Alfa Romeo Brera S

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Few sports cars are developed specifically for Britain’s roads. And those that have tend to join the ranks of ‘driver’s cars’ – a place we believe the new Alfa Brera S will shortly join.
A year of intensive suspension and chassis development at Prodrive - world-leading motorsport specialists – and the Brera S is born. A sports coupe that subtly enhances all that’s great about the original, with the addition of outstanding driver feedback and handling.

Distinctly different from the rest of the line-up, this unique addition to Alfa Romeo’s UK range includes refined styling changes, inside and out. And to ensure ultimate exclusivity, production of the Alfa Brera S will be limited to just 500 individually numbered models.

Power comes from a choice of two existing direct injection petrol engines – the 185 bhp 2.2 JTS and the 260 bhp 3.2 V6 JTS.
To reduce roll and pitch and achieve an even flatter cornering attitude, Prodrive commissioned bespoke Eibach coil springs and Bilstein dampers.

Spring rates are increased by over 50 per cent compared to the standard Alfa Brera, giving the car a more nimble and agile feel, while the specially tuned gas-filled mono-tube dampers give tighter body control. A careful balance has been created to maintain good compliance over ridges and bumps in the road.

Suspension static geometry has also been revised to optimise steering and handling. These changes, together with new 19” alloy wheels and Pirelli PZero Nero tyres, have created a more responsive turn-in to corners, with increased driver feedback, allowing the driver to explore the dynamic limits of the car. The cars have been lowered by 10 mm front and rear to further reduce roll and improve cornering and braking performance.

At each corner of the Alfa Brera S, unique Alfa 8C Competizione-inspired, lightweight 19” alloy wheels have been fitted. Although the wheels are eye-catching, the all-new design was commissioned by Prodrive primarily for performance, rather than just cosmetic appeal. The reason is unsprung weight – the weight carried by the car on the ‘road side’ of the spring and shock absorber. This plays a significant role in the way the car steers, handles and transmits feedback to the driver.

As a result, the weight of both Alfa Brera S models is lower than the rest of the range. The front-wheel drive 3.2 V6 JTS is almost 100 kg lighter than the Q4 version and the 2.2 JTS version weighs 35 kg less.

And it sounds different too. The characteristic growl of the V6 has been enhanced by careful redesign of the rear silencers. Thanks to a Holmholtz resonator connected in tandem with each silencer, the 2.2 JTS model now emits a sportier yet refined burble.

For the record, the 2.2 JTS and 3.2 V6 JTS Alfa Brera S can reach 62 mph from rest in 8.6 and 7.0 seconds respectively, on the way to maximum speeds of 139 and 155 mph.

Nicholas Bernard, Marketing Director for Alfa Romeo UK says: “The standard Brera is well loved and delivers a great all-round driving experience. But the Alfa Brera S is deliberately honed, tuned and fettled for British roads and aimed directly at a dedicated audience of driving enthusiasts.” Alfaromeo.co.uk

Pictures:
Brera_S_Static2_500.jpg
Brera_S_Static_500.jpg

Brera_S_Road_500.jpg
Brera_S_Interior_500.jpg

Brera_S_Group_500.jpg
Brera_S_Road_rear_500.jpg


Looks brilliant to me. The 100kg weight saving on the V6 is definitely worth it, and even 35kg on the 2.2 is pretty good, that's the equivalent of 35 bags of sugar it no longer has to lug about.

Autocar in the UK have tested the model and say that it's streets ahead of the regular models, and only the £28,000 price is disappointing considering you can get a Nissan 350Z or Audi TT V6 for that kind of money.
 
Interesting...

We yanks can has?

Not before us Aussies get a piece of the pie.:sly:

Nah, I don't think it seems all that different. 100kg, and the car already weighed like 1700kg. It's a much too heavy car. Make it 1300kg and bolt on a turbo and I'm listening.
 
The V6 version goes down to 1500kg, so it's still heavy, but not as bad as before.

Like I said, Autocar seemed to think it was much better than standard, said the steering and body control had improved a great deal.

And I quite like the wheels... and the interior.
 
We yanks can has?

Soon my friend... Soon...

The 8C comes first, then we're supposed to be getting this and the 159. Of course, they've been telling us "soon" since 2003.
 
Bring it to the states so I can sell the MINI and get me one of these gorgeous piece of automobile sexiness. I don't know what it is but Alphas just do it for me in terms of design. I don't care if it's sporty or not, if it looks like that it belongs in my garage.
 
Wasn't the 8C supposed to come around this fall or something? Are we going to see this version of the Brera or just the Brera?

A 7 second 0-60 is hardly "sporty",

That's on par with the GTI. Try and tell anyone who has ever been in one of those that it's not "sporty." It's a hot hatch, we aren't looking for 5s here.

Although, for 260 hp, that is a little low.
 
That's on par with the GTI. Try and tell anyone who has ever been in one of those that it's not "sporty."

Ok, here I go.

To anyone who has rode in anything that had a 7 second 0-60 time and thought it was sporty, you were wrong. Thanks and enjoy your day.

It's a hot hatch, we aren't looking for 5s here.
...
Although, for 260 hp, that is a little low.
A little low? That is just plain ridiculous. Even if it had a 0-60 time around 6.5 seconds I still think that it would be a stretch to call that "sporty". The press release posted claims that it has gone for a bit of a weight reduction allready, so I can't figure out for the life of me how a small hatch with 260hp can't even crack 7 seconds to 60.
 
0-60 in a Cooper S is about 7 seconds and it's very sporty. It's still FWD so it's not going to be a rocket.
 
Hardly any FWD hatch will get past the 6.5 seconds mark, simply because they can't get their power down. This is AWD though, so with 260 hp, it should be below 6 secs.

I'm a little surprised about the weight though. The AWD version with the glass roof was measured at a whopping 1,900 kg. So an optimisation is desperately needed here, still, this should weigh 1800 kg now.
 
That's on par with the GTI. Try and tell anyone who has ever been in one of those that it's not "sporty." It's a hot hatch, we aren't looking for 5s here.

Although, for 260 hp, that is a little low.

But doesn't the Altima get like 6 or 6.5. So it's beaten by a "family sedan". Hot hatch more like cold hatch
 
The Accord is also a boat.


The 0-60 time just keeps getting more confusing. If 7 seconds is an Alfa claim, why did their claims get half a second slower for the faster version of the car? If that is an Autocar thing, why is their 0-60 identical to their speed for the normal Brera? I'm thinking the time is much closer to 6 flat than anything.
 
Weight and performance aside, this car does have loads of appeal. It looks stunning from every angle and drives and grips very well, despite the hips. Only the seat is too high, so it's more for small Italians. :sly:
 

That was Autocar's verdict about the price, not my own. That said, I'ma big Alfa fan and even I can see that the Audi is objectively better than even the Brera S in virtually every way.

A little low? That is just plain ridiculous. Even if it had a 0-60 time around 6.5 seconds I still think that it would be a stretch to call that "sporty". The press release posted claims that it has gone for a bit of a weight reduction allready, so I can't figure out for the life of me how a small hatch with 260hp can't even crack 7 seconds to 60.

Erm... the Brera isn't actually that small. People need to bear in mind that it's based on the same platform as the 159, which is an executive saloon. It's also a very stiff platform, and these latest Alfas are very well appointed with pretty much all the kit they can cram into them. That goes some way to explaining the weight. I think (and this might be an Alfa first) they're actually over-engineered, a bit like older Mercedes were.

On the plus side, Alfa released a press release a while back saying they were already working on making the base 159 something like 100kg lighter and presumably the same will filter to the Brera. Then maybe Prodrive can take another 100kg off it and then we'll be cooking on gas...

Apologies for the following language, but I think it's bollocks that 7 seconds isn't considered "sporty". Ferrari 308s were doing this 30 years ago and I'm pretty sure they're considered "sporty". The weight issue needs to be resolved but people need to get it out of their minds that a car is slow if it's doing plus-6 second 0-60 times because that's complete tosh.

the Interceptor
I'm a little surprised about the weight though. The AWD version with the glass roof was measured at a whopping 1,900 kg. So an optimisation is desperately needed here, still, this should weigh 1800 kg now.

I'm not sure where you got the 1900kg figure from, the largest I can find for any Brera V6 Q4 is around 1670kg, and I seriously doubt a glass roof adds another 200kg on top of that.
 
That said, I'ma big Alfa fan and even I can see that the Audi is objectively better than even the Brera S in virtually every way.
Its not amazingly better though. I'd say at that price the Alfa may well be a better TT competitor than it is in its normal guise.
 
I'm not sure where you got the 1900kg figure from, the largest I can find for any Brera V6 Q4 is around 1670kg, and I seriously doubt a glass roof adds another 200kg on top of that.
I looked it up, and I was wrong. In the AutoBild Sportscars test, the Brera V6 3.2 Q4 Sky View was measured (with fluids, without passengers) at 1800 kilograms. Sorry, mixed that up. Those 1800 kgs are a real life figure though.
 
I'll pass and take a Mi.To instead, thanks. Brera has cool features but a terrible shape.
 
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