Birmingham Post

I’m in clover with the Quadrifogl­io!

EDWARD STEPHENS EXPERIENCE­S SOME THRILL-A-MINUTE MOTORING IN THIS ALFA ROMEO FLAGSHIP MODEL

- Price: Mechanical:

IT’S a simple enough adornment to put on the exterior of a car and most people wouldn’t even really notice it. But for Alfa Romeo aficionado­s the addition of a small hand enamelled badge with a clover leaf on it means the car they are looking at is something special.

It means it’s a Quadrifogl­io version – Italian for four-leaf clover – and that means Performanc­e with a capital P.

It’s the equivalent of BMW’s M badged cars or MercedesBe­nz’s AMG models and not a car for the faint hearted.

The Stelvio Quadrifogl­io – driven here – for example boasts a whopping 510 bhp giving it a top speed of 176 miles per hour and a 0-62 accelerati­on time of just 3.8 Seconds.

This flagship – or perhaps rocket ship would be a better term – of the Alfa range has a 2.9-litre V6 engine developed £69,510

510bhp, 2,891cc, 6cyl petrol engine driving all wheels via eight speed manual gearbox. 176 mph

3.8 secs

24.6

37%

50

222 g/km

3 years / unlimited mileage

with the help of Ferrari, and provenance doesn’t come much better than that.

The engine is mated to a warp-speed – sorry eight-speed – automatic box that in race mode will change gear in just 150 millisecon­ds.

But the Stelvio Quadrifogl­io isn’t a budget priced Ferrari. In fact it isn’t a budget priced anything with a price tag of almost £70,000.

Add a few extras like a carbon ceramic braking system at £5,900, carbon-shell bucket seats at £3,250 and a special three-coat paint finish at £2,500, to mention just three, and my car for the week had an on-the-road price of well over £85,000.

With its massive wheel arches, dynamic side skirts, striking vents in the bonnet and along the side, deep lustre red paintwork, 20-inch black alloy wheels and four exhaust pipes the Quadrifogl­io is an SUV that’s hard to miss.

The sporty styling continues on the interior too with a plethora of carbon fibre on the dashboard, centre console and doors while a lush mix of leather and Alcantara on the seats ensures the cockpit lives up to the car’s price.

Press the red starter button on the steering wheel – would you expect anything less on a Quadrifogl­io – and the giant bi-turbo engine bursts into life with a superb roar from the quadruple exhausts.

Turn the driving mode button to race mode if you’re bold enough and the note goes up even higher but beware because in this format you have also switched off the traction control so care is definitely needed.

For most people normal or dynamic mode is sufficient to give thrill-a-minute motoring with blistering accelerati­on that will literally throw you back in your carbon fibre seat.

Fortunatel­y the Stelvio Quadrifogl­io comes with Q4 all-wheel-drive so all that power is put directly onto the road with no wheelspin and superb control.

Even in normal mode though the ride is firm and a little choppy but the active suspension system which is continuall­y controllin­g the suspension and shock absorbers ensures grip is never a problem whatever the speed.

If you opt for dynamic or race mode the suspension firms up even more but never really at the price of comfort.

Alfa’s foray into the SUV market with the Stelvio has produced a car which offers plenty of shoulder room and a general feeling of spaciousne­ss in the cabin for passengers.

And despite its more than generous proportion­s and slightly restricted rear view vision when reversing it’s an easy car to manoeuvre and park thanks to parking sensors front and rear as well as a rear view camera, although the on-screen view is relatively small compared to a lot of cars.

If you opt for the Quadrifogl­io version, however, the raw power of this Italian tour de force is something that will probably override every other considerat­ion.

father in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, played an immortal in Highlander, been a sleuthing monk in The Name of the Rose, captained a nuclear submarine in The Hunt for Red October and appeared as King Agamemnon in the Time Bandits. He was also the voice of fire-breathing Draco in the 1998 film Dragonhear­t. “Perhaps I’m not a good actor, but I would be even worse at doing anything else,” he once said.

Sean has called being knighted by Queen Elizabeth in 2000 as “one of the greatest days of my life” but he decided to step back from acting and retire in 2003 after filming The League of Extraordin­ary Gentlemen. The proud Scot even gave Scottish first minister Nicola Sturgeon a few tips when it came to public speaking.

She said: “I’ve never had a voice coach, but I am about to name drop horrendous­ly here, I did once get some advice on how to project my voice from Sean Connery, which was lovely. It’s all about where you breathe. That’s my claim to fame.”

Turning 90 is unlikely to bother the film favourite who has said: “Some age, others mature.”

He knows his name will forever be linked to 007 and the movies that brought him internatio­nal recognitio­n but he has pointed out: “There’s one major difference between James Bond and me. He is able to sort out problems!”

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