Early GTV6

Started by GG105, December 31, 2013, 11:39:44 AM

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GG105

The vibration was in the tailshaft. This is the short form. It nearly drove us mad, it was finally sent to Benincas for balancing. Joe told us to line the drive train up, which we did as best we could. Pretty much right now, just a little vibration off idle.

The car was showing some signs of glazed bores, so we ran it up on the dyno, several sessions of 4,000 revs in third gear have done the trick. We ground of the locating pins off the passenger side mirror, so now I can turn it enough to actually see out of it.

Its pretty much done now apart from some minor cosmetic stuff. Faults aside, and there are plenty of them, these are special cars and I'm very happy to have brought this one back from the brink.

It shares shed space with the other Alfas and an Aussie R32 GTR, E36 M3, Porsche 3.2 Carrera, Renault Clio V6, NA Mazda MX5 and an SL500 MB. This makes for an interesting comparison. Ignoring the last two, whilst the others are quicker than the Alfa, the little V6 pulls way above its 160hp weight and nothing sounds quite like it.

John
1959 Giulietta Sprint
1969 GT 1300 Junior
1970 Giulia 1300 TI
1975 Ferrari 365 GT4
1990 Mazda MX5
2005 BMW 330Ci
2014 Porsche Turbo

Ian Morris

Does anyone have a paint formula or code for painting early campagnolo GTV6 wheels? 

GG105

Ian, I don't have a formula for the paint. I usually use BMW silver for late model wheels.

John
1959 Giulietta Sprint
1969 GT 1300 Junior
1970 Giulia 1300 TI
1975 Ferrari 365 GT4
1990 Mazda MX5
2005 BMW 330Ci
2014 Porsche Turbo

ALFAAA

#108
Hi Ian,
Bring one of your wheel rims to any of the Auto paint shops and they should match the paint colour.
I repaired one of my 916 spider rims , I went to CD auto paint in Dandenong, they match the paint perfectly. :) 
Current :2004 916 V6 3.2 Spider (baby)
             :Alfetta GTV6 1984 3.2 24v
             :2024 Tonale Veloce SUV

Past       :Alfetta GTV  1977
             :147 Selespeed 2002

Ian Morris

They weren't in the best condition. But I am kicking myself that I didn't get them colour matched before I had them blasted to prepare them for painting. Now there is no paint on them. And no one seems to have the colour. I have heard that the early Campagnolo wheels have a different colour to the later Camparatura wheels. Stands to reason, they are a different manufacturer and material.

GG105

The Campy wheels, from memory, were a slightly duller colour than the later wheels, although I don't remember them from new. In any event, I don't think the difference is material. If you look at the photos on this thread, mine are painted BMW Silver and I think they look fine.
1959 Giulietta Sprint
1969 GT 1300 Junior
1970 Giulia 1300 TI
1975 Ferrari 365 GT4
1990 Mazda MX5
2005 BMW 330Ci
2014 Porsche Turbo

aggie57

#111
Quote from: sportiva on December 28, 2016, 01:37:19 PM
The reason I have thought about knucle risers and drop spindles and not done it. Is that I have doubts about there price v's handing improvement on a road car. Of the two designs I think the drop spindle would be  stronger and less stresssed but they are more expensive and I wondering if the price for the improved turn in is justified for a road car driven with enthusiasm. As it is my car handles well and is predicable on a wet road inital understeer can be controlled with steering and throttle input to bring the back around and oversteer is easily corrected. Does changing the roll center make these cars a handfull on a wet road do they want to snap oversteer especially with an LSD fitted

No, the roll centre change has no downside as far as I recall.  It's been a number of years but I had three cars with various combinations of the common changes. The last one was a late GTV6 that was a fast road car, not a dedicated track one, and it had the full gambit including extended uprights, lowered rear roll centre, LSD, etc.

It was quick on the track and a great road car. Standard cars, even with stiffer bars and coils, where ponderous by comparison. Slower turn in, more understeer, generally a couple of steps below. Yes, the LSD made for some fun on wet roads but one lesson I recall was to keep the rear roll bar and rear springs soft. With soft springs it would even do lovely 11's wet or dry but with stiffer rear springs it would just axle tramp.
Alister
14 Alfa's since 1977. 
Currently 1973 GTV 2000, 2020 911 C2S MT, 2021 Mercedes GLE350, 2023 Polestar 2 LRDM
Gone......far too many to list

GTVeloce

The difference in turn-in with the long shank ball joints is fantastic, especially on the road. Through some awesome mountain passes I drove my GTV (with modded roll centre) and a GTV6 (without) and yes, 4 cyl vs 6 cyl would have made a difference with respect to understeer, but the biggest difference I noticed was the ability to take tight switch back corners in my car without re positioning my hands on the wheel which was not possible in the GTV6. Although I may not have minded as I was too busy lusting after the sound of the 6...

I have just received a set for my road going, fairly stock (standard torsion bars) 75. I am hopeful it will have a similar effect without stiffening the suspension too much in this car.

GG105

Have just bought a factory South African 3 litre GTV6. Stay tuned.

John
1959 Giulietta Sprint
1969 GT 1300 Junior
1970 Giulia 1300 TI
1975 Ferrari 365 GT4
1990 Mazda MX5
2005 BMW 330Ci
2014 Porsche Turbo

Dna Dave

As a owner of one, I can tell you, well done, you will love it
1980 Alfa gtv racecar, 2.0L twinspark turbo
1991 Alfa 75 Potenziata
2009 Alfa Mito VRA Racecar
1974 Alfetta sedan
2003 Mitsubishi Evo3 RS
2008 Alfa GT 3.2L
2007 Mazerati MC Victory

Past,

Not that many 😜

Scott Farquharson

Just got the reply from centro doco at Alfa on the Dulux car.

It is a very early build.

Alfa Romeo GTV 6 2.5 I.E. RHD

Production date: 1981, September 2nd

Delivery date: 1981, October 5th

Market destination: Australia

Exterior color: Rosso Alfa





Scott Farquharson
Group A Dulux Alfetta GTV6
Group S Alfetta GTV
Alfetta GT (GTAM?)

poohbah

Scott, how did you get the info from centrodocumentazione, and did they charge you? They provided me the info on my '81 GTV for free back in 2015, but there are a few folk on here who have asked for info since without luck. They may be interested in how to go about getting the info now and what charges may apply.

Now:    2002 156 GTA
            1981 GTV
Before: 1999 156 V6 Q-auto
            2001 156 V6 (sadly cremated)

aggie57

Quote from: Scott Farquharson on October 13, 2017, 05:29:46 PM
Just got the reply from centro doco at Alfa on the Dulux car.

It is a very early build.

Alfa Romeo GTV 6 2.5 I.E. RHD

Production date: 1981, September 2nd

Delivery date: 1981, October 5th

Market destination: Australia

Exterior color: Rosso Alfa

Gee Scott, that really is early. One of the first cars for Australia?  Likely one of the first RHD cars too. I was in Paris in June '81 and saw my first GTV6 at an Alfa dealer there. I don't recall seeing one before then in the UK.
Alister
14 Alfa's since 1977. 
Currently 1973 GTV 2000, 2020 911 C2S MT, 2021 Mercedes GLE350, 2023 Polestar 2 LRDM
Gone......far too many to list

Alpal007

Quote from: GG105 on January 01, 2014, 09:28:57 AM
Happy new year everyone!

Thanks Tim, that's interesting. If it's correct that only 50 or so split dashes were imported, I suspect they were all '82 builds and all red, mine is Feb '82. That makes two more two more delete sunroof cars than I knew existed before yesterday! My car is chassis 2026, making it the 26th '82 production RHD GTV6. What is yours?

John
HI JOHN
Can you explain how to determine the chassis number and how you know it's the 26th car produced in 82? Just curious as I also own a 82 model split dash with sunroof and just trying to get a handle on where it sits with your car.
Mine has a built plate of Jun 82 and a compliance plate from Alfa Australia of 4/83

Allan


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk

Paul Newby

Quote from: aggie57 on October 14, 2017, 03:39:44 PM
Quote from: Scott Farquharson on October 13, 2017, 05:29:46 PM
Just got the reply from centro doco at Alfa on the Dulux car.

It is a very early build.

Alfa Romeo GTV 6 2.5 I.E. RHD

Production date: 1981, September 2nd

Delivery date: 1981, October 5th

Market destination: Australia

Exterior color: Rosso Alfa

Gee Scott, that really is early. One of the first cars for Australia?  Likely one of the first RHD cars too. I was in Paris in June '81 and saw my first GTV6 at an Alfa dealer there. I don't recall seeing one before then in the UK.

I believe this was the original Alfa Romeo Australia evaluation car, NSW reg LPH816 which featured in press evaluations, including Wheels magazine September 1982. (The GTV6 wasn't released here until 1983.) Gulson bought it directly from Alfa (I suspect it didn't have an Australian Compliance plate) and turned it into a Group C racer for Bathurst 1982.
1974 2000 GT Veloce (Le Mans Blue) - Restoration project
1975 Alfetta GT (Periwinkle Blue Metallic) - Group S racer - Sold!
2009 147 Monza 3Dr (Kyalami Black) - Don't ask!
2010 VW Passat R36 Wagon (Biscay Blue) - Daily Driver
2015 VW Golf GTI Performance (Night Blue) - Wife's Runabout