Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

TURN OVER A NEW LEAF

- David McCowen

VALUE

Think of Alfa Romeo’s Giulia Quadrifogl­io as the four-door sedan Ferrari won’t build. Powered by a twin-turbo V6 developmen­t of the supercar marque’s award-winning V8 family, this Italian has a truly special motor. That approach helps you digest its high asking price (about $165,000 drive-away), eye-watering servicing bills ($5245 for 5 years) and tight-fisted three-year, 150,000 kilometre warranty. Updated for 2020, the Quadrifogl­io benefits from changes including an improved infotainme­nt system, nicer cabin, expanded driver aids and a $6950 price cut to $138,950 plus on-roads. All the ingredient­s for a range-topping performanc­e car are in place — sticky Pirelli tyres, enormous brakes, multi-mode suspension and rear-drive with a torque-vectoring differenti­al. It also has a lightweigh­t carbon fibre bonnet, boot, roof and spoilers, to which you can add carbon Sparco seats and ceramic brakes.

COMFORT

First launched in February 2017, the Giulia wowed critics with a combinatio­n of gorgeous looks and impressive driving dynamics. But the interior wasn’t quite a match for Europe’s finest. Running changes include a new 8.8-inch infotainme­nt screen with updated software and touchscree­n functional­ity. A digital display nestled between classic analog gauges is easier to read and key touchpoint­s such as the gear selector and infotainme­nt controller now feel premium. Our test car presented well with carbon fibre highlights, a thin-rimmed steering wheel backed by huge metal shift paddles and leather and Alcantara trim framed with green and white stitching. It isn’t nearly as connected or clever as the Germans, though.

SAFETY

The new Giulia adds handy features such as speed-sign recognitio­n and traffic-jam assistance. Impressive on paper, the features aren’t integrated as smoothly as key rivals — the automatic brake applicatio­n in stop-start traffic is rather sudden, for example. Customers should also be careful when selecting a driving mode — choose “Race” to dial up the fiercest engine, gearbox and suspension settings and you’ll also lose the safety net of traction and stability control.

DRIVING

Enzo Ferrari is reputed to have told customers “when you buy a Ferrari, you pay for the engine, and I will give the rest of the car free”. The Giulia sings from that hymnbook. Capable of producing 375kW and 600Nm, this engine is undoubtedl­y muscular. But the way it produces power makes this Alfa special. As with Ferrari’s finest, the motor revs hard to the top of its tacho, building power and momentum before it kicks you up the backside with a crisp change from its eight-speed auto. Equally capable of thrilling on a racetrack or dawdling around town, the Giulia’s engine and transmissi­on duo are truly magnificen­t. Its suspension is just as impressive, with a composed fluidity few cars can match. It feels at home on the school run or circuit — especially the latter, where the reardrive layout is truly entertaini­ng. Minor qualms include grabby electronic­ally activated brakes and speedy steering requiring personal recalibrat­ion.

ALTERNATIV­ES

MERCEDES-AMG C63 S, FROM ABOUT $180,000 D/A Class benchmark blends Benz luxury with a

truly awesome twin-turbo V8. Hurry before it becomes a hybrid four-cylinder.

AUDI RS5 SPORTBACK, FROM ABOUT $172,500 D/A

Sensible alternativ­e has a gorgeous cabin and devastatin­g cross-country pace.

BMW M3, FROM ABOUT $175,000 D/A

New M3 is quicker than ever, thanks to more power and all-wheel-drive. Polarising looks.

VERDICT

The Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifogl­io is a flawed gem. Important changes close the gap in refinement and usability to Euro rivals, and it remains a driver’s delight.

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