Giulia TI Super thread
------------------------------ Date: Sat, 21 Nov 1998 16:49:22 -0700 From: Don SuiterSubject: AR TI Super - ebay Hello, Since I don't put a message up online very often, I was wondering if any of the digesters have been spending any time over on ebay the auction site. I have been browsing a bit and searching for Alfa Romeo. It's interesting, as there have been or are currently over 150+ Alfa related items listed. Most on Alfa models and other interesting Alfa related bits. One of my scans uncovered the following car online in auction, does anyone know any of its history? 1964 Alfa Romeo TI Super --- Chassis #AR59133 with Eng. #005100187 per the notes on the auction list. Some interesting GTA parts noted. You can see the details in the auctions which have closed, as this was only online for a couple of weeks. They did show a few good pictures. Is this by any chance the TI which was at Alfa West in Denver for the past couple of years or one very similar? The auction car is white and the one at AW was white but very rough. Anyone know more? Thanks for any thoughts on Alfa and ebay or anything related to this model of Super. Don S... - -- Don Suiter - Vintage Racing - RMVR Alfa GTjr #81 ACOC Webmaster - http://www.csd.net/~suiter/acoc.html ErEc Imaging - http://www.donsuiter.com/ ------------------------------ ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 23 Nov 1998 09:42:41 EST From: JHertzman@aol.com Subject: T.I., T.I. Super, and Super In AD7-276 Don Suiter asks about an Alfa Romeo TI Super at an auction, wondered if it is the same one which was in Denver for a couple years, mentions that both were white, and asks for "anything related to this model of Super". The first thing to know is that these are all permutations of the boxy four- door sedan which established Alfa as a prime contender in the ugly-is-chic sweepstakes. 575,000 cars were built with this body, 71,000 of them Giulia T.I.s, 504 of them Giulia T. I. Supers, and 124,000 of them Giulia Supers. The remaining model terms were fairly simple; they split into 1300 and 1600 subsystems along with "T.I.", "Super" or "S" qualifiers. As for both of the ones he had met being white, all T.I.Supers were, originally- Biancospino, Hawthorn White, just slightly warmer than the Porcelain white, china white, biancco P.F. used on Spiders generally. The cars were basic homologation specials, weighing 910 kg as opposed to 1000 kg for the basic Giulia T.I. and 1020 kg for the Sprint GT Veloce. Similarly with the engine; The Duetto Veloce and GT Veloce had 109 CV, the Giulia Sprint Specials had 112 CV and the T.I had 115, the same as the "street" version of the GTA which had an identical listed top speed, 185 km/h. Odd numbers, if d'A-T is correct the only difference between the T.I. and "customer" GTA engines is the number of spark plugs. As with the GTA, the number required built for homologation purposes was far greater than the number needed for factory-supported racing needs. The popularity of the T.I. Super is said to have led directly to the development of the Giulia Super which was introduced in the same show season as the GTA, the 1965 Geneva show for the Super and the 1965 Amsterdam and Geneva shows for the GTA. Lastly, the serial numbers game. The car is described as a 1964 Alfa Romeo TI Super, Chassis #AR59133 with Eng. #005100187. The chassis number given would be preceded by three giving family (105) and two giving the subset (09 in this case) for a total of 105.09.59133 , and I can't find anything like that in Fusi or D'Amico- Tabucch. Also did not find any 1600 engine numbers which cointained the string 510. Probably simple transcribing errors, slips of the pen- John H. ------------------------------ ----------------------------- Date: Tue, 24 Nov 1998 21:18:11 -0700 From: Don Suiter Subject: Tks, re: Giulia TI question Hello, My thanks to the John H for his well written reply about the 64 Giulia TI which I had viewed over on ebay. Thanks to Andrew W. for his off-digest input. For the curious the Alfa has come back online at ebay with a new higher price. I wish the seller good luck, I just wish I had a few of the GTA parts on my junior. For the curious, you can view the ebay auction at this link. http://cgi.ebay.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=43976049 The standard disclaimers, I do not have any $$$ interest in this car, just curious about it's history. Best of T-day to all, Don - -- Don Suiter - Vintage Racing - RMVR Alfa GTjr #81 ACOC Webmaster - http://www.csd.net/~suiter/acoc.html ErEc Imaging - http://www.donsuiter.com/ ------------------------------ NOTE: here is a COPY of the Auction page (700k jpg too) ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 25 Nov 98 06:53:58 -0500 From: "Andrew Watry" Subject: TI Supers Anyone know of an available Alfa book (or magazine article) that covers Giulia TI Supers well? I have most of the usual suspects, including Fusi, the Illustrated Buyers Guide, Pat Braden's Giulia book, and the Brookland Giulia sedan article compilation. Lots on TIs, lots on Supers, and the other street variations, but there's very little on TI Supers. Was it ever tested or previewed in R&T or C/D? Thanks Andrew Watry Berlina Register 59 Sprint 67 Super (new headliner and window seals; carpets next) 69 Berlina (FOR SALE; offers entertained) 74 GTV ------------------------------ ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 25 Nov 1998 22:17:53 -0800 From: "Steve Schaeffer" Subject: Tony Adriaensens book "Allegeritta" Has a few pages on it, and some nice photos. If you don't already own this book, you should. I'll paraphrase the book a bit: Introduced to the press on the Monza circuit on April 24, 1963 as the competition version of the Giulia Ti. Big cloverleafs on the front wings, the type indication on the back panel and the little grilles in place of the headlamps placed in the middle. Campy aluminum wheels with 155x15 tyres and a modified dashboard gave an extra sporty look. Thin size steel was used for the body work and all sound -deadening mat'l was removed. The front seats were lightweight bucket seats and the opening mechanism for the Plexiglas windows in the back doors was removed. This resulted in a loss of weight of about 100kg in comparison to the Ti. The engine was the same as the one used in the Giulia SS. Fuel admission was thru a single electrical fuel pump in combo with twin Weber 45DCOE14 carburettors. A fuel tank with a capacity of 80-100 liters could be fitted on request. Brake power came from Four Dunlop discs. The mid-placed headlamps were removed and the holes were used as extra air ducts. In the early stages of Autodelta's activities, and unidentified no. of TI Super cars were prepared for racing. These versions boasted 160 bhp at 7500rpm. It has been impossible to find the exact modifications that were carried out nor the total production no. of the Autodelta TI Super. The no. of those special versions was probably very low as Autodelta was at the time fully occupied with developing the TZ models and the GTA. A remarkable fact is that the registering of ths car in the GT category for the 1963 Tour de France edition, a race in which it took fourth place overall behind three Ferrari's. There were only 501 TI supers produced. Happy Thanksgiving USA! Steve Schaeffer http://www.luxline.com/turner Seattle, WA ------------------------------ ----------------------------- Date: Sun, 29 Nov 1998 23:19:21 EST From: JHertzman@aol.com Subject: T.I. Supers and "thinner steel" bodywork In AD7-284 Andrew Watry asks: >>Anyone know of an available Alfa book (or magazine article) that covers Giulia TI Supers well? I have most of the usual suspects, including Fusi, the Illustrated Buyers Guide, Pat Braden's Giulia book, and the Brookland Giulia sedan article compilation. Lots on TIs, lots on Supers, and the other street variations, but there's very little on TI Supers. Was it ever tested or previewed in R&T or C/D?<< Not in R & T for sure, and C & D is probably equally sure; my clippings files (from cutting-up C & D's predecessors and other such) have every snippet on the "BMW"-disguised Giulia prototype, Colli Promiscua and the original open Tubolare Zagato, and I'm fairly sure I wouldn't have missed the T.I. Super in an American newsstand publication. The Brooklands Giulia Berlina compilation probably has everything that had been published IN ENGLISH, but that is the rub. There was bound to have been a thorough coverage in Quattroruote, and there is bound to have been some great material in retrospective articles in either (or both) Ruoteclassiche or La Manovella e Ruote a Raggi. Inquiries to the publishers (Editoriale Domus for the first two, I think Nada for the last) might produce a reference. Or a large-hearted Italian enthusiast on the list might help? Please? In AD7-287 Steve Schaeffer furnished some interesting material from Tony Adriaensens book "Allegeritta", which I don't have, and he is right, one should. One point mentioned was that thinner steel was used for the bodywork, a ploy which I am familiar with from the various touring-car championships of the nineties and also from some USA factory-supported drag racing in which "chemical milling" was used for controlled selective thinning of panels, a more exotic concept than just punching-out a thinner sheet. D'Amico-Tabucchi's remarks about the Giulia T.I. and the G.T.A. do not support the "thinner steel" concept, but they are not infallible. One other authority is Alfa's own Spare Parts Catalog. The edition I got in 1967 when I bought my Super consists of a basic Giulia T.I. Parts Catalog, a Supplement covering parts used on the Giulia T.I.Super which differed from those in the T.I., and a further Supplement covering parts used on the Giulia Super which differed from those in the T.I. It is not always possible to tell "how" different- often one hole punched in a deck-lid for a different piece of trim, or in an engine-bay sidewall to mount a different junction block, generates a different part number. It is, however, possible to tell when there is absolutely no difference whatsoever. There are many fascinating details. Page one in the body section, for instance, has the complete T.I. Super body shell, painted and trimmed, with two parts numbers, one for the 'touring model' and the other for the 'racing model', but it also has a single number for the 'body, unpainted'. Moving on into the body structural parts there is a steering column support for disk-braked cars, suggesting that some T.I. Supers were still drum-braked. There is also one other flooring part for disk-braked T.I.Supers. There are different parts numbers for the hood, the trunk lid, the rear doors, and for thirteen or so structural panels- floors, inner side-rail fillers and the like- but there are none for the roof, front doors, front fenders, rear quarter panels, or front or rear fixed panels, indicating that these parts did not differ from the corresponding parts on the base T.I. This, to me, casts doubt on the "thinner steel" concept. It would also seem to me that if going to that length to save the weight it would have been easy enough to leave the basic stressed hull standard and punch-out all the unstressed hinged panels - four doors, deck, and hood- in aluminum, as Rover (and undoubtedly others) had done a decade earlier, and as I believe Alfa did on the steel-bodied Junior Zagato. The rest of the parts book comparisons offer a multitude of fascinating inferences, for those so inclined. John H. ------------------------------
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