Skip to main content

Alfa Romeo’s Giulia promises 510 horsepower of Italian bravado

Alfa Romeo launched its new Giulia sedan earlier this year and made the new model the centerpiece of its Frankfurt Auto Show display today.  While Alfa has not formally announced specific dates and pricing for the United States, Alfa brand chief Harald Wester said today that the high-performance Quadrifoglio version of the Giulia would be available in the Spring of 2016, with the more basic versions following later in the year.

The new Alfa is built to compete in the European sports sedan market. The Quadrifoglio edition features a 510 horsepower twin-turbo V6 engine, six-speed manual transmission, and rear-wheel-drive. With a 0-62 time of 3.9 seconds, the car is designed to take on BMW’s M3 and Audi’s RS4. An all-wheel-drive version is expected later next year.

7T4t93-fcy1iHYPIjBYA1IQIKfqjRr-GWtPeNCChJo4,zyJANUWiIHq687vQgzY_GsDO8_yzHh4JOVIAhiC6bhc
Jeff Zurschmeide

Alfa has packed the new Giulia with technology and performance-oriented design, gifting the car with perfect 50/50 weight distribution, an exclusive new 4.5-link rear suspension design called Alfalink, electronically-controlled shock absorption, and torque vectoring. The Giuliua comes with three driving modes that Alfa calls DNA: Dynamic, Natural, and Advanced Efficient (a new energy-efficiency mode introduced on the Giulia). The Quadrifoglio edition also includes a Racing mode.

For the Quadrifoglio, Alfa has developed an active aerodynamic front splitter that helps the Alfa achieve about 220 pounds of downforce at 186 MPH, and this deserves special note as a meaningful innovation.  A splitter is a flat plane spoiler that sticks out at the base of a car’s front grille. It works by allowing air to pass under the car, while air hitting the front surface of the vehicle “piles up” and creates downforce – at the expense of wind resistance. The Alfa design raises the splitter in high-speed straight-line driving to reduce resistance, and lowers the splitter under braking or cornering to maximize downforce when it’s needed.

The Giulia Quadrifoglio also comes with carbon-ceramic brakes handed down from Alfa’s sister company, Ferrari. These brakes will stop the Giulia from 62 mph in just under 105 feet. Finally, the bodywork generates a low .25 coefficient of drag, and the Giulia Quadrifoglio weighs in at a slender 3373 pounds.

The result of all this work is that the 2016 Alfa Romeo Giulia laps the Nurburgring’s Nordschleife race course in less than 8 minutes.

If all this sounds good enough to have you thinking about a purchase, the European price of the Giulia Quadrifoglio is expected to be about $80,000. It’s reasonable to expect the American price will be about the same.

Jeff Zurschmeide
Jeff Zurschmeide is a freelance writer from Portland, Oregon. Jeff covers new cars, motor sports, and technical topics for a…
The Kia EV3 could be the cheap electric SUV we’ve been waiting for
White Kia EV3

The Kia EV9 was already one of the cheapest ways to get an electric SUV, but now the company is taking things to the next level. After teasing the Kia EV3 last year, the car is now official.

The EV3 is built to be a slightly smaller, cheaper version of the EV9 -- following the path of the Rivian R2, which arrived after the Rivian R1S. It's certainly not as technologically advanced as the EV9, but it still looks unmistakably like a modern Kia, and is clearly a sibling of the larger SUV. On the outside, the vehicle has the same split taillights and very similar Tiger Face front. But it is quite a bit smaller. The vehicle will be available in nine finishes -- however only "Aventurine Green" and "Terracotta" are being announced right now.

Read more
Kia EV3: release date, performance, range, and more
White Kia EV3

Kia is on a roll. Hot on the heels of the success of the Kia EV6 and EV9, the company is already announcing what could be its cheapest electric vehicle yet -- the Kia EV3.

The Kia EV line seems to follow the rule of lower numbers indicating a lower price — and if so, the EV3 will end up being the cheapest electric car Kia has released to date. That, however, thankfully doesn’t mean that the EV3 will be a low-end car — it just means that Kia may be pushing the boundaries on electric car pricing.

Read more
Kia EV3 vs Tesla Model Y: Can Kia’s new entry-level car take on Tesla?
White Kia EV3

The Kia EV3 is finally coming, and it could well end up being the best small-size electric SUV to buy when it finally rolls out. It's smaller than the Kia EV9, but it offers many of the same design elements and features. But there's another small-size electric car that's currently one of the most popular vehicles out there -- the Tesla Model Y.

How does the Kia EV3 compare with the Tesla Model Y? And is one vehicle actually better than the other? We put the Kia EV3 and the Tesla Model Y head-to-head to find out.
Design
The design of the Kia EV3 is very different than that of the Model Y, though they're both reasonably good-looking vehicles.

Read more