RE: Bewitching Alfa Romeo 8C for sale

RE: Bewitching Alfa Romeo 8C for sale

Today

Bewitching Alfa Romeo 8C for sale

Alfa has probably missed the chance to create a like-for-like successor to the 8C. Which does wonders for its appeal


For a company that’s widely known for gorgeous performance cars that look right at home parked outside the Hotel de Paris in Monaco, Alfa Romeo doesn’t exactly churn them out. True, it’s always been good at making ordinary cars look very pretty and the occasional (often brilliant) Quadrifoglio model keeps its sporty image alive and kicking, but a dedicated performance car? Those only come around once a decade, if that.

Most recently, that’s taken the form of the highly unexpected and extremely limited 33 Stradale: a stunning homage to its '60s namesake and based on the underpinnings of the Maserati MC20 which, funnily enough, (albeit allegedly) started life as an Alfa. It’s a hotly debated topic, but if you're inclined to believe the rumours, Alfa’s take would have been a follow-up to 8C with a name to match. It was supposedly cut, along with the BMW M4-rivalling GTV coupe, to make way for more sure-fire profit makers like compact SUVs. Still, as consolidation prizes go, it doesn’t get much better than the MC20 and 33 Stradale, but it does mean the car like the one we have here remains the most recent (and potentially last) V8-powered Alfa.

In the looks department, topping the old 8C would have been a tall order. Hard to believe the Competizione concept debuted over 20 years ago and that its Wolfgang Egger design would carry over to the production model with no significant changes four years later in 2007. Its name harks back to its eight-cylinder competition cars of old, with its front-engined GT silhouette a modern take on its many beautiful racers from the latter half of the '30s. But there’s a dash of '60s in there, particularly the almost-Kammback and duck tail - and yet it still feels modern even to this day.

Moreover, the bodywork was made from carbon fibre like only the most serious of performance GTs of the day. Somewhat less lightweight was the steel chassis it was draped over, meaning the coupe isn’t quite as light on its feet as you’d think it’d be at 1,585kg. Still, a bellowing 4.7-litre, 450hp V8 developed by Ferrari and assembled by Maserati meant there was more than enough grunt to push it along and one hell of a soundtrack while doing so. Then there were the carbon ceramic brakes, limited-slip differential and (very on trend for 2007) a six-speed automated manual transmission. That’s some kit list for a car that, from the outside at least, looks tailor-made for prowling the streets of Saint Tropez.

Safe to say anticipation was high ahead of the 8C’s arrival, especially as Alfa Romeo had never built a supercar in the modern era. Unfortunately for the manufacturer, a scathing TG review has hung over the 8C like a dark cloud for decades, with Clarkson describing the supercar’s handling as “terrible”. Ben Collins wasn’t all that keen on the 8C either, ranking it among his least favourite cars from his time on the show. He did however bundle the TVR Sagaris in that list too, and having recently driven one myself I’m not entirely sure what he’s on about. At six or seven-tenths, the Sagaris is magnificent, just as I’m sure the 8C would be too.

Then again, I wasn’t driving the Sagaris at Stig speeds and I doubt many would in the Alfa 8C, either. Not these days anyway, when this 6,996-mile example will set you back £239,990 - or around double the cost of what it was worth new back in 2009. That does open the door to many V12 Ferraris, like this 2016 F12 or even this 812 Superfast. All very special cars, of course, but how often do you see an 8C roaming the streets of London or relentlessly revving at a car meet? Hardly ever, and that’s a big win in our book.


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Author
Discussion

Mannginger

Original Poster:

9,252 posts

260 months

Be-ditching Shirley?

Davy Jones

51 posts

52 months

Lovely thing. Personally, would still prefer the F12 as referred to in the article.

pb8g09

2,472 posts

72 months

Davy Jones said:
Lovely thing. Personally, would still prefer the F12 as referred to in the article.
Reluctantly I agree, though the 8C is a beauty. Just a shame it couldn’t have been worked with a manual box, but I guess that’s like complaining about the running length of the Godfather.

PRO5T

4,315 posts

28 months

It’s going to get you invited to places no Ferrari for similar money is though is it? Should that be your thing of course.

How many of these were made in total? There can’t have been many in the U.K. at all (no right hand drive if so recall?).

Motorsport3

505 posts

195 months

240k for an 8C or 1/10th of that for a Maserati GTS with the same engine and also stunning looks?

Andy83n

408 posts

65 months

Eating a sausage roll would be a nightmare with those seats.

Its a no from me

BigChiefmuffinAgain

1,118 posts

101 months

They sell at auctions for around this price.

Lovely thing to cruise around in but so are many other cars at that price, which can potentially drive better as well. Personally would go for an SZ if I wanted an interesting Alfa...

GreatScott2016

1,285 posts

91 months

Really pretty thing. As some have said, plenty of alternatives at that price point though. I'd look elsewhere simply because it's LHD, but a lovely thing to druel over smile

Jimbo.

3,958 posts

192 months

pb8g09 said:
Davy Jones said:
Lovely thing. Personally, would still prefer the F12 as referred to in the article.
Reluctantly I agree, though the 8C is a beauty. Just a shame it couldn’t have been worked with a manual box, but I guess that’s like complaining about the running length of the Godfather.
Re. a manual gearbox, someone has done it:

https://www.goodwood.com/grr/road/news/perfecting-...



Sandpit Steve

10,764 posts

77 months

Lovely car, but can’t help thinking that the best part of £250k buys a lot more elsewhere, unless you have a large collection of cars already.

Not quite as rare as many think either, they made 500 coupés.

andy43

9,916 posts

257 months

PRO5T said:
It’s going to get you invited to places no Ferrari for similar money is though is it?
Do you mean hedges?

cooperd5

90 posts

175 months

Lovely looking thing but I'll pass at that price!
Didn't someone make a body kit for these? To look like a boat or something?

smithyithy

7,330 posts

121 months

cooperd5 said:
Lovely looking thing but I'll pass at that price!
Didn't someone make a body kit for these? To look like a boat or something?
Thinking of the 'Disco Volante' by Carrozzeria?




andburg

7,438 posts

172 months

if i had a lottery win big enough I'd take one but being LHD It'd have to be at my holiday home.

i love the seats

Dombilano

1,209 posts

58 months

Prefer the tele-dial wheels on these

Geoffcapes

754 posts

167 months

Having been in both an 8C and an 8C Spider, the spider is so much better in pretty much every aspect.

The Spider is the one I'd have be a mile.

Augustus Windsock

3,404 posts

158 months

smithyithy said:
cooperd5 said:
Lovely looking thing but I'll pass at that price!
Didn't someone make a body kit for these? To look like a boat or something?
Thinking of the 'Disco Volante' by Carrozzeria?



That’s not a Disco Volante, THIS is a Disco Volante..

CountyAFC

954 posts

6 months

Wrong wheels.

Terminator X

15,392 posts

207 months

Looked amazing back in the day, still looks good today IMHO. Price as always, mind blowing.

TX.

C5_Steve

3,709 posts

106 months

Dombilano said:
Prefer the tele-dial wheels on these
Yeah this would be a deal breaker for me (not that I'll be bothering DCs doorstep anytime soon!). I don't think I've actually ever seen these wheels on one before the tele-dials are just so perfect.

I got to see the green one at the HAC Concours last year and it cemented the fact that I still think these are one of the most beautiful things on the road. Never seen one outside of a show though. Yes, you can find cars that better it in many ways for the same or less in price but it's that old adage about if you don't look back at your car after you get out you've bought the wrong car. I'd stare at this for hours if I had one, I can't say that about anything else in its price bracket.