Alfa NORD engine one of the most definitive engines of the world

Started by carlo rossi, August 31, 2017, 05:14:17 PM

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carlo rossi

Classic Cars: Alfa-Romeo Twin-Cam – 2002
What makes a great engine? Above all, it must showcase its creators' ingenuity and enthusiasm, and do its job with more than mere utility. A great engine can be a reason to lust after a car, even if the rest of the car is mediocre. The engine is the heart, the soul and the voice.
Italy has always understood this, and no Italian engine better encapsulates the idea than the archetypal Alfa Romeo twim-cam, heart of Giuliettas, Giulias, GTVs, GTAs, Duettos and many more (including, even, a few vans).
There have, of course, been many other twin-cam Alfa engines outside the 1955 to 1998, aluminium-block family. The first one was as far back as 1914: a 4.4-litre, four cylinder monster whose twin overhead camshafts were augmented by Alfa Romeo's first Twin Spark system. But it is to Vittorio Jano, poached by Alfa employee Enzo Ferrari from Fiat in time for the 1924 GP season, that Alfa really owes its twin-cam credibility.
Jano designed a sequence of six- and eight-cylinder road and race engines, mostly twin-cams, which culminated in his 1930 straight-eight 2300. From this point onwards, an Alfa had to be a twin-cam in the public's eye; the template was set. Single-cam cylinder heads wouldn't reappear until the Alfasud in 1972 and, later, the first versions of the modern V6.
After World War Two, Alfa Romeo was in poor shape. So was the Italian economy, which meant no-one was going to buy exotic Alfas any more. A reappraisal of priorities resulted in the 1900, revealed in 1950 as a unitary-construction, four-door saloon whose deliberately plain styling covered an engine of – could it really be? – just four cylinders. But it had just the right features to make it a credible Alfa motor, just as Jano had set out.
New engineering and design chief Orazio Satta Puliga, who had joined Alfa Romeo in 1938 from an aeronautical background and would stay there for 34 years, made sure the new engine had hemispherical combustion chambers with valves set 90 degrees apart, crossflow ports (obviously), a camshaft to operate all the inlet valves and another for the exhausts. The result was a decent 90bhp, despite a small single-barrel carburretor and a low compression ratio of 7.5:1.
That's considerably more than rival engines of the time could manage:
Citroën's Light Fifteen extracted just 56bhp from a similar capacity.
The cylinder head was aluminium, with hard Stellite valve seats (cut to a 30 degrees angle instead of the usual 45 degrees) and sodium-cooled exhaust valves, and the cylinders featured removable cast-iron wet liners.
Later, in the 1900 TI Super, the engine gained the first pair of twin-choke carburettors to be used on a production engine, setting another signpost for the hottest Alfas. But the block was still iron. Alfa Romeo's aero-engine expertise was moving the thinking towards the idea of an aluminium block – and that's exactly what Satta and his team devised next.
The 1900 alone was not enough, even with its various sporting body derivatives, to sustain Alfa Romeo. It needed something smaller, cheaper but still clearly Alfa Romeo-ish, otherwise people would simply go and buy a Fiat. The new car, launched in 1955 first as a coupé, was called Giulietta in a reference to the Romeo in Shakespeare's play. And under its bonnet sat what looked like a scaled-down version of the 1900 engine, now reduced to 1290cc.
Look more closely, though, and you would find many detail differences. Quite apart from the aluminium block, the angle between the valves was down to 80 degrees to give a more compact combustion chamber (and therefore a higher compression ratio), and tappet adjustment was by shims between the valve stem and the inside of the bucket tappet, just as in Jaguar's 1948 XK engine and many racing units.
Unlike the XK engine, though, the Alfa motor – its design unfettered by the UK's antediluvian horsepower-tax laws which forced small bores and long strokes – had almost equal bore and stroke dimensions, which made room for big, free-breathing valves. Even the 1900 engine couldn't claim that feature: it was a little more undersquare, as later and bigger versions of the new unit would also be apart from the maddest evolution, the double-supercharged GTA SA version, whose short-stroke design helped yield 220bhp at 7500rpm from 1570cc.
For 1955, the 1290cc engine was a revelation. No other
smallish four-cylinder was as advanced or as
sophisticated – and no-one had created a
volume-production, all-aluminium, watercooled engine before, True, 53bhp wasn't much, but with dual twin-choke carburation, bigger valves and more favourable cam timing, the sportiest 1290s released up to 90bhp. No wonder the breed was set to last for over 40 years.
Not many engines look as good as this one. The main picture is of a twin Weber 40DCOE-fed 2000 (actually 1962cc) of 1970 vintage, which delivers 132bhp at 5500rpm, but it's little different visually from its ancestors of a decade or more earlier. That cam cover, surmounted by a four-pronged oil cap with olio writ large, looks as though it's in two parts, but it's all one piece with just six knurled screws to hold it in place. All the head bolts are accessible without disturbing the cam cover, and you can remove the entire head with all the valvegear still in situ.
The block is deep-skirted, generously ribbed and home to five main bearings and four wet liners. The hottest factory racing engines used a one-piece liner unit with all four cylinder walls coalescing, a modification intended to curb the high-frequency stress-waves that can destroy the block at sustained revs beyond 8000rpm, but that problem is unlikely to concern most of us. The timing chains are of two-row design, the oil pump is a two-gearwheel type, the cast two-piece exhaust manifold is a masterpiece of free-flowing simplicity.
And the sump.... All Alfa 105-series cars, which means Giulias and their derivatives, have the extraordinary 'wing' sump you see here. Its fine fins help keep the oil cool, as does the sheer volume of oil (11.4 pints, or not far off a gallon-and-a-half). No wonder Alfa Romeo exhorted owners to let an engine run for a few minutes from cold before driving off, and to refrain from using all the performance until the engine was well warmed through.
Few major changes happened to the mainstream engine up to 1988's Twin Spark cylinder head with its ribbed cam cover. This version's two plugs per cylinder resurrected an idea used in the GTA racers, and it also featured the variable inlet-cam timing already seen in some of the later single-plug engines. Before that, the only significant visual change was in sump design: cars before and after the 105 series had smaller, squarer sumps. A closer look reveals differences in block and head heights to suit the various capacities, but this is subtle stuff.
It's all the more surprising, then, that no other production engine has been made in such a wide variety of capacities while looking outwardly similar. In 1959, when the regular engine was still at 1290cc, Alfa Romeo built a prototype small car, Tipo 103, which featured an 896cc version mounted transversely and driving the front wheels. Development stalled during the factory's move from Portello to the new Arese site, and then plans were hatched for the flat-four Alfasud to be built at Pomigliano d'Arco.
At the other extreme, the final all-Alfa Twin Spark engines, before they were ousted by today's Fiat-block, 16-valve units, had a 1995cc capacity. But even the earlier two-litre engines, including the first Twin Sparks, had more than double the swept volume of the Tipo 103 motor at 1962cc.
The other capacities were 1570cc and 1779cc, fed variously by single- or twin-choke downdraught carburettors, paired twin-choke 40mm sidedraughts from Weber, Solex or Dell'Orto, or – for a time in the US – Spica fuel injection. And, of course, fuel injection (usually by Bosch) became the norm in Europe, too, during the late Eighties.
Internally, the differences were greater. Early 1290s had small valves and generally slenderer components, but from 1290 to 1779cc the block was near-identical apart from the height. Early 1779s suffered from piston slap, but offsetting the gudgeon pin cured this and all two-litre engines were similarly tweaked. Stretching to that biggest capacity called for different bore centres, however, which meant that the combustion chambers were no longer centralised relative to the bores. The design was becoming compromised, but the eventual adoption of the new Twin Spark head put things straight again.
Even so, this is not a revvy engine in its bigger capacities – the redline is set below 6000rpm in some applications – but its crisp, torquey power delivery and the Alfa exhaust rasp are as strong as ever.
Bob Dove, master Alfa engine rebuilder, sees virtues which include a 'bulletproof' valve train and an exceptionally strong crankshaft, but with today's knowledge he can also see the design's snags.
Much of his hindsight centres around the combustion chambers. The wide valve angle makes for a large chamber, even with Alfa Romeo's domed pistons, and the chamber shape is not ideal, given what we now know about flame fronts and detonation. 'It's a nice crossflow chamber,' Bob concedes, 'but it's not symmetrical across the head and the compression happens in a funny shape. If we're rebuilding a race engine today, we use pistons with a high dome and a flat top, running the piston as close to the chamber as we can.'
Bob points out that later twin-cam engines from other makers tended to have narrower valve angles. He cites the Lotus twin-cam of 1962 as an example: narrower angle, flatter pistons, more potential bhp per litre. Alfa's GTAm racer had a new head with a 45 degree angle between valves, and gave around 225bhp from 1985cc with Spica injection. 'But that,' says Bob, 'isn't really part of the same family.'
That's the story of Alfa Romeo's most prolific and best loved twin-cam engine. It looks as though sculpted out of a solid aluminium ingot, it was designed like a racing engine and, for its time, it was amazingly advanced. Seldom is functionality so beautiful. And seldom is a beautiful engine so readily available to all.

what a resume
current cars
red 83 gtv 2.0


previous cars
Red 76 1.2/1.5 alfasud ti
white 79 alfetta 2000
alfetta 74 1.8
escort Lotus twin cam
bikes
ducati 900 ss 1979
moto morini 3 1/2 sport 1975/6
Moto morini 3 1/2 valentini speciale 77 oh and a deltek rockhopper

poohbah

QuoteIt looks as though sculpted out of a solid aluminium ingot, it was designed like a racing engine and, for its time, it was amazingly advanced. Seldom is functionality so beautiful. And seldom is a beautiful engine so readily available to all.

Great read Carlo. Makes me want to go out and give mine a scrub...
Now:    2002 156 GTA
            1981 GTV
Before: 1999 156 V6 Q-auto
            2001 156 V6 (sadly cremated)

bonno

You can add proven long term reliability to the resume of the NORD engine.

carlo rossi

interesting it implies about the english tax laws calculated in part by its piston diameter
which could be the reason in the fifities why almost all english cars had lond strokes and small bore relatively
current cars
red 83 gtv 2.0


previous cars
Red 76 1.2/1.5 alfasud ti
white 79 alfetta 2000
alfetta 74 1.8
escort Lotus twin cam
bikes
ducati 900 ss 1979
moto morini 3 1/2 sport 1975/6
Moto morini 3 1/2 valentini speciale 77 oh and a deltek rockhopper

Citroënbender

Yes, the number of occasions when English mechanical savants were allowed to see their designs to fruition, could probably be counted on a clenched fist.

The Renault alloy block fours and the PRV V6 (which has visual semblance with the 12V Busso) are equally nice to look at but don't have the same figures to boast. There's a particular timbre you get from a wet liner alloy inline block pedalling hard, that is inimitable and grin-inducing.