4C [Official] Alfa Romeo 4C Spider drops its top in Detroit


The Alfa Romeo 4C (Type 960) is a mid-engined sports car that was produced Alfa Romeo. Unveiled at the 2013 Geneva Motor Show, the 4C was initially only available as a coupé, with a spider body style coming a few years later in 2015. The name 4C refers to its straight-four engine.

JHF

Driving Dynamics Pro
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Arrives in North America this summer
After a series of leaked official images and revealing spy shots, the Alfa Romeo 4C Spider has made its official debut on the dawn of the North American International Auto Show.

Alfa Romeo has retained most of the 4C Coupe's design and they added sculpted air intakes on the sides while the removable & stowable cloth roof will be available alongside an optional exposed carbon fiber hardtop. The open-air version also gets far more attractive headlights, a deck lid with three functional heat extractors and an aero-optimized spoiler while the taillights come with LED technology. Also at the back is an optional Akrapovic performance exhaust system with center-mounted tips that have carbon fiber surrounds.

The 4C Spider comes with four fresh alloy wheel designs in sizes ranging from 17 to 19 inches and matched with silver, red, yellow or black brake calipers. The client can choose from one of the seven exterior paints available, including the new Giallo (yellow) hue while inside there are six combinations with two seat material options. The added complexity of the roof has increased weight by only 22 lbs (10 kg) which means the Alfa Romeo 4C Spider should be just as fun to drive as its fixed roof sibling.

Power comes from the same four-cylinder, 1.75-liter turbocharged gasoline engine delivering 237 bhp (177 HP) and 258 lb-ft (350 Nm) of torque through a twin-clutch gearbox with steering wheel-mounted paddle shifters changing gears in only 130 milliseconds. It completes the 0-60 mph (0-96 km/h) run in 4.1 seconds and will top out at 160 mph (258 km/h).

On the inside it boasts two composite-framed sport seats covered in leather, a flat-bottomed leather-wrapped steering wheel, aluminum pedals, carbon fiber vent surrounds and a seven-inch color digital cluster. The 4C Spider comes with an Alpine sound system with support for HD radio, SiriusXM Radio, USB & iPod connectivity and Bluetooth streaming.

Alfa Romeo says deliveries in United States and Canada are scheduled to begin this summer.

Additional details can be found in the attached press release.

Source: Alfa Romeo

http://www.worldcarfans.com/115011287101/alfa-romeo-4c-spider-drops-its-top-in-detroit

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Ciao Alfa.....those must be a year old pictures, because "martedì 7 di gennaio" (January, Tuesday the 7th) is from 2014, not 2015....or italian elettronica is doing their charm thing :D
 
See in the pic with the red coupe that the coupe now gets the decent headlights and not those matrix-sentinel-thingamebobs. Existing owners must be colouring their undies 50 shades of brown now...
 
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Lovely little car, I really would love one of these. It reminds me of a shrunken Ferrari 458 Spider, stunning!
 
I really hope to drive/own an Alfa one day, but only if the brand thrives in America. I will not sign up for an experimental car with piss poor quality and a shoddy dealer network. They're going to have to come correct to get my money. Such a storied brand it deserves to be done right.

M
 
Alfa Romeo 4C Spider goes up for order in the U.K.
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2016 Alfa Romeo 4C Spider

Alfa Romeo has begun accepting orders for the 4C Spider in the United Kingdom.

Priced from £59,500 OTR, the 4C Spider follows in the footsteps of the 4C Coupe but adopts projector-style xenon headlights, a new engine cover and an aluminum roll bar that is hidden underneath a black “halo.”

The interior also echoes the coupe and features fabric seats, aluminum trim and a leather-wrapped steering wheel. Other notable highlights air conditioning, contrast stitching and an Alfa Hi Fi sound system.

Power is provided by a turbocharged 1.75-liter four-cylinder engine that develops 240 PS (176 kW) and 349 Nm (258 lb-ft) of torque. It is connected to a twin-clutch transmission which enables the car to accelerate from 0-60 mph in less than 4.5 seconds before hitting a top speed of 160 mph (257 km/h).

Source: Alfa Romeo UK
 
2015 Alfa Romeo 4C Spider
Allow us to issue a warning you're understandably likely to ignore.

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“You want to do what? Have you driven a Lotus Elise? Trust me, doing an interstate drive from Los Angeles to Texas won’t be fun.” So began the warnings to the buyer of my Lotus Elise.

“The hardtop will be bolted in—no wind-in-hair driving—there’s no cruise control or spare tire. The radio sounds awful when it manages to find a station. There’s hardly any of the following: sound deadening, suspension compliance, or seat adjustments. What? You’re bringing your wife? Are you aware that the passenger seat is fixed in place, no adjustments? You’ll be fighting by Palm Springs. She’ll fly home from Phoenix, if she doesn’t divorce you. Please consider shipping the car to Texas.”

Owning an Elise for two years makes you intimately aware of the car’s shortcomings and limitations. But, on the right road, on the right day, it’ll trigger a dopamine storm in your head so intense that you’ll become awfully forgiving. You’ll forget that on less-perfect roads the Elise sounds like a shopping cart stacked with panes of glass.


There’s no car currently on the market more like the dearly departed Elisethan the Alfa Romeo 4C Spider, and nearly all of the same warnings apply. It is our duty to make you aware of what you’re getting into before you hand over $65,495 to the dealership for a 4C Spider—or decide to drive one halfway across the country with your spouse. We realize that you’ll go ahead and get one anyway, and we applaud you.


Weight Watcher
Like the Elise, the 4C Spider is a sports car obsessed with weight loss, an automotive anorexic. In a Puritanical fury, designers and engineers have removed every bit of fat with the goal of boosting performance and enhancing the feel of the primary controls. The result is a 2504-pound two-seater. Granted, the Alfa is 195 pounds heavier than the new Mazda MX-5 Miata, a car that costs much less and doesn’t have even a strand of carbon fiber in it. If you buy a 4C, we suggest deflecting all comments about the Miata’s weight by pointing out the 4C’s carbon-fiber tub. “Just like a LaFerrari,” you’ll say. Stick to your talking points.

Sitting behind the carbon-fiber hot tub for two is a transversely mounted 1.7-liter turbocharged four-cylinder engine and a dual-clutch automatic. Acceleration is commensurate with the Alfa’s shrunken-exotic looks. A blast to 60 mph takes 4.2 seconds and the quarter-mile passes in 12.9 seconds at 107 mph. Without the dual-clutch doing its high-revving launch-control dance, the rolling 5-to-60 start adds a second. This is a joyfully quick car, as swift to 60 as a Ferrari F40. But in the stop-and-go traffic of the real world, the 4C Spider’s gearbox doesn’t engage the clutch very smoothly. Taking off from a stop is often a jerky process as the clutch is slow to engage. Once rolling, shifts snap off with the tug of a paddle, or you can let the gearbox shift for itself in Auto mode. There’s no manual transmission, which is surprising considering the interaction of driver and car is placed above all else.

Shout It Out Loud
Our test car arrived with the Sport exhaust, a $500 option that removes the muffler. That’s as stupid as it sounds—first, you’re paying for something that’s not there and, second, a muffler isn’t a bad thing. In fact, Alfa will soon offer an optional Akrapovič exhaust that we’ve yet to hear, but since it includes a muffler we have to assume it’s quieter than no muffler. With the Sport exhaust, the Alfa is seriously loud. Can you ignore unwanted noise like a deposed dictator holed up in a Swiss embassy? Good. You’ll need those skills.

Upshifts cause a loud fart-snort that sounds like a UPS truck with a head cold. Without a muffler, the Alfa’s four-cylinder drones and moans to the tune of 85 decibels at full throttle, the racket occasionally broken up by the whoosh and whine of the turbocharger. None of these noises are particularly pleasant and it only brings to light the rough, gritty nature of the 4C’s four-cylinder engine. Set the cruise control to 70 mph—it does have cruise control—and you’ll hear 79 decibels of harshness. Suffering through the tiresome din will make you want to fill your ears with cotton wadding; you’ll be begging for mercy, wishing for deafness. Sound insulation and a muffler would help. Bring earplugs for the transit stages of life.

In most driving, looking past these shortcomings isn’t easy. The 4C Spider is a sadist, but like the Elise, on an empty canyon road or out in the country with the easily folded fabric top tucked in the trunk, the abuse is forgotten. Unassisted steering sends through unfiltered messages from the road. The rich texture of the pavement, every seam, and every break in the road is broadcast to your palms. There is so much sensitivity that big breaks in the surface will jerk the flat-bottomed wheel alarmingly. Hang on tight. Steering this car requires strength, especially when the Alfa Romeo–spec Pirelli P Zeros are hammered to their 0.96-g limit.

Handling is spectacularly neutral and the chassis responds predictably and reliably to inputs from the brakes, steering, and engine. The hard brake pedal takes getting used to, but there is the perfect amount of bite and it’s easy to modulate. Stops from 70 mph take only 150 feet. Like a race car, the Spider is a delight on track. Why else would you put up with it? Compared with the Elise, the 4C Spider comes across as larger, because it is larger. It’s longer, more than 500 pounds heavier, and nearly six inches wider. Width adds stability, but it also erodes playfulness and agility. Relatively speaking, anyway.


Huh, What’s This?
Considering the track-ready prowess and the cold comfort of the 4C, the ride is surprisingly civil. Our test car arrived with the $2200 Spider Track Package 2 and the 18-inch front and 19-inch rear wheels ($2500). Aside from kicking the steering wheel, bumps are taken in stride. The windshield frame does quiver slightly, but the Alfa is tight and free of creaks and rattles. Build quality on this particular 4C Spider was superior to the 4C coupe we drove last fall. Paint quality was excellent, the panel gaps were consistent, and the instrument panel didn’t have any wires dangling under it. But upon closer examination, we noticed that the shocks had stickers on them that said, “PRESS CAR.” So our car appears to have been prepped for car reviewers; we asked a Fiat-Chrysler spokesperson what exactly this means and were told that our early preproduction example had its parts marked during assembly and that there was no difference between the parts on our test car and the parts on cars sent to dealerships. Well, except for the “PRESS CAR” stickers. Without a saleable 4C Spider for side-by-side comparison, we can’t be sure of that, however.

We also don’t know what the Spider would be like with a better seating position. Alfa’s lightweight seats are comfortable and supportive, but the backrest is too upright and the seat bottom is too flat. You’re forced over the steering wheel, legs nearly flat on the floor. There are six Torx bolts that adjust the seat for height, but they only move the seat up and down and cannot be made to affect the rake of the seat unless you leave the middle bolts out. You’re not supposed to leave the middle bolts out—we asked. At least the passenger seat isn’t bolted in place like the Elise’s. In the lowest setting, you sit deep in the Spider, the beltline is high, but with the top removed, most of the claustrophobia you experience in the hardtop version melts away. Getting in and out is tough, but at least the doors can be closed without having to worry about the glass unintentionally disappearing into the door, a charismatic foible of the Elise.

Is the Porsche Boxster a better sports car? Yes. But if you really want the unfiltered sports-car experience, less weight, and hypersensitive controls, be prepared to tolerate the commotion of an unmuffled four-cylinder engine, a dual-clutch automatic, a barely adjustable seat, and a twitching steering wheel. Still want one? We understand completely. An Elise passed through these hands, after all. But consider yourself warned.

Specifications
VEHICLE TYPE:mid-engine, rear-wheel-drive, 2-passenger, 2-door targa

PRICE AS TESTED:$76,495 (base price: $65,495)

ENGINE TYPE:turbocharged and intercooled DOHC 16-valve inline-4, aluminum block and head, direct fuel injection

DISPLACEMENT:106 cu in, 1742 cc
Power: 237 hp @ 6000 rpm
Torque: 258 lb-ft @ 2200 rpm

TRANSMISSION:6-speed dual-clutch automatic with manual shifting mode

DIMENSIONS:
Wheelbase: 93.7 in
Length: 157.0 in
Width: 73.5 in Height:46.7 in
Passenger volume: 47 cu ft
Cargo volume: 4 cu ft
Curb weight: 2504 lb

C/D TEST RESULTS:
Zero to 60 mph: 4.2 sec
Zero to 100 mph: 11.1 sec
Zero to 130 mph: 22.4 sec
Rolling start, 5-60 mph: 5.2 sec
Top gear, 30-50 mph: 3.1 sec
Top gear, 50-70 mph: 4.4 sec
Standing ¼-mile: 12.9 sec @ 107 mph
Top speed (drag limited,C/D est): 155 mph
Braking, 70-0 mph: 150 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft-dia skidpad: 0.96 g

FUEL ECONOMY:
EPA city/highway: 24/34 mpg
C/D observed: 24 mpg

http://www.caranddriver.com/reviews/2015-alfa-romeo-4c-spider-test-review
 

Alfa Romeo

Alfa Romeo Automobiles S.p.A. is an Italian luxury car manufacturer and a subsidiary of Stellantis Italy. It was founded on 24 June 1910 in Milan, Italy, as A.L.F.A., an acronym for Anonima Lombarda Fabbrica Automobili. The brand is known for sport-oriented vehicles and has been involved in car racing since 1911. As of 2023, it is a subsidiary of the multinational automotive manufacturing corporation Stellantis.
Official website: Alfa Romeo

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