Alfa Romeo Alfa Romeo Alfa Romeo Alfa Romeo
Junior Zagato 1.6 - Roméo 2 - Spider S3 Qadrifoglio - 2.5 V6 - Giulia TI - 6 C 1750 - 6 C 2500 Super Sport - 6C 2500 Berlina - 1900 SS et Spéciale - Spider Giulia 1600 - Tipo 256 6C 2500 - Tipo I to IV - 1900 - Tipo 101 Giulietta - Tipo 101 Sprint Speciale - Tipo 105 Giulia - Tipo 105 Giulia GTA - Tipo 105 Giulia TZ - Tipo 105 Duetto Spider - Tipo 115 2000 Berlina - Tipo 106 2600 - Tipo 105.64 Montreal - Tipo ES30 SZ - RZ
ALFA ROMEO (I) 1910 to date
(1) A.L.F.A. (Anonima Lombardo Fabbrica Automobili), Milan 1910-1914 (2) SA Italiana Ing. Nicola Romeo & C, Milan 1914-1930
(3) SA Alfa Romeo, Milan 1930-1942
(4) Alfa Romeo S.p.A., Milan 1942 to date
A.L.F.A. (The Lombardy Motor Manufacturing Co.) was formed in 1909 by Cav. Ugo Stella, formerly managing director of the Societa Italiana Automobili Darracq, to manufacture a completely new range of Italian cars at Portello on the outskirts of Milan where, since 1906, small French Darracq cars had been assembled.
By 1910 the last Darracq had left the factory, and production commenced of a sturdy range of Alfa cars designed from scratch by Cav. Giuseppe Merosi, a native of Piacenza, who had been Chief Technician with Bianchi in Milan.
The first Alfas were a 24hp 4.1-litre car, later known as the 20/30hp, and a 12hp 2.4-litre, which became the 15/20hp. Both were well made, with side-valve 4-cylinder monobloc engines and shaft drive. In 1913 the sports 6.1-litre 40/60hp appeared with push-rod overhead valves operated by two camshafts in the crankcase. A one-off 4;-litre Grand Prix car was built in 1914 with a 4-cylinder twin ohe engine, but it never ran in international races.
In 1915 the factory was taken over by the industrialist Nicola Romeo, and after World War I the pre-war models were marketed as Alfa Romeos. The 20/30 ES Sport of 1921-22 was successful in Italian races, as was a special racing 40/60 driven by Campari, which scored the firm's first victory at Mugello in 1920.
A 6-cylinder luxury side-valve car called the G1 was not a success, but Merosi's best remembered designs followed it; the 3-litre 6-cylinder push-rod ohv touring, sports and racing RL series cars which first appeared in 1921 and went into production in 1923. A racing version won the 1923 Targa Florio. The similar 4-cylinder 2-litre type RM was marketed in 1923-26, but the pointed radiator sports 22/90hp RLSS and the touring 21/70hp RLT, which had a flat radiator, were sold until 1927.
In 1924 Alfa Romeo won the very first Grande Epreuve they ever entered, an unparalleled achievement, when Campari was victorious in the 1924 French Grand Prix at Lyons in the new straight-eight supercharged P2 car, designed by Vittorio Jano, who came from Fiat. In 1925 Alfa Romeo were declared World Champions.
Jano took over from Merosi in 1926 and his first touring and sports car designs soon became world famous, these having single and twin overhead camshaft 6-cylinder engines, first in I500cc and then in 1750cc form. When supercharged, these cars won all the great sports car races in the period 1928-30, with the exception of Le Mans.
This latter omission was rectified from 1931 to 1934 when victory at Le Mans each year went to Jano's next sports car design, which had a 2.3-litre straighteight supercharged engine with a central drive to the overhead camshafts. This engine also powered the successful Grand Prix Alfa Romeo of 1931, known as the `Monza' model and raced for the factory by Scuderia Ferrari.
In 1932 this engine, in 2.65-litre form, powered the Type B P3 Monoposto G.P. car, which proved virtually unbeatable and bore affinities with the Type A racing car of 1931 powered by two 1750cc engines side by side. In 1933 Alfa Romeo came under State ownership and the Monopostos were withdrawn from racing until right at the end of the season. Ferrari continued G.P. racing with Monzas enlarged to 2.6 litres.
The Monopostos in 2.9-litre form were not powerful enough against the Mercedes and Auto Unions, although Chiron won the 1934 French G.P. for Alfa Romeo, whilst Nuvolari quite unexpectedly won the 1935 German G.P. in a 3.8-litre Monoposto fitted with Dubonnet ifs. From 1936 to 1939 Alfa Romeo fielded independently sprung straight-eight, V-12, and V-16 cars in G.P. racing, but against the German cars only isolated victories in smaller races were attained, usually through the skill of Nuvolari. In 1935 Ferrari built two big bi-mntore racing cars, with one P3 engine under the bonnet and another in the tail.
Some 2.9 P3 engines were put into all-independently sprung chassis in 1937-39 to make expensive but exceedingly fast prestige sports cars. In sports car racing Alfa Romeos won every Mille Miglia from 1928 to 1938 inclusive, except in 1931.
In 1934 Jano's unsupercharged 6-cylinder twin ohc 2.3-litre car replaced the 1750 and 8C 2300, and, developed by Bruno Treviso, it later became the 2500 of 1939 and the early post-war years. It was replaced in 1950 by the 4-cylinder 1900. This marked an important change in Alfa Romeo policy. Previously the touring Alfas had been expensive and semi-bespoke machines, whereas the 1900 and its successors were unitary construction saloons whose production has risen to about 30,000 units per annum at the present time. In 1954 was introduced the famous 1300cc Giuletta, designed by Orazio Satta. From it were derived the successful 1600 Giulia and the 6-cylinder 2600, introduced in 1962. For 1968 the 1600s were replaced by the 1750 series, actually 1,779cc, available as a saloon (Berlina), coupe (1750 GT Veloce) or open sports (1750 Spider Veloce).
The remarkable Colombo-designed supercharged l;-litre 8-cylinder Monoposto known as the `158' was introduced in 1938 for voiturette racing. After the war it was eligible for the Grand Prix formula, and by remaining unbeaten in Grandes Epreuves in 1946-48 and 1950 until mid-1951, it set up a record unequalled by any other G.P. design. In 1946 it took the first three places in the G.P. des Nations at Geneva, and repeated this finishing order in 1947 in the Italian G.P., the G.P. d'Europe at Spa and the Swiss G.P. In 1948 a similar clean sweep was attained in the French G.P. and the Monza G.P. The most successful drivers during these years were Jean-Pierre Wimille, Achille Varzi and Count Felice Trossi, but the deaths of all three took place before the 1949 season and Alfa Romeo withdraw from racing as they had done in 1933. The 158s returned to the tracks in 1950 with Giuseppe Farina and Juan Manuel Fangio as their star drivers, and after victories in every race the cars ran in, Farina was declared World Champion. In 1951 Fangio was World Champion on the 400bhp Type 159, though the cars had to concede their first defeat, by an unblown 4;-litre Ferrari.
At the end of the season Alfa Romeo withdrew from G.P. racing, and although the works Disco Volante sports racing 2;- and 3-litre cars of 1952-53 were generally unlucky in racing, the Giulias have had G.T. successes in recent years. A new factory at Arese, just outside Milan, has been built to take the place of the old Portello works. Another new factory is at Naples.