934. It wasn't until just before the outbreak of World War II when Nazi Germany fed Auto Union and Mercedes-Benz great sums of money to create cars that could dominate auto racing and boost national pride, that Alfas began to slowly slip off the podiums—and even after that the company remained highly competitive.

Alfa Romeos raced in the most grueling, dangerous, frightening, and exciting events that car racing has ever known. The company's road cars, too, used phenomenal engines and chassis, many of which were initially developed for race use and then later detuned and clothed in stunning bodies by Italy's famed carrozzerie. Alfa built supercars before supercars existed. Alfa was, put simply, one of the absolutely superlative prewar marques, a rarefied combination of lust, precision, sophistication, and aesthetic excellence.

After World War II, though, Alfa Romeo boldly entered a market into which it had never before ventured: that of the mass-produced car. Fortunately, these later Alfas did not lose their prewar dignity. Instead, the carmaker's characteristically excellent engineering and styling were translated into smaller, more affordable packages. The 1900 was the first of Alfa's mass-produced cars. An excellent vehicle with monocoque construction and a twin-cam four-cylinder with an alloy head, the 1900 was a clear departure from Alfa's prewar roots. The car was distinctive, though, and while it was usually ordered as a conservative sedan, it could also be ordered as a coupe or convertible from the same excellent design houses that created some of the finest examples of prewar Alfa style. The real success story of Alfa Romeo's early postwar years, though, was introduced four years after the 1900, and named Giulietta.

Despite what BMW fans might say about their 2002s, the Alfa Romeo Giulietta was the first sports sedan. Admittedly, that assertion might meet with some controversy, but even on paper, the Giulietta's sporty demeanor is clear. Even the four-door (or Berlina) Giuliettas were equipped with mechanicals that made many contemporary sports cars jealous. The brakes were excellent finned Alfin drums, the rear axle with its aluminum differential housing was suspended by coils instead of leaves, and the car's compact size and weight of just one ton ensured delightful road manners.

And then you see the engine. Displacing just 1,290cc, it was not particularly powerful. It had a polished sophistication that could not be matched by the engines in many cars with bigger price tags and more impressive performance figures, though. The Giulietta engine was such an inherently excellent and modern unit that its basic design, albeit in 1,962cc form, was in use until the very last of the Alfa Romeo 105- and 115-series Spiders were produced—in 1993.

The Giulietta's engine contained many features usually reserved for prohibitively expensive cars, yet it was made available affordably to the masses. The block and head were both cast in aluminum. An oil capacity to rival the Exxon Valdez ensured cool operation even at sustained high engine speeds. The pistons traveled in cast-iron wet liners that were replaceable, indicating that these engines were designed not just to perform but also to last. Twin, chain-driven camshafts operated two valves per cylinder that opened into hemispherical combustion chambers. This was an engine comparable to those used in some of the very best sports cars of the time—and sure enough, Alfa created successful racing cars using tuned Giulietta running gear coupled with aerodynamic bodies.

Unlike most cars offering more than one body configuration, where the four-door sedan is usually the first style introduced, Alfa Romeo introduced the coupe (or Sprint) version of its Giulietta before the Berlina. The background behind this unusual decision is fascinating.

Alfa intended to release the Giulietta Berlina as the initial Giulietta body style in 1953. In order to raise money and generate interest in their new car, Alfa held a lottery by issuing company securities and giving security holders the chance to win a Giulietta. Alfa Romeo held this lottery while their latest car was still being developed, though, and by 1953 the Giulietta was not yet ready for production. The randomly selected lottery winners were getting upset at not having their cars by the originally stated release date, and Alfa knew it had to act quickly to settle the problem before the Giulietta's reputation was tarnished before the model had even been released.

The Giulietta Berlina would not be ready until 1955. Given Alfa Romeo's close relationship with the Italian carrozzerie, though, the company knew that it could order a limited run of cars built quickly to assuage the concerns of angry lottery winners. Alfa Romeo accordingly contacted Bertone to arrange for the production of the Giulietta Sprint in time for a debut at Turin in 1954. Alfa didn't realize just how well its Giulietta would sell in all three standard body configurations (Berlina, Sprint, and Spider), and by the end of production, the car had been a success story not only for Alfa but also for Bertone, which went on to produce all Giulietta Sprints.

In addition to the Berlina and Sprint, a two-seat Spider (convertible) version of the Giulietta was also produced. Styled and built by Pinin Farina, this lithe and pretty automobile was proof that the Giulietta running gear was perfectly suited to sports cars. Though the Berlina was the most popular body style by a wide margin, the little sedans are now very rare as they tended to lead rougher lives than the Sprints and Spiders.

From 1956, Giulietta shoppers could choose a Sprint Veloce or Spider Veloce in addition to the standard versions of the three primary body styles. The Veloce models featured, amongst other engine modifications, twin Weber carburetors in place of the standard trims' single Solex units, and they could rev to 8,000rpm. With virtually no external cues giving away the added power, the Veloces were true sleepers that offered tremendous fun in cars that were still relatively affordable and sturdy.

Two other notable and exclusive Giulietta body styles were the Sprint Speciale (by Bertone) and the Sprint Zagato. These models added sleek, aerodynamic bodies to an already impressive platform. The cars are highly prized today, the Sprint Speciale for its terrific style and the Sprint Zagato for its racing pedigree.

The Giulietta was produced in two series, retroactively titled 750 and 101 in reference to the beginning digits used for part numbers associated with the vehicles. The early 750 and later 101 were distinguished by several subtle yet important changes (such as the 101's split-case gearbox and longer wheelbase for Spider), but they were not marketed as different cars, and there were transitional examples that blurred the distinctions between the series. Despite the detailed changes, the Giulietta models were never fully redesigned until the Giulia replacement came in 1962 (some Giulietta models remained in production until 1964). The Giulia continued to cement Alfa Romeo's postwar reputation as the producer of innovative, thoughtfully engineered, and superbly styled mass-produced sports cars and sedans.

To gain an insightful understanding of the Giulietta, it's helpful to consider the car's name. Giulietta. No one seems to know for sure where that name came from, but there is a popular legend that offers a possible idea. Several of Alfa Romeo's directors, as well as racing driver Jean-Pierre Wimille, ended up in a Paris nightclub at a time near the debut of the Alfa 1900. A clever Russian prince who happened to be in the same nightclub recognized the eight gentlemen and asked, 'You are eight Romeos, without even one Giulietta?' Evidently, the Alfa directors liked the name.

Whether or not this story is true, it gives a clear (if romanticized) picture of what Alfa Romeo was like in the 1950s. This was a clever, stylish brand, run by charismatic enthusiasts who were ready to reformulate the essence of their company. Exciting times, exciting people, exciting cars—Giulietta's birth represented a new chapter in Alfa Romeo's history that has come to be as highly regarded as the tradition of extravagant perfection before it.

Sources:

Benson, Joe. Illustrated Alfa Romeo Buyer's Guide . 2nd. Osceola, WI: MBI Publishing Company, 1992. Print.

Goodfellow, Winston. Italian Sports Cars. Osceola, WI: MBI Publishing Company, 2000. Print.

LaChance, David. ''The Italian Girlfriend'.' Hemmings Sports & Exotic Car. Dec 2010: 24-29. Print.

by Evan Acuña


The 1954 Alfa Romeo Giulietta was an important vehicle for the Company, because it was the first offering since World War II that truly resembled the racing-inspired vehicles Alfa was capable of producing. The vehicles were mass-produced, a first for the company. The Giulietta came in various body styles including the Spider, Sprint, TI, and Veloce.

The vehicles were built with the engine in the front and powered the rear wheels. Most used a four-speed manual gearbox with front and rear drum brakes. The steering was worm-and-roller with the front suspension comprised of wishbones with telescopic dampers and coil springs with anti-roll bar while the rear was a rigid live axle with telescopic dampers and coil springs.

The first of the Giulietta's to be offered was the 2+2 coupe which featured a four-cylinder engine and bodywork by Bertone. The 1290 cc engine producing 65 horsepower, a respectable figure at the time. A year later the Berlina version appeared, commonly referred to as a salon. This version brought a level of practicality, with its four doors and longer wheelbase. It featured the same mechanical components as the Sprint but the engine was not as powerful, producing a little over 50 horsepower.

The famous coachbuilder, Pininfarina, was tasked with designing a new prototype for 1955. What was created was the Giulietta Spider Prototype, first introduced to the public at the 1956 Turing Motor Show in production form. It sat atop a slightly shorter wheelbase than the Sprint but used the same mechanical components.

In 1956, the Veloce was introduced. This version was sporty, with its dual-cam 1300 cc alloy engine. Using dual Weber DC03 carburetors the vehicle was capable of producing 90 horsepower. The gas tank was enlarged to better prepare it for endurance racing while the larger front brakes provided excellent stopping power. By using Plexiglas rear and side windows and aluminum alloy doors, hood, and trunk lid the vehicle was able to shed weight, ultimately improving performance. The Veloce version was available on the Spider and the Sprint.

In 1957, the Giulietta Ti was introduced, outfitted with a salon body and powered by a Sprint engine. With the four doors and a 65 horsepower engine, this became the most popular Giulietta ever produced.

Modest changes were made in 1959 to correct reliability issues. There were few aesthetic changes, mostly to the exterior of the TI version.

In 1961 the berlina's received an updated grill and the Spider now shared the same wheelbase as the Sprint. The TI received extra power, an increase that brought total output to 75 horsepower.

In 1963, the production of the Berlina ceased with the TI doing the same a year later. Throughout the production lifespan of the Giulietta, the TI was by far the most popular model with nearly 93,000 examples being produced. The closest to the TI was the Berlina with a little over 39,000 examples. With nearly 2,800 examples produced, the Spider Veloce was the lowest produced version. There was a version dubbed the Promiscua that was a four-door estate car and featured bodywork by Coli that was even more exclusive, with only 91 examples produced.

by Dan Vaughan