Alfa Romeo Alfa 6
Alfa 6 1st and 2nd series | |
Manufacturer | Alfa Romeo |
---|---|
Also called | Alfa Sei |
Production | 1979–1986 |
Assembly | Arese, Milan, Italy |
Predecessor | Alfa Romeo 2000 |
Successor | Alfa Romeo 164 |
Body style | Sedan |
Layout | FR layout |
Engine | Petrol: 2.0 L V6 2.5 L V6 Diesel: 2.5 L VM HR588 I5 |
Transmission | 5-speed manual 3-speed ZF automatic |
Length | 4,760 mm (187 in) |
Width | 1,680 mm (66 in) |
Height | 1,420 mm (56 in) |
Curb weight | 1,480 kg (3,300 lb) (petrol) 1,580 kg (3,500 lb) (turbodiesel) |
Related | Alfa Romeo Alfetta |
The Alfa Romeo Alfa 6 is an executive car produced by the Italian automaker Alfa Romeo from 1979 to 1986.
On its launch in 1979, the Alfa 6 was the flagship of the Alfa Romeo range. The four-door body was fairly conventional and used a similar style to the existing Alfa Romeo Alfetta, and in fact both vehicles share a great number of parts, including door panels; Design work on the 6 was done prior to the Alfa Romeo Alfetta, but the fuel crisis of 1973 delayed further development and led to the 6's belated 1979 debut. The styling was not particularly aerodynamic but the drag coefficient was a somewhat respectable 0.41. Power came from an all-new 2.5 V6 engine which generated 158 PS (116 kW; 156 hp) at 5600 rpm using a total of six carburettors (that frequently went out of balance) and a single, belt driven camshaft in each cylinder head. Power steering, power windows, central locking, electric wing mirrors and a 25% limited slip differential were standard, making the Alfa 6 competitively priced compared to similar saloons of that time where such equipment typically was a costly extra. The car was also designed to set new standards in safety; for example it featured a shock sensor in the boot which would cut off the fuel supply in the event of a crash.
On its launch in 1979, the Alfa 6 was the flagship of the Alfa Romeo range. The four-door body was fairly conventional and used a similar style to the existing Alfa Romeo Alfetta, and in fact both vehicles share a great number of parts, including door panels; Design work on the 6 was done prior to the Alfa Romeo Alfetta, but the fuel crisis of 1973 delayed further development and led to the 6's belated 1979 debut. The styling was not particularly aerodynamic but the drag coefficient was a somewhat respectable 0.41. Power came from an all-new 2.5 V6 engine which generated 158 PS (116 kW; 156 hp) at 5600 rpm using a total of six carburettors (that frequently went out of balance) and a single, belt driven camshaft in each cylinder head. Power steering, power windows, central locking, electric wing mirrors and a 25% limited slip differential were standard, making the Alfa 6 competitively priced compared to similar saloons of that time where such equipment typically was a costly extra. The car was also designed to set new standards in safety; for example it featured a shock sensor in the boot which would cut off the fuel supply in the event of a crash.
In 1983 the car was revamped, with single square headlights replacing the twin round units, new bumpers, a new grille and new trim around the rear lights. Minor interior changes were also carried out, whilst mechanically the engine's troublesome six carburettors were replaced by Bosch L-Jetronic fuel injection, with the power remaining at 158 PS (116 kW; 156 hp). This revamp also saw the introduction of two new engines, a 2.0 version of the existing V6 engine (which retained the carburettors) and a 2.5 litre VM 5 cylinder turbodiesel. The executive car market into which to Alfa 6 was launched had many new rivals to combat. Its own Italian stablemates, including Fiats Argenta and Lancia's Gamma both looked promising, not to mention the resurgent French Marques,Peugeot with there 604sl, Citroen and the impressive CX and Renault's 30tx. Of course the German contingent of BMW, Mercedes and Audi all had excellent contenders but were usually more expensive and options that came standard with the Alfa, usually a costly extra.
The Bertone Delfino concept car in 1983 was based on Alfa 6.
In addition to introducing several novel features the Alfa 6 previewed styling elements found in other premium cars. For example B.M.W, when updating its mid-range 5 series, choose to iron out any rounded lines, particularly aft of the "C" pillar, into a sharply creased and very angular, albeit stylish and modern trunk area. When parked side by side in European car parks the similarities are extremely evident. Even the front end treatments look remarkably similar with four round headlights and a premium grille of similar sizing.This could be said of most executive cars of the time but the German company choose an Italian stylist to update the 5 series.
The Alfa 6 also held up a long tradition of handing well and riding comfortably, a tricky compromise for engineers usually but Alfa Romeo had achieved this with several previous models. In retrospect had the Alfa 6 been built to a higher standard its advanced engineering and handsome styling, which incidentally still looks good today to this writers eyes, may have been a stronger contender in the increasingly crowded executive market of the 1970s and 80s.
Engines
Model | Engine | Volume | Power | Torque | Years |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alfa 6 2,0 V6 | V6 | 1,997 cc (6 single Dell'Orto carburetors) | 99 kW (135 PS) at 5,600 rpm | 178 N·m (131 lb·ft) at 4,500 rpm | 1983–1986 |
Alfa 6 2,5 | V6 | 2,492 cc (6 single Dell'Orto carburetors) | 118 kW (160 PS) at 5,800 rpm | 219 N·m (162 lb·ft) at 4,000 rpm | 1979–1982 |
Alfa 6 2,5 V6 QO | V6 | 2,492 cc (Bosch L-Jetronic) | 116 kW (158 PS) at 5,600 rpm | 215 N·m (159 lb·ft) at 4,000 rpm | 1983–1986 |
Alfa 6 2,5TD | I5 | 2,494 cc VM turbodiesel | 77 kW (105 PS) at 4,300 rpm | 206 N·m (152 lb·ft) at 2,400 rpm | 1983–1986 |
Statistics
- Total build: 12,070
- With carburetted 2.5 litre V6 petrol engine: 5,748
- With fuel injected 2.5 litre V6 petrol engine: 1,574
- With 2.0 litre V6 petrol engine: 1,771
- With 2.5 litre VM turbodiesel engine: 2,977
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