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First published 1996 June
3
alfa romeo
spares
1957 Giulietta Sprint
By then I had just bought a 1957 Giulietta
Sprint. The car was in a terrible condition, but that's the fun part
of Alfas, restoring and meeting new Alfaholics. Talking in the
garage and arguing of the best solution for various mechanical
problems. The Giulietta had the fuel pump on the left side of the
engine. This scared me, 'cause if the hose broke, the fuel would be
spread just over the hot exhaust. That would be a true burnout.
However, I had no problems there, but rumors said
that "in Italy there's one Giulietta burning a day". My
only concern was that if it happened to me, I would end up in the
newspaper unable to read it if I was all carbon.
This is a photo of my Giulietta. The overhauling
has just started and she's being stripped but I just simply couldn't
let her just stand there. I just had to drive. The red license plate
indicates that I didn't pay tax for her. I used the red plate since
the car was not registered at that time.
The Giulietta had enormous drum brakes,
extensively finned. They were very good and I had no problems. In
those days there were not so many cars on the roads in Scandinavia
and very few Alfas. It's amazing how the design of the old Giulietta
still looks modern and up to date. My model had the small
"lobster-hooks" in the front and not the somewhat bigger
chrome bumpers that were introduced in 1960.
I
was working at that time in the summer for an Italian Agency "Viaggi
Condor" and since one of the bosses had a brother who was an
Alfa-dealer, we drove Giulias. When I returned back to Scandinavia
that fall I didn't talk so much about Giulias. I realized that most
people here knew very little about Alfas. Volvo had introduced the
Amazon with twin carbs and SAAB was champion in the Rallies in
Europe.
FIAT was dominating the market to some extents
with the124 and 125 cars. The photo shows my blue Giulia Super in
Italy the summer 1966. Good performance, fun to drive but not a
Spider.
The next summer when I returned to Italy, I drove a FIAT 124 Spider,
that car too had a twin-cam engine, five-speed gearbox and disc
brakes. Quite good. It was so fun in Italy! However, my "Patrone"
Stefano Pattaconi had a kid brother Sandro who owned a brand new
Duetto.
That sure was something. I got up early in the
mornings just to look at it and drive it when the sun was rising
over the Adriatic sea. His Duetto had a record player installed. It
was very primitive and I only had three records at that time in
Italy. Neil Sedaka's Oh Carol, Rita Pavone's Cuore and Jerry Lee
Lewis.
I bored my dates (in the mornings) driving that
Duetto playing the same records over and over again. I did enjoy
myself, believe me! Back in Sweden I had a 1750 GTV and the
Giulietta Sprint. But I was constantly thinking about the Duetto.
They were utterly rare in Scandinavia, in fact I had never seen one
at that time in the streets yet.
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