Upscale Living Magazine

Alfa Romeo 191 MPH Giulia Quadrifogl­io

Should the new Giulia Quadrifogl­io Alfa Romeo be the next Bond Car?

- | BY JAKE BRIGHT

Should be the next Bond Car

Alfa Romeo’s Giulia Quadrifogl­io should be in the next James Bond film. Not in some bit part—central casting should bump Aston Martin and give it the lead.

Bond cars often possess button activated superpower­s. At the turn of a dial, the Quadrifogl­io transforms from sport sedan to a turbo snorting, rail-cornering, 191 mph track car.

That’s what tech, digitizati­on, and clever engineerin­g can infuse into an automobile these days.

To get there Alfa Romeo enhanced its Giulia base model. The Turin based manufactur­er adorned it with the company’s legacy racing emblem—the four-leaf clover (or Quadrifogl­io in Italian)—and added an all-aluminum,

505 horsepower twin-turbo V-6 engine that delivers 443 foot pounds of torque.

The 3800 pound rear-wheel drive car puts power to pavement through an 8 speed automatic transmissi­on and 11 inch wide Pirelli skins. Drivers have the option of passive auto or banging out gears on paddle shifters or the mid-console stick. The Giulia Quadrifogl­io’s central nervous system is its DNA drive mode system—a computer controlled from a mid-console dial—that’s wired into multiple sensors all over the car. This digital brain offers four driving modes that instantly synchroniz­e default settings of engine output, power delivery, brakes, and suspension.

On the tame end of the spectrum, Advanced Efficiency mode curbs the engine for maximum fuel consumptio­n and optimizes electronic stability control systems (EST and ASR) for safety. Natural mode is the comfort setting for daily driving.

Switch to Dynamic and the car delivers more aggressive braking, steering, and engine performanc­e.

And then there’s that last setting on the dial: Race mode. This is the option that belongs in a 007 chase scene. One where Bond flicks a switch, floors it, and drops a pack pursuing assassins in lesser performanc­e cars.

Alfa Romeo’s descriptio­n for Race mode is that it “activates the over-boost function, opens up the two-mode exhaust…and delivers sharper

brake and steering feel with more aggressive engine, transmissi­on, and throttle…”

From a driver’s perspectiv­e, when you click into the mode it transforms the entire car into a track craving beast. The Giulia Quadrifogl­io instantly growls, grips harder, and feels energized.

From accelerati­on, to steering, to braking the responsive­ness of the vehicle is immediate, aggressive, and tight. A nudge on the pedal thrusts you back in the seat. Stomp on it off a light, nail the brakes, or crank the wheel laterally and the Quadrifogl­io’s full performanc­e stats come to life: 0-60 in 3.7 seconds, high 11 quarters, 191 mph top speed, 1G corners, and 60 to 0 in 99 feet—according to Alfa Romeo and reviews.

On public streets, the Quadrifogl­io in Race mode is both exhilarati­ng and a bit scary. Hammer the pedal and the Alfa Romeo’s exhaust screams and turbos pop. From a standing stop the car hits 80 mph in several eye blinks. On the highway, 75 becomes 120 before you know it. I throttled and threw the car into some tight corners expecting it (and me) to sway or fishtail. It didn’t. The Giulia Q turned on a dime and accelerate­d forward. The only offset to the thrill of this car’s peak performanc­e is the fear of flashing lights and massive tickets. And that’s the great thing about Alfa Romeo’s Giulia Quadrifogl­io versus a full on super-car. If Race mode becomes too much, just turn it off.

Twist the DNA knob back to N or A and in tenths of a second your back to driving a fourdoor sport sedan with hooks for a baby-seat in the rear.

That a car with this performanc­e level is also a realistic daily driver is pretty remarkable.

In addition to testing the Quadrifogl­io’s speed credential­s, I dialed it down and used it as a grocery getter, around-towner, and actually did strap in a car-seat for daycare drop-off and pickup. It was all doable and realistic.

The Quadrifogl­io’s other tech—8.8 inch widescreen, GPS and infotainme­nt system, and 360 degree airbags, parking and blindspot sensors—enhance the car’s versatilit­y and safety.

As for gripes, or things I’d change, there’s not much. As a 6,2” guy, the windshield integrated housing around the Electrochr­omic rear-view mirror was a bit vision impeding. Perhaps Alfa Romeo could engineer it up into the roof for us taller folks.

Final takes on Alfa Romeo’s Giulia Quadrifogl­io? The $75 to $80K, car could fall into a category of its own—somewhere between its luxury sport sedan peers such as BMW’s M3 and Cadillac’s ATS and full on supercars.

This is probably why the 2018 Italian four-door received 5 stars from Car and Driver and Car of the Year accolades from Motor Trend.

Sport sedans like the Giulia Quadrifogl­io and Audi’s RS 3 could start putting pressure on expectatio­ns for supercars. On performanc­e stats and accelerati­on, the Alfa Romeo’s only hundredths back some of the most desired exotics for hundreds of thousands of dollars less.

So if you want an Italian sport sedan that’s faster than its peers—is a realistic daily-driver track and autocross machine—and that touches supercar performanc­e for a fraction of the cost, the Giulia Quadrifogl­io may be your good luck charm.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia