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First published 1996 October
30
alfa romeo
spares
It's so fun to have a Spider.
The
Spider is something you drive with feeling. I have always been very
careful to have the engine warmed up before taking off. That is, I
drive the first five minutes rather slow with the engine not
exceeding 3 000 revs. When the oil-pressure is 5-6 bar the engine is
ready. The oil-pressure is normally 4-5 bar when hot. Then the
temperature is rising to 85 degrees and it's OK to speed up.
BTW, I have only used Castrol oil in my cars. I
don't know if that's good or bad, but I have so far never had any
oil problems with my up to now 19 Alfas over 30 years.
On my way to one of the meetings this silver
Duetto came roaming. I still don't know who drove, I thought he was
going to the track as well, so I let him pass. My friend Anders
Tillman took the photo.
The Duetto is very attractive even when you've been overtaken. The
Duetto and Spider Veloce is also referred to as "Osso di Seppia"
or roundtail. Have a look in the Picture gallery to see the Kamm-tail,
which was introduced in 1970.
This is the roundtail. I prefer the roundtail to
the Kamm-tail. This is what Alfisti talk about. It's like the story
about the hen and the egg. Which came first and what's the origin. I
think that the roundtail is a better design since it is in harmony
with the front of the car.
Also the roundtail matches the rear Carello
lights and the shape of those. The photo shows my Veloce Spider with
the Revolution five-spoke wheels. They are 6x14 and were most
popular in the late -60's and in the -70's. I am very fond of them.
MOMO made great alloy wheels too. I had a set of MOMO Vegas and they
are the ones you see on some of the other photos of my spider.
Italian tune-up
Years ago I red something that I can't get out of
my head. Thanx to readers of the Alfa-digest on the web, I finally
located who wrote it. The quote was from Pat Braden's book "
The Alfa Romeo Bible" and goes something like this:
You've spent lots of money on your Alfa.
You're very careful and do not stress the engine. Never more than
3.000 revs and you treat the gearbox like an egg. You drive with
your ears and eyes wide open to check that your Alfa is feeling OK.
At the same time, there's an Italian driving
exactly the same Alfa as you do. He's constantly overreving and
steps on the accelerator like as if he was mad. He also uses the
brakes intensively and leaves black stripes behind him in every
corner. There are various tools on the floor of the car and a slice
of pizza, which even a dog would find hard
to eat.
He hardly changes the oil or coolant and he
uses his Alfa as a daily driver, carrying screaming kids with ice
cream, dirty tools and his mother-in-law. The roaming engine is
running so good that it's hard to believe.
The same guy might be you mechanic. When you
ask him to tune your precious pearl. He says OK. Then when you have
gone, he takes your Alfa, drives it like he drives his own Alfa, and
like magic, the plugs are clean, the acid oil is evaporating and the
brakes quit binding.
When you drive home after the service, you
wonder what he's done to your Alfa. It feels just like a power tuned
GTA.
That's what I remember. That's what driving an Alfa Romeo is
all about, use the power.
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