Alfa Romeo Montreal 2.6 V8

montral

Alfa Romeo Montreal 2.6 V8

The Alfa Romeo Montreal was introduced as a concept car in 1967 at Expo 67, held in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Originally, the concept cars were displayed without any model name, but the public took to calling it The Montreal. It was a 2+2 coupe using the 1.6-litre engine of the Alfa Romeo Giulia TI and the short wheelbase chassis of the Alfa Romeo Giulia Sprint GT, with a body designed by Marcello Gandini at Bertone. One of the two concept cars built for Expo 67 is displayed in the Alfa Romeo Historical Museum in Arese, Italy, while the other is in museum storage.
Production version

The first production car, Tipo 105.64, was shown at the 1970 Geneva Motor Show and was quite different from the original, using a 2593 cc 90° dry-sump lubricated, cross-plane V8 engine with a bore of 80.0 mm and a stroke of only 64.5 mm and using SPICA (Società Pompe Iniezione Cassani & Affini) fuel injection that produced around 200 PS (147 kW; 197 hp), coupled to a five-speed ZF manual gearbox and a limited-slip differential. This engine was derived from the 2-litre V8 used in the 33 Stradale and in the Tipo 33 sports prototype racer. The chassis and running gear of the production Montreal were taken from the Giulia GTV coupé and comprised double wishbone suspension with coil springs and dampers at the front and a live axle with limited slip differential at the rear.

Since the concept car was already unofficially known as The Montreal, Alfa Romeo kept the model name in production.
Side profile of Montreal

Stylistically, the most eye catching feature is the car's front end with four headlamps partly covered by unusual "grilles", that retract when the lights are switched on (a compromise Gandini had to make to meet regulations for the height of headlamps in certain markets). Another stylistic element is the NACA duct on the bonnet. The duct is actually blocked off since its purpose is not to draw air into the engine, but to optically hide the power bulge. The slats behind the doors contain the cabin vents, but apart from that only serve cosmetic purposes. Paolo Martin is credited for the prototype instrument cluster.

The Montreal was more expensive to buy than the Jaguar E-Type or the Porsche 911. When launched in the UK it was priced at £5,077, rising to £5,549 in August 1972 and to £6,999 by mid-1976.

Commercial/info Video

General Data

Make
Alfa Romeo
Model
Montreal
Sub Model
2.6 V8
Model Code
Tipo 105.64
Production / Sales Year(s)
1971 - 1977
Country of origin
Italy

Body work and dimensions

Body type
Coupe
Doors
2
Number of seats
2+2
Length CM
422
Length in
166.14
Width CM
167.2
Width in
6583
Height CM
120.5
Height in
47.44
Wheelbase CM
235
Wheelbase in
95
Curb Weight KG (EU)
1270
Curb Weight LBS (EU)
2800

Engine

Engine Type
V
Cylinders
8
Engine Displacement (cc)
2593
Engine Displacement (cui)
158
Engine (l)
2.6
Engine HP
197
Engine PS
200
Engine KW
147
@RPM
6500
Engine Max Torque (NM)
161
Engine Max Torque (Lb-Ft)
119
Engine Max Torque (kgf-m)
16.42
Engine Max Torque RPM
4750
Fueltype
Gasoline
Fuel system
Injection
Charge system
Naturally aspirated
Unless noted otherwise, DIN rated horsepower and torque is given.

Transmission

Transmission Type
Manual
Number of gears
5

Chassis

Engine position
Front
Drive Train
Rear Wheel Drive
Fuel Tank Capacity Liter
63

Performance (Factory Claim)

Top Speed Km/h
220
Top Speed MP/H
137
Acceleration 0-100 km/h | 0-62 Mph in sec.
7.4

Brakes and suspension

Front Brakes
Disks
Rear Brakes
Disks
Front Suspension
Coil Springs
Rear Suspension
Coil Springs
Standard Tire Size
195/70R14V

Credit Photography and text

Photography
Joop Stolze Classic Cars
Technical Specifications
Archive Superclassics
Text Source
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Last modified
22/06/2022

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