Alfa has built motors to various formulae over the decades. Coach builders
have put their bodies around the drivetrains. What I see here is a Dodge
chassis and power unit (never mind the size), coupled to a coachbuilder's
body and interior (in this case Zagato), with a resemblance to Alfas of
lore. So, do the Alfa badges make it an Alfa?

Ben
Still 6 Alfas, none with a V10

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
[email protected]
Sent: Friday, July 15, 2011 11:41 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [alfa] Re: Is this an Alfa? 

I think of Alfas as having smaller motors...this is a Viper Zagato that is
styled after an Alfa. The original Tubolari Zagato was fast largely because
it  was really light weight and aerodynamic.
Stevan Thomas
73 Belina
83 GTV6
 
 
In a message dated 7/15/2011 7:17:13 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time,
[email protected] writes:

Date:  Fri, 15 Jul 2011 09:14:34 -0500
From: "Ben Ament"  <[email protected]>
Subject: [alfa] Is this an Alfa?

It is  sanctioned by the factory, built by Zagato on a Viper chassis with
Viper  V10 power, and sexy as all get out, but is it an Alfa?  



http://www.roadandtrack.com/future-cars/first/zagato-alfa-romeo-tz3-stradale



We  old timers have debated whether 164s are real Alfas, what with wrong
wheel  drive and built under Fiat tutelage and all. What about the TZ3? Road
&  Track calls it the first American Alfa. What do you all  think?
--
to be removed from alfa, see http://www.digest.net/bin/digest-subs.cgi
or email "unsubscribe alfa" to [email protected]
--
to be removed from alfa, see http://www.digest.net/bin/digest-subs.cgi
or email "unsubscribe alfa" to [email protected]

Reply via email to